Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Rapier Peerage - A Modest Proposal

This is my first draft of a letter I intend to send to the SCA Board of Directors regarding the creation and implementation of a Rapier Peerage:

In considering and implementing a proposed "Fourth" or "Rapier" Peerage, preservation of the current structure, traditions, and mythos of the SCA's rapier community is not only in the best interest of the activity, it is also in keeping with previous SCA precedent for implementing new peerage orders, and is achievable, though not without significant cross-Kingdom coordination and possibly the temporary relaxation of a few corporate policies.
 
How do you institute a new Peerage for rapier atop a community that has already grown as inspirational and responsible a body of overseers as any other field of SCA endeavor--a group whose members have already shepherded the activity through three decades of expansion and serious growth in sholarship, who are already "clear beacons promoting not only the ideals of the society, but also the activities necessary for our Society to function and to best fulfill its mission"?[1]  Do you simply supplant this current, intrensic group of leaders, and tell the various Orders of the White Scarf that they no longer represent the pinnacle of all that is most noble and most responsible in the field of rapier?  Do you tell the Dons and Provosts that they no longer embody the highest estate in their field, that they may no longer embrace the responsibility for the activities, traditions, and mythos they created--often against very tall odds or open opposition?
 
I believe it would be wrong to marginalize the healthy, self-actualized  structure that already exists in rapier.  Afterall, Knighthood, as a formal peerage, merely codified the structure already in place for the field of armored combat, as did the Pelican for the subset of "service" Laurels.  The precedent for recognizing the existing social organization of a field of endeavor in the creation of a peerage is clear and strong, and should be followed once again in the case of rapier.  I assert that it is simply the potential magnitude of perpetuating that precedent for rapier that makes this matter daunting in the least, even though, ironically, it has been the SCA's own lengthy reluctance to change anything about the existing Peerages that has created the problem's magnitude, in the first place. For this reason, I believe the matter of implementing a rapier peerage deserves greater effort, and formal exception where necessary.
 
THEREFORE, in keeping with SCA precedent, I believe the best way to implement the proposed new rapier peerage is for the Crowns of the Known World, in close cooperation, with clear oversight on the part of the SCA's Board of Directors, and incrementally over the course of a year, to raise to the new Peerage Order all of those who are already Companions in a White Scarf Order. 
 
1. Because of the special nature of this effort and the preexistence in the majority of the Laurel Kingdoms of an Order already occupying the place, fulfilling the role, and embodying the virtues and ideals of the proposed new peerage, the implementation decision by the SCA's Board of Directors ought to be more "imperial" in nature than would otherwise be the norm, coordinating the various Crowns in the new peerage's implementation, rather than the BOD "firing and forgetting."
 
2. I believe a small implementation committee of Heralds and/or representatives (at the Kingdoms levels, overseen by someone appointed by the SCA Board) should oversee coordination of a timeline with the Known World's many Crowns to make all possible efforts to preserve the chronological order of current White Scarf precedence, and to convert it into the new peerage.  