d459 | Result |
---|---|
1 |
Animal/Monster Handler – responsible for the safe keeping, dietary care, and exercise of animals or monsters. |
2 |
Arborist – maintains and cares for trees, often by surgically removing dying limbs. |
3 |
Baler – bales hay, or in the mills, wool and cotton goods. |
4 |
Beekeeper – owns and breeds bees, especially for their honey. |
5 |
Breeder – breeds livestock, animals, or monsters. |
6 |
Cowherd – supervises grazing cattle. |
7 |
Dairyboy/Dairymaid – milks cows and makes cheese and butter. |
8 |
Falconer – keeps, trains, and hunts with falcons, hawks, or other birds of prey. |
9 |
Farmer – operates a farm or cultivates land. |
10 |
Fisher – catches fish. |
11 |
Florist – grows and arranges plants and cut flowers. |
12 |
Forager – searches for food in the wild. |
13 |
Forester – supervises the wellbeing of a forest. |
14 |
Fowler – catches or ensnares birds. |
15 |
Gamekeeper – breeds and protects game, typically for a large estate. |
16 |
Groom – cleans and brushes the coats horses, dogs, or other animals. |
17 |
Herder – supervises a herd of livestock or makes a living from keeping livestock, especially in open country. |
18 |
Horse Trainer – tends to horses and teaches them different disciplines. |
19 |
Hunter – hunts game or other wild animals. |
20 |
Lumberjack – fells trees, cuts them into logs, and transports them to a sawmill. |
21 |
Master-of-Horses – supervises and commands all horses under a jurisdiction. |
22 |
Master-of-Hounds – maintains a pack of hounds and their associated staff, equipment, and hunting arrangements. |
23 |
Miller – owns or works in a grain mill. |
24 |
Miner – works underground in mines in order to obtain minerals such as coal, diamonds, or gold. |
25 |
Pathfinder – scouts ahead and discovers a path or way for others. |
26 |
Plumer – hunts birds for their plumes. |
27 |
Prospector – searches for mineral deposits, especially by drilling and excavation. |
28 |
Ranger – wanders or ranges over a particular area or domain. |
29 |
Renderer – converts waste animal tissue into usable materials. |
30 |
Shepherd – herds, tends, and guards sheep. |
31 |
Stablehand – works in a stable. |
32 |
Thresher – separates grain from the plants by beating. |
33 |
Trapper – traps wild animals, especially for their fur. |
34 |
Vintner – engages in winemaking, especially with monitoring and harvesting the grapes. |
35 |
Zookeeper – maintains and cares for animals or monsters in a zoo. |
36 |
Architect – designs buildings or landscapes and in many cases supervises their construction. |
37 |
Brickmaker – crafts bricks from clay, stone, or other materials. |
38 |
Brickmason – builds with mineral products such as stones, bricks, cinder blocks, or tiles, usually with the use of mortar as a bonding agent. |
39 |
Carpenter – makes and repairs wooden objects and structures. |
40 |
Construction Worker – a laborer in the physical construction of a built environment and its infrastructure. |
41 |
General Contractor – supervises a construction site, manages its vendors and trades, and communicates information to all involved parties. |
42 |
Glazier – fits glass into windows and doors. |
43 |
Plasterer – applies plaster to walls, ceilings, or other surfaces. |
44 |
Roadlayer/Streetlayer – paves roads or streets. |
45 |
Roofer/Thatcher – builds and repairs roofs. |
46 |
Stonemason – cuts and prepares stone for use in construction. |
47 |
Acrobat – performs spectacular gymnastic feats. |
48 |
Actor – impersonates characters, typically on stage in a theatrical production. |
49 |
Aerialist/Trapezist – performs acrobatics high above the ground on a tightrope or trapeze. |
50 |
Arranger – adapts a musical composition for performance. |
51 |
Athlete – proficient in sports and other forms of physical exercise. |
52 |
Busker/Street Musician – performs in a public place, often for money. |
53 |
Celebrity – a famous person. |
54 |
Chef – a professional cook trained in the culinary arts. |
55 |
Choirmaster – trains a choir and orchestrates their singing when they perform. |
56 |
Clown – comic entertainer who wears a traditional costume and exaggerated makeup. |
57 |
Comedian – entertainer whose act is designed to make an audience laugh. |
58 |
Conductor – directs the performance of an orchestra. |
59 |
Contortionist – twists and bends their body into strange and unnatural positions. |
60 |
Curator – keeper and custodian of a museum or other collections of precious items. |
61 |
Costumer – makes theatrical costumes. |
62 |
Dancer – moves their body rhythmically with or without musical accompaniment. |
63 |
