Master Artisan
Master Artisan is a rank in charge of most of the design work aboard a ship.
In Europe during the Middle Ages artisans usually organised into guilds. Guilds were associations of master artisans that were granted charters by the local sovereign authority. The guilds controlled all aspects of production and distribution to ensure quality and to prevent competition from outside markets. Along with merchants, artisans occupied the middle tier of the European and Indian social hierarchy, below the landowning aristocrats and above the agricultural workers. In contrast, Japan's Edo period artisan class was ranked below the samurai and the agricultural workers, and above the merchants.
To become an artisan in the guilds, a person worked under a master artisan as an unpaid apprentice at a young age. If the apprentice completed the training, the apprentice became a paid journeyman. For a journeyman to become a master artisan, he would have to produce a masterpiece that met the standards of the guild.
Within the Colorado Rogues the Master Artisan is the head of desgn. He may work with standard crew such as the Cooper , Embellisher, Fletcher or Carpenter to make sure the task gets done.
The Master Artisan is a Ship Officer rank.