The oldest known social club is
La Court de Bonne Compagnie, established in London and mentioned in 1413. The club was set up by a group of devout
Templars for the purpose of "charitable causes". To represent the professional interests of
craft and
merchant guilds, societies or clubs were formed in the
Middle Ages and
Early Modern period, through which community and various social functional spaces (such as guild houses and music guilds of the Meistersinger) and events were run. Societies based on language were formed in the seventeenth century, with exclusive English upper class
gentlemen's clubs of the eighteenth century,
Masonic lodges, the literary societies of
the Enlightenment, and political clubs of the
French Revolution being some of the earliest examples. One of the most notable social clubs of the early period was the
Berliner Montagsclub, founded in 1749. The first cross-class associations were founded in German-speaking countries during the 18th century. As a result of industrialisation during the nineteenth century, modern clubs, societies and federations began to develop, including those focused on culture, education and socialising. ==Legal basis==