Equilibrist – performs balancing feats. |
64 |
Fashion Designer – applies design, aesthetics and natural beauty to garments and their accessories. |
65 |
Gladiator – fights against other people, wild animals, or monsters in an arena. |
66 |
Glasspainter – produces colorful designs on or in glass. |
67 |
Jester – professional joker or “fool” at court, typically wearing a cap with bells on it and carrying a mock scepter. |
68 |
Juggler – keeps several objects in motion in the air at the same time by alternately tossing and catching them. |
69 |
Illuminator – paints and calligraphs to adorn or enlighten scrolls and manuscripts. |
70 |
Limner – paints portraits or miniatures. |
71 |
Makeup Artist – applies cosmetics to models, actors, nobles, etc. |
72 |
Minstrel – recites lyric or heroic poetry for nobility. |
73 |
Model – poses as a subject for an artist, fashion designer, or sculptor. |
74 |
Musician – plays a musical instrument. |
75 |
Painter – paints pictures. |
76 |
Playwright – writes plays or musicals. |
77 |
Poet – writes ballads, epics, sonnets, or other forms of poetry. |
78 |
Ringmaster/Ringmistress – master of ceremony who introduces the circus acts to the audience. |
79 |
Ropewalker – walks along a tightrope to entertain others. |
80 |
Sculptor – crafts art by carving or casting blocks of marble, stones, or other hardened minerals. |
81 |
Singer/Soprano – sings with or without instrumental accompaniment. |
82 |
Skald – composes and recites poems honoring heroes and their deeds. |
83 |
Stage Magician – deceives their audience with seemingly impossible feats while using only natural means. |
84 |
Stuntman/Stuntwoman – performs dangerous stunts for their audience. |
85 |
Tattooist – illustrates the skin with indelible patterns, pictures, legends, etc. |
86 |
Theater Director – supervises and orchestrates the mounting of a theatre production by unifying various endeavors and aspects of production. |
87 |
Wrestler – performs in matches involving grappling and grappling-type techniques. |
88 |
Writer – commits his or her thoughts, ideas, etc., into written language. |
89 |
Accountant – keeps and inspects financial accounts. |
90 |
Actuary – compiles and analyzes statistics and uses them to calculate risk. |
91 |
Animal Collector/Monster Collector – collects and deals in rare and exotic animals and monsters. |
92 |
Business Owner – owns a business entity in an attempt to profit from its successful operations. |
93 |
Debt Collector – recovers money owed on delinquent accounts. |
94 |
Draper – an alcohol merchant. |
95 |
Appraiser – assesses the monetary value of something. |
96 |
Auctioneer – conducts auctions by accepting bids and declaring goods sold. |
97 |
Banker – an officer or owner of a bank or group of banks. |
98 |
Bagniokeeper – owner of a bath house or brothel. |
99 |
Bookkeeper – keeps records of financial affairs. |
100 |
Chandler – deals in provisions and supplies. |
101 |
Collector – collects things of a specified type, professionally or as a hobby. |
102 |
Entrepreneur – organizes and operates a business or businesses, taking on greater than normal financial risks in order to do so. |
103 |
Grocer – a food merchant. |
104 |
Guild Master – leads an economically independent producer (a “guild,” an association of craftsmen or merchants that often holds considerable bureaucratic power). |
105 |
Innkeeper – owns and runs an inn. |
106 |
Land Surveyor – establishes maps and boundaries for ownership or other purposes required by government or civil law. |
107 |
Merchant – sells and trades goods. |
108 |
Moneychanger – exchanges one currency for another. |
109 |
Moneylender – lends money to others who pay interest. |
110 |
Peddler – travels from place to place selling assorted items. |
111 |
Pimp/Madame – controls prostitutes and arranges clients for them, taking part of their earnings in return. |
112 |
Plantation Owner – an owner of an estate on which crops are cultivated by resident labor, typically slave labor. |
113 |
Speculator – invests in stocks, property, or other ventures in the hope of making a profit. |
114 |
Thriftdealer – deals in secondhand items. |
115 |
Tradesman – deals exclusively in bartering. |
116 |
Vendor – deals items in the street. |
117 |
Billboardposter – a person who puts up notices, signs and advertisements. |
118 |
Courier – transports packages and documents. |
119 |
Herald – a messenger who carries important news. |
120 |
Interpreter – interprets language and its meaning, especially within ancient manuscripts. |
121 |
