Some prices - (these first ones are all from Poland or Prussian towns from 1420-1460

sword 1/2 mark or about 40 groschen - source Uzbrojenie w Polsce średniowiecznej 1350-1450, “Armaments in Medieval Poland 1350-1450”, Andrzej Nadolski, Polska Akademia Nauk, Instytut Historii Kultury Materialnej, (1990), page 471

A sheep, 56 dinari
Bushel of flour (1423) 6 kreuzer (144 dinari)
Side of bacon, 1 Mark (40 kreuzer)
Cubit of fine linen (30 kreuzer)
Pair of shoes (16 kreuzer)
Bushel of wheat 84 dinari
Sword 20 kreuzer
3 Tons of beer, 1 mark (1377, Hanseatic League law)
Crossbow (not sure what specific type) 1 mark / 40 kreuzer
Coat of plates (platendienst) 12 kreuzer
Cuirass with pauldrons, 39 kreuzer
Mail Haubergeon 2-7 marks or 10 marks for a ‘special’ Haubergeon (possibly tempered or fine links)
Half-Armor ‘of proof’ 90 kreuzer
Milanese harness 4 florins
Milanese harness ‘of Proof’ 7 florins, 4 kreuzer

Equipment for a mounted crossbowman, 11 florins, equipment ‘for a lancer’ 30 florins

Payment to a master tailor in Strasbourg 1460 for 1 week’s (6 out of 7 days) work: 144 pfennig. Outlay for apprentices, hired workers and worker meals, 29.5 pfennig. Net pay 115.5 pfennig or 26 Kreuzer, 104 Kreuzer per month.

Weekly earnings in Silesia, second half of 15th century:

24 Prague groschen – carpenter (roughly ˝ mark, 18 Kreuzer)
18-35 Prague gr - master mason* (roughly 13-26 Kreuzer, 104 Kr per month)
8.5 gr Prague gr – non-guild worker
3.7 Prague gr- carter
* A master mason will often receive 2 or 3 times his normal pay because he will receive wages at his own rate for each apprentice or journeyman in his employ.

Mercenaries pay Hungarian Black Army:
Light Cavalry 2 Florin per month (120 kreuzer per month)
Gunner 3 Florin per month (180 kreuzer per month)
Halberdier 3 Florin per month (180 kreuzer per month)
Leutzule (guide) 2 Florin per month (120 kreuzer per month)
Lancer* 10 Florin per month (600 kreuzer per month)
Knight (‘Lance’)*20 Florin per month (1200 kreuzer per month)




A good primary source for all this stuff is the Balthasar Behem Codex, aka the Codex Picturatus. It's a survey of craft guilds in Krakow in 1505, it has prices and all sorts of regulations, though you need to be able to read (or painstakingly translate, as some friends and i did) medieval Latin. It also has tons of really cool paintings of each type of craft workshop. You can find scans of the whole thing online.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balthasar_Behem_Codex