Toolmaking is considered the oldest, most foundational trade in human history, originating approximately 2.6 million years ago with the creation of stone tools (Oldowan tools) used for butchering and survival. While popular culture often cites prostitution, anthropologically, the first specialized, exchangeable skills were tool creation, foraging, and hunting.
Ancient jobs came into being primarily because of the earliest human needs. Occupations such as farming, tool making, and carpentry emerged as a result of first human creations such as tools and agriculture. According to some research reports prostitution was considered as the oldest job in the history of mankind.
The phrase "world's second-oldest profession" may refer to any number of trades and professions, playing on perceived similarities to prostitution. One frequent use of the phrase is to refer to spies and spying.
What they do: Being a wood patternmaker is the rarest job in the world. Wood patternmakers create wooden molds that are used by metalworkers to cast molten metal. They use advanced woodworking techniques to create these intricate designs and molds according to precise specifications.
Health services, professional business services, and wholesale and retail trade employ the most workers ages 50 and older. Agriculture, other services, public administration, and manufacturing have the highest shares of 50-plus workers.
Doctors, scientists, and farmers are the most respected jobs. Reality TV stars and politicians attracted the least respect. The top factors that make a job respectable are caring for others, trustworthiness, and being essential to society.
Very generally speaking, the oldest company in the world is usually recognized as Kongo Gumi, the Japanese construction company that was founded in 578 AD. It operated operated continuously for over 1,400 years until it was absorbed by another firm in 2006.
Technically, the least common jobs in the U.S. are those that don't exist anymore—ice cutters, town criers, switchboard operators, and other gigs that society has progressed past the need for. Of the jobs that people still actually have, though, wood patternmaking just might be the rarest.
Pilot is the world's dream job, with over 1.3 million global annual searches. Travel-related roles take up a large portion of the dream jobs list; alongside Pilot in first, followed by Flight Attendant in fifth and Travel Agent in sixth.
1: Shampooer. The worst-paying job on the list is shampooers. They work in hair salons washing and rinsing customers' hair. Mean hourly wages are $14.07 and mean annual wages are $29,260.
However, it is now known that the classification of four occupations as Ban Gu understood it did not exist until the 2nd century BC. Ban explained the social hierarchy of each group in descending order: Scholars, farmers, artisans, and merchants; each of the four peoples had their respective profession.