Linguist – studies the essence of communication, including the units, nature, structure, and modification of language. |
122 |
Messenger – carries messages between recipients. |
123 |
Town Crier – makes public announcements in the streets or marketplace. |
124 |
Translator – translates between languages. |
125 |
Accoutrementer/Coinsmith – makes currency for the government. |
126 |
Armorer – specializes in making and repairing armor. |
127 |
Blacksmith – forges and repairs things in metal, including weapons, armor, utensils, etc. |
128 |
Bladesmith – specializes in making and repairing bladed weapons, especially swords and daggers. |
129 |
Bookbinder – binds books and wraps scrolls. |
130 |
Bottler – bottles drinks and other liquids. |
131 |
Bowyer – makes bows and crossbows. |
132 |
Brewer – brews ale. |
133 |
Broom Maker – makes brooms and brushes. |
134 |
Candlemaker – makes candles and wax from honey and tallow. |
135 |
Cartwright – makes and repairs carts and wagons. |
136 |
Cobbler – makes and repairs footwear. |
137 |
Cooper/Hooper – makes and repairs casks and barrels. |
138 |
Cutler – makes cutlery. |
139 |
Dyer – dyes cloth and other materials. |
140 |
Embroiderer – ornaments with needlework. |
141 |
Engraver – incises a design onto a hard surface by cutting grooves into it. |
142 |
Farrier – trims and shoes horses' hooves. |
143 |
Fletcher – makes and repairs arrows. |
144 |
Furniture Artisan – makes and repairs furniture. |
145 |
Furrier – prepares furs for adornment. |
146 |
Glassworker – blows glass planes and items. |
147 |
Glovemaker – makes and repairs gloves. |
148 |
Goldsmith/Silversmith – a smith who specializes in precious metals. |
149 |
Hatter/Milliner – makes and repairs headwear. |
150 |
Instrument Maker – makes and repairs musical instruments. |
151 |
Lapidary – turns stone, minerals, or gemstones into decorative items such as cabochons, engraved gems, and faceted designs. |
152 |
Leatherworker – makes items from leather such as pouches, scabbards, straps, etc. |
153 |
Jeweler – designs, makes, and repairs necklaces, bracelets, watches, etc., often containing jewels. |
154 |
Locksmith – makes and repairs locks. |
155 |
Luthier – makes and repairs stringed instruments. |
156 |
Mercer – weaves textile fabrics, especially silks, velvets, and other fine materials. |
157 |
Optician – makes and repairs eyeglasses. |
158 |
Potter – makes pots, bowls, plates, etc., out of clay. |
159 |
Printer – a person who applies pressure to an inked surface resting upon a print medium (such as paper or cloth), thereby transferring the ink to manufacture a text. |
160 |
Restorer – repairs or renovates a work of art so as to return it to its original condition. |
161 |
Ropemaker – braids rope. |
162 |
Rugmaker – makes and repairs rugs by braiding, hooking, weaving, etc. |
163 |
Saddler – makes and repairs saddlery. |
164 |
Seamstress/Tailor – makes, alters, repairs, as well as occasionally designing garments. |
165 |
Soaper – makes soap from accumulated mutton fat, wood ash, and natural soda. |
166 |
Tanner – treats the skins and hides of animals to produce leather. |
167 |
Taxidermist – prepares, stuffs, and mounts the skins of animals. |
168 |
Tinker – travels from place to place mending utensils. |
169 |
Toymaker – makes and repairs toys. |
170 |
Watchmaker – makes and repairs watches and clocks. |
171 |
Weaponsmith – specializes in making and repairing weapons. |
172 |
Weaver – makes fabric by weaving fiber together. |
173 |
Wheelwright – makes and repairs wooden wheels. |
174 |
Whittler/Woodcarver – fashions wood into various shapes. |
175 |
Assassin – murders through stealth for reasons pertaining to money, politics, or religion. |
176 |
Bandit – a robber or outlaw belonging to a gang and typically operating in an isolated or lawless area. |
177 |
Burglar – illegally enters buildings and steals things. |
178 |
Charlatan/Conman – tricks people by gaining their trust and persuading them to believe something that is not true in order to benefit from the encounter. |
179 |
Cockfighter/Gamefighter – engages in arena matches in which animals or monsters are pitted against one another, typically to the death. |
180 |
Crime Boss – controls and supervises a criminal organization. |
181 |
Cutpurse – a pickpocket or thief. |
182 |
Drug Dealer – dealer of illegal substances. |
183 |
Drug Lord – controls a network of persons involved in the illegal drugs trade and transactions. |
184 |
Extortioner – extorts money from someone by threatening to expose embarrassing information about them. |
185 |
Fence – deals in stolen goods. |
186 |
Forger – produces fraudulent copies or imitations. |
187 |
Fugitive – a person who has escaped from a place or is in hiding, especially to avoid arrest or persecution. |
188 |
Highwayman – robs travelers on a road. |
189 |
Kidnapper – abducts people and holds them captive, typically to obtain a ransom. |
190 |
Loan Shark – charges extremely high rates of interest for moneylending, typically under illegal conditions. |
191 |
Pirate – attacks and robs ships at sea. |
192 |
Poacher – hunts illegal game. |
193 |
Poisoner – makes poisons to harm or kill. |
194 |
Raider/Marauder – makes sudden, unprompted attacks against defenseless or near-defenseless settlements. |
195 |
Smuggler – manages the import or export of goods secretly, in violation of the law, especially without payment of legal duty. |
196 |
Thief – steals people’s property, especially by stealth and without using force or violence. |
197 |
Affeeror – determines the values of fines and amercements. |
198 |
Agister – affords pasture to the livestock of others for a price. |
199 |
Alderman – a civic dignitary in the local council ranked below the mayor. |
200 |
Alienist – assesses the competence of a defendant in a court of law. |
201 |
Assay Master – oversees the testing of currency. |
202 |
Baron/Baroness – a member of the lowest order of the British nobility. |
203 |
Chancellor – a senior state or legal official. |
204 |
Chief – leads or rules a people or clan. |
205 |
Conservationist – advocates for the protection and preservation of the environment and wildlife. |
206 |
Count/Earl/Countess – a nobleperson ranking above a viscount and below a marquess. |
207 |
Courtier – attends court as a companion or adviser to the king or queen. |
208 |
Diplomat – an official representing a country abroad. |
209 |
Duke/Duchess – rules over a duchy and is of the highest rank below the monarch. |
210 |
Emperor/Empress – the supreme sovereign ruler of an extensive group of states or countries under a single authority. |
211 |
Judge – decides cases in a court of law. |
212 |
King/Queen – the ruler of an independent state and its people. |
213 |
Knight – serves his or her sovereign after being bestowed a rank of royal honor. |
214 |
Lady-in-Waiting – attends a queen, princess, or other high-ranking feminine nobleperson. |
215 |
Lawyer/Advocate – practices or studies law, typically an attorney or a counselor. |
216 |
Marquess/Marchioness – a nobleperson ranking above a count and below a duke. |
217 |
Master-of-Coin – supervises the royal treasury, advises the monarch on financial matters, and is responsible for raising money through taxation. |
218 |
Master-of-the-Revels – responsible for overseeing royal festivities. |
219 |
Minister – assists with the administration of business. |
220 |
Noble/Aristocrat – a person belonging to a class with high social or political status. |
221 |
Notary – performs certain legal formalities, especially to draw up or certify contracts, deeds, and other documents for use in other jurisdictions. |
222 |
Orator/Spokesman – makes statements on behalf of a group or individual nobleperson. |
223 |
Page – a young attendant to a person of noble rank. |
224 |
Prince/Princess – the direct descendant of a monarch. |
225 |
Senator – partakes in governmental decision-making after being elected. |
226 |
Sheriff – the chief executive officer in a county, having various administrative and judicial functions. |
227 |
Spymaster – directs a network of subordinate espionage agents for a state, kingdom, or empire. |
228 |
Steward – supervises both the estate and household of his lord or lady while they are away. |
229 |
Squire – acts as an attendant to a knight before attempting to become a knight themselves. |
230 |
Tax Collector – collects unpaid taxes from people, guilds, or businesses. |
231 |
Viscount/Viscountess – a nobleperson ranking above a baron and below a count. |
232 |
Ward – a member of a noble house who has been taken in by another noble family to be raised for a time. |
233 |
Acater – provides and prepares foodstuffs or delicacies for events such as festivals. |
234 |
Tunner – fills casks in a brewery or winery. |
235 |
Baker – bakes bread and cakes. |
236 |
Barber – cuts hair and shaves or trims beards. |
237 |
Barkeep – works and serves drinks in a bar. |
238 |
Barmaid/Barboy – serves drinks and food in a bar as well as engaging with customers. |
239 |
Butcher – cuts up and sells meat. |
240 |
Butler – the chief servant of a household. |
241 |
Caregiver – looks after a sick, elderly, or disabled person. |
242 |
Charcoal Maker – manufactures charcoal by carbonizing wood in a kiln. |
243 |
Chatelaine/Majordomo – a person in charge of a large household. |
244 |
Chimney Sweeper – a small person, typically a child, who ascends chimneys to clean them. |
245 |
Clerk – undertakes routine administrative duties in a business or bank. |
246 |
Cook – prepares food for eating. |
247 |
Copyist – makes copies of handwritten documents or music. |
248 |
Croupier – runs a gaming table by gathering in and paying out money or tokens. |
249 |
Exterminator – exterminates unwanted rodents and insects. |
250 |
Food & Drink Taster – ingests food that was prepared for someone else to confirm it is safe to eat. |
251 |
Gardener/Landscaper – tends and cultivates a garden. |
252 |
Gongfarmer – digs out and removes excrement from privies and cesspits. |
253 |
Gravedigger – digs graves for the purposes of a funeral ceremony. |
254 |
Groundskeeper – maintains an athletic field, a park, or the grounds of a graveyard or other institution. |
255 |
Kitchen Drudge – performs menial work in a kitchen. |
256 |
Knacker – disposes of dead or unwanted animals. |
257 |
Lamplighter – lights street or road lights at dusk. |
258 |
Laundry Worker – a laborer who takes part in the washing, drying, and ironing of clothes and other fabric items. |
259 |
Lector – reads to others while they work for entertainment. |
260 |
Longshoreman – loads and unloads ships in a port. |
261 |
Maid – a domestic servant of a household. |
262 |
Nanny/Nursemaid – a servant employed to look after a young child or children. |
263 |
Operator – a laborer who operates equipment, typically in construction. |
264 |
Pastry Chef – makes desserts, especially cakes and pastries. |
265 |
Plumber – installs and repairs the fittings of water supply and sanitation. |
266 |
Porter – carries luggage and other loads. |
267 |
Prostitute – engages in sexual activity for payment. |
268 |
Quarryman/Quarrywoman – quarries stone. |
269 |
Servant – performs duties for others, especially a person employed in a house or as a personal attendant. |
270 |
Stagehand – moves scenery or props before or during the performance of a theatrical production. |
271 |
Street Cleaner – cleans streets and alleyways after dark. |
272 |
Talent Scout – searches for talented individuals who can be employed or promoted. |
273 |
Trainer – trains someone in a particular skill, usually physical, for money. |
274 |
Water Bearer – brings water from rivers, wells, and lakes back to their settlement. |
275 |
Wet Nurse – a woman employed to suckle another woman's child. |
276 |
Abjurer – a mage focused in protective spells. |
277 |
Alchemist – transforms or creates something within nature through (usually) ritualist magic. |
278 |
Archmage – an extremely powerful mage. |
279 |
Artificer – unlocks magic in everyday objects as well as being an inventor. |
280 |
Bard – uses their artistic talents to induce magical effects. |
281 |
Conjuror – conjures spirits or familiars. |
282 |
Druid – a mage attuned to the magical forces of nature, able to shapeshift, call on the elements, communicate with flora and fauna, etc. |
283 |
Elementalist – manipulates nature’s elements to their will. |
284 |
Enchanter/Enchantress – uses sorcery to put someone or something under a spell. |
285 |
Evoker – manipulates energy or taps into an unseen source of power in order to produce a desired kinetic end. |
286 |
Healer – able to cure a disease or injury using magic. |
287 |
Hearth Witch/Hearth Wizard – incorporates spells and enchantments in cooking. |
288 |
Illusionist – performs tricks and spells that deceive the senses. |
289 |
Mage – a magic-user. |
290 |
Medium – uses extrasensory perception, magic, or divine powers to identify information hidden from the normal senses. |
291 |
Meteorologist – forecasts and manipulates weather. |
292 |
Necromancer – communicates with and conjures the spirits of the dead. |
293 |
Ritualist – practices or advocates the observance of ritual (formula intended to trigger a magical effect on a person or objects). |
294 |
Runecaster – uses special alphabets to create runes (symbols possessing magical effects capable of being used multiple times). |
295 |
Sage – a wise and experienced magic-user. |
296 |
Seer/Oracle – able to see what the future holds through supernatural insight. |
297 |
Shaman – accesses and influences the world of good and evil spirits. |
298 |
Shapeshifter – a person with the ability to change their physical form. |
299 |
Sorcerer/Sorceress – derives their magical abilities innately rather than through study. |
300 |
Summoner – a mage able to summon forth magical beasts, creatures, and monsters. |
301 |
Transmuter – alters matter in form, appearance, or nature. |
302 |
Warlock – a mage who has gained their abilities by forming a pact with an otherworldly being. |
303 |
Witchdoctor – a tribal mage with powers of healing, divination, and protection against the magic of others. |
304 |
Witch – a woman who has supernatural powers and practices sorcery, typically in solitude. |
305 |
Wizard – derives their magical abilities through study. |
306 |
Wordsmith – draws their power from language and casts by dictation. |
307 |
Admiral – commands a fleet or naval squadron. |
308 |
Bailiff – looks after prisoners. |
309 |
Bodyguard – escorts and protects another person, especially a dignitary. |
310 |
Bouncer – prevents troublemakers from entering or to eject them from the premises of an establishment. |
311 |
Captain – an army officer of high rank in charge of commanding squadrons of soldiers. |
312 |
Castellan – the governor of a castle. |
313 |
Cavalryman/Cavalier – a skilled horseback rider. |
314 |
City Watch – an officer of law enforcement who resides in larger towns or cities. |
315 |
Commissar – teaches principles and policies to military units. |
316 |
Constable – an officer with limited policing authority, typically in a small town. |
317 |
Detective/Investigator – investigates and solves crimes. |
318 |
Drummer/Fifer – a non-combatant foot soldier who sounds signals for changes in formation in combat. |
319 |
Duelist – skilled in one-on-one combat. |
320 |
Executioner – carries out a sentence of death on a legally condemned person. |
321 |
Firefighter – extinguishes fires. |
322 |
Guard/Sentinel – a person who keeps watch, especially a soldier or other person formally assigned to protect a person or to control access to a place. |
323 |
General – the chief commander of an army. |
324 |
Inspection Officer – responsible for the inspection of military units to ensure they meet appropriate standards of training and efficiency. |
325 |
Intelligence Officer – collects, compiles and organizes information about the enemy. |
326 |
Jailer – supervises a jail and the prisoners in it. |
327 |
Lieutenant – an officer of middle rank in the armed forces. |
328 |
Marksman/Archer – in long-range weapons, such as the bow, crossbow, sling, etc. to inflict damage from afar. |
329 |
Marshall – has the charge of the cavalry in the household of a monarch. |
330 |
Medic – a medical practitioner equipped for the battlefield. |
331 |
Mercenary – a soldier without allegiance who works for money, typically a member of a company or guild. |
332 |
Privateer – engages in maritime warfare under a commission of war. |
333 |
Quartermaster – responsible for providing quarters, rations, clothing, and other supplies. |
334 |
Royal Guard – responsible for the protection of a royal person. |
335 |
Runner – carries information between lines in wartime. |
336 |
Sapper – a soldier responsible for tasks such as building and repairing roads and bridges, laying and clearing mines, etc. |
337 |
Sergeant – an officer instructed with a protective duty, typically worth “half a knight” in regard. |
338 |
Sergeant-at-Arms – charged with keeping order during meetings and, if necessary, participates in battle. |
339 |
Scout – sent ahead of a main force so as to gather information about the enemy's position, strength, or movements. |
340 |
Siege Artillerist – works the artillery machines of an army. |
341 |
Slave Driver – oversees and urges on slaves at work. |
342 |
Soldier/Man-at-Arms – serves in an army. |
343 |
Special Force Soldier – carries out special operations. |
344 |
Spy – secretly collects and reports information on the activities, movements, and plans of an enemy or competitor. |
345 |
Tactician – uses a carefully planned military strategy to achieve a specific end. |
346 |
Tollkeeper – collects tolls at a bridge, road etc. where a charge is made. |
347 |
Torturer – inflicts severe pain on someone as a punishment or in order to force them to do or say something. |
348 |
Warden – responsible for the supervision of a particular place or thing or for ensuring that regulations associated with it are obeyed. |
349 |
Warmage – a soldier skilled in destructive battle magic. |
350 |
Abbot/Abbess – the head of an abbey of monks. |
351 |
Acolyte – assists the celebrant in a religious service or procession. |
352 |
Almoner – distributes money and food to poor people. |
353 |
Archbishop – responsible for an archdiocese, their surrounding district. |
354 |
Bishop – a senior member of the clergy, usually in charge of a diocese and empowered to confer holy orders. |
355 |
Cantor – sings liturgical music and leads prayer in a synagogue. |
356 |
Cardinal – a leading dignitary of a church, nominated by the highest official. |
357 |
Chaplain – a member of the clergy attached to a private chapel, institution, ship, branch of the armed forces, etc. |
358 |
Cleric – has devoted their entire being to the will of their god, thus gaining magical powers. |
359 |
Confessor – hears confessions and gives absolution and spiritual counsel. |
360 |
Cultist – a member of a cult who generally lives outside of conventional society and worships an unorthodox patron. |
361 |
Cult Leader – the organizational leader of a cult who is occasionally also the founder. |
362 |
Deacon – an ordained minister of an order ranking below that of priest. |
363 |
Diviner – seeks ultimate divination in order to further understand or meet godly substance. |
364 |
Exorcist – expels or attempts to expel evil spirits from a person or place. |
365 |
High Priest/Pope – the chief priest of a religion. |
366 |
Inquisitor – seeks to eliminate heresy and other things contrary to the doctrine or teachings of their faith. |
367 |
Missionary – goes on a religious mission to promote their faith in a foreign place. |
368 |
Monk – able to manifest their spirituality through a calm, centered being and thus gain abilities which function similarly to magic. |
369 |
Nun – a member of a religious community of women, especially a cloistered one, living under vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. |
370 |
Paladin – a holy knight and divine spellcaster crusading in the name of good and order. |
371 |
Pardoner – raises money for religious works by soliciting offerings and granting indulgences. |
372 |
Priest – has the authority to perform certain rites and administer certain sacraments. |
373 |
Prophet – regarded as an inspired teacher or proclaimer of the will of God. |
374 |
Sexton – looks after a church and churchyard, sometimes acting as bell-ringer and formerly as a gravedigger. |
375 |
Templar – fights in a religious military order. |
376 |
Abecedarian – teaches the illiterate. |
377 |
Accoucheur/Obstetrician/Midwife – assists in childbirth and the care of women giving birth. |
378 |
Anthropologist – studies the customs, beliefs, and relationships of humanoids and intellectually and culturally advanced creatures. |
379 |
Apothecary – prepares and sells medicines, drugs, and potions. |
380 |
Apprentice – studies a trade under a skilled employer. |
381 |
Archaeologist – studies humanoid history and prehistory through the excavation of sites and the analysis of artifacts and other physical remains. |
382 |
Archivist – maintains and is in charge of archives. |
383 |
Assayer – determiner of the proportions of metal in ore and the amount of copper, silver, gold, or platinum in coins. |
384 |
Astrologer – uses astrology to tell others about their character or to predict their future. |
385 |
Astronomer – makes observations of celestial and scientific phenomena within the material plane. |
386 |
Bloodletter – surgically removes some of a patient's blood for therapeutic purposes. |
387 |
Botanist – an expert in or student of the scientific study of plants. |
388 |
Cartographer – a scholar and illustrator of maps. |
389 |
Chemist – engaged in chemical research or experiments. |
390 |
Dean – the head of a college or university. |
391 |
Doctor/Physician – a qualified practitioner of medicine. |
392 |
Drakologist – studies or is an expert in the branch of zoology concerned with dragons. |
393 |
Engineer – designer of a machine or structure. |
394 |
Entomologist – studies or is an expert in the branch of zoology concerned with insects. |
395 |
Herbalist – practices healing by the use of herbs. |
396 |
Historian – an expert in or student of history, especially that of a particular period, geographical region, or social phenomenon. |
397 |
Horologist – a scholar of time and entropy. |
398 |
Librarian – administers or assists in a library. |
399 |
Mathematician – a scholar of the abstract science of number, quantity, and space. |
400 |
Mortician – prepares dead bodies for burial or cremation and makes arrangements for funerals. |
401 |
Nurse – cares for the sick or infirm, especially in a hospital. |
402 |
Optometrist – examines the eyes for visual defects and prescribes eyeglasses. |
403 |
Philosopher – a scholar of the fundamental nature of knowledge, reality, and existence. |
404 |
Professor – a teacher of the highest rank in a college or university. |
405 |
Scholar/Researcher – a specialist in a particular branch of study who pursues the acquisition of knowledge. |
406 |
Scribe – copies out manuscripts. |
407 |
Student – attends school or learns under other to enter and pursue a particular subject. |
408 |
Surgeon/Chirurgeon – practices surgery. |
409 |
Taxonomist – groups organisms into categories. |
410 |
Teacher – instructs on a particular skill or subject. |
411 |
Theologian – engages in the study of the nature of God and religious belief. |
412 |
Tutor – charged with the instruction and guidance of another. |
413 |
Veterinarian – treats diseased or injured animals. |
414 |
Zoologist – an expert in or a student of the behavior, physiology, classification, and distribution of animals. |
415 |
Boatman – mans a small seacraft. |
416 |
Bosun – in charge of organizing the equipment and crew of a ship. |
417 |
Cabbie/Wagoner – drives a horse-drawn wagon. |
418 |
Cabin Boy/Cabin Girl – waits on the orders of a ship's officers and passengers. |
419 |
Caravaneer – travels or lives in a caravan. |
420 |
Charioteer – drives a chariot. |
421 |
Carter – transports goods by cart. |
422 |
Ferryman – operates a ferry. |
423 |
First Mate – the deck officer second in command to the master of a ship. |
424 |
Helmsman – steers a ship or boat. |
425 |
Navigator – directs the route or course of a ship or other form of transportation, especially by using instruments and maps. |
426 |
Purser – keeps the accounts of a ship, especially as the head steward on a passenger vessel. |
427 |
Sailor – works as a member of the crew of a commercial or naval ship or boat. |
428 |
Sea Captain – commands a ship. |
429 |
Shipwright – a carpenter skilled in ship construction and repair. |
430 |
Adventurer – wanders the world in search of knowledge, treasure, fame, glory or a multitude of additional wants and desires. |
431 |
Beggar/Pauper – lives by asking for money or food. |
432 |
Blood Hunter/Monster Hunter – takes on jobs to hunt down and kill or capture dangerous creatures. |
433 |
Bounty Hunter – pursues a criminal or fugitive for whom a reward is offered. |
434 |
Crossing Sweeper – sweeps a path ahead of people crossing dirty urban streets in exchange for a gratuity. |
435 |
Deserter – a member of the armed forces who has deserted. |
436 |
Disgraced Noble – a person of high birth who has since loss their respect, honor, or esteem in some or all noble circles. |
437 |
Drunkard – a person who is habitually drunk and considers themselves a professional in the task. |
438 |
Dungeon Delver – navigates underground labyrinths in search of any treasure they may find. |
439 |
Elder – a person of a greater age, especially one with a respected position in society. |
440 |
Exile – lives away from their native country, either from choice or compulsion. |
441 |
Explorer – explores unfamiliar areas in search of geographical or scientific information. |
442 |
Ex-Criminal – a person who has been convicted of a crime and has since served their sentence, or who has preemptively given up their life of crime. |
443 |
Folk Hero – a celebrity who is greatly admired by many people of a particular kind or in a particular place. |
444 |
Gambler – bets money on sports, card games, or games of chance in the hope of a profit. |
445 |
Grave Robber/Tomb Raider – steals valuables from graves and tombs. |
446 |
Heretic – differs in opinion from established religious dogma. |
447 |
Hermit – lives in solitude, typically as a religious or spiritual discipline. |
448 |
Housewife/Househusband – cares for his or her family by managing household affairs and completing housework. |
449 |
Pilgrim – journeys to some sacred place as an act of religious devotion, occasionally to settle there. |
450 |
Prisoner – held in confinement as a punishment for crimes they have been convicted of. |
451 |
Rag-and-Bone Man – collects unwanted household items and sells them to merchants. |
452 |
Rebel/Political Dissident – rises in opposition or armed resistance against an established government or ruler. |
453 |
Refugee – leaves their home in order to escape war, persecution, or natural disaster. |
454 |
Runaway Slave – a slave who has left their master and traveled without authorization. |
455 |
Scavenger/Mudlark/Tosher – searches for and collects discarded items. |
456 |
Slave – a person who is the legal property of another and forced to obey them. |
457 |
Squatter – unlawfully occupies an uninhabited building or unused land. |
458 |
Traveler/Wanderer/Vagabond – wanders from place to place without a permanent home or job. |
459 |
Urchin – a child who lives or spends most of their time in the streets, occasionally working as a thief or pickpocket. |