Newcomer's Corner: Traditions: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with " ==The Newcomer's Courner: Traditions== <center>by Mistress Aliskye MacKyven Raizel ''<b>Once is a Tradition<br /> Twice is a Sacred Tradition, <br /> Three times is a S...")
 
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Origins are lost in the Midst of Antiquity</b>''<br />
Origins are lost in the Midst of Antiquity</b>''<br />
~ attributed (traditionally) to Master [[Baldwin of Erebor]]</center>
~ attributed (traditionally) to Master [[Baldwin of Erebor]]</center>
Traditions are customs and ways of doing things that are passed by word of mouth from one generation to another which (generally) remain unwritten. As such they are subject to revision and reinterpretation as time drifts by and few are left who remember how things started. Some traditions endure forever, others come and go and still others fade away and are lost.
Because Caid is a child of the Kingdom of the [[West]], breaking off and forming the Kingdom of Caid many years ago, many of our traditions are Western ones. The tone of many of our ceremonies and customs are based on similar ceremonies and customs in the Kingdom of the West, though over the years some ceremonies have been re-written and other have been added that are uniquely Caidan.
===WESTERN TRADITIONS===
One custom derived from the [[West]], is that the Knight of Caid are allowed to view the final round of the Crown Lists from the fighting field. This is both a privilege due to their rank as knights and a duty to the [[Crown]], as the King may call upon their expertise and ask their opinion of the Final Combat.
Another tradition again has its origins in Western tradition but slightly altered. In the West, the Crown Prince and Princess are crowned with wreaths of laurel leaves at Court following the final round of Crown Lists. When it came time to crown Caid's first Crown Prince and Princess, apparently no one had thought to obtain laurel leaves, so rosemary was substituted. Since then the Caidan Crown Prince and Princess have been crowned with wreaths of rosemary.
One other tradition derived from the West is the use of the term "Eric" to describe the rope fence that defines the area of the fighting field and which provides a barrier between the fighters and the onlookers. In the West, they often gave names to these rope enclosures and one such rope enclosure made from red material became known as Eric the Red. The term caught on and since then the rope and stakes used to divid the fighting fields have been called, "the Eric." Many are surprise that the term does not have a medieval origin at all.




[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Articles]]

Revision as of 13:45, 28 October 2022

The Newcomer's Courner: Traditions

by Mistress Aliskye MacKyven Raizel

Once is a Tradition
Twice is a Sacred Tradition,
Three times is a Sacred Tradition whose
Origins are lost in the Midst of Antiquity

~ attributed (traditionally) to Master Baldwin of Erebor

Traditions are customs and ways of doing things that are passed by word of mouth from one generation to another which (generally) remain unwritten. As such they are subject to revision and reinterpretation as time drifts by and few are left who remember how things started. Some traditions endure forever, others come and go and still others fade away and are lost.

Because Caid is a child of the Kingdom of the West, breaking off and forming the Kingdom of Caid many years ago, many of our traditions are Western ones. The tone of many of our ceremonies and customs are based on similar ceremonies and customs in the Kingdom of the West, though over the years some ceremonies have been re-written and other have been added that are uniquely Caidan.

WESTERN TRADITIONS

One custom derived from the West, is that the Knight of Caid are allowed to view the final round of the Crown Lists from the fighting field. This is both a privilege due to their rank as knights and a duty to the Crown, as the King may call upon their expertise and ask their opinion of the Final Combat.

Another tradition again has its origins in Western tradition but slightly altered. In the West, the Crown Prince and Princess are crowned with wreaths of laurel leaves at Court following the final round of Crown Lists. When it came time to crown Caid's first Crown Prince and Princess, apparently no one had thought to obtain laurel leaves, so rosemary was substituted. Since then the Caidan Crown Prince and Princess have been crowned with wreaths of rosemary.

One other tradition derived from the West is the use of the term "Eric" to describe the rope fence that defines the area of the fighting field and which provides a barrier between the fighters and the onlookers. In the West, they often gave names to these rope enclosures and one such rope enclosure made from red material became known as Eric the Red. The term caught on and since then the rope and stakes used to divid the fighting fields have been called, "the Eric." Many are surprise that the term does not have a medieval origin at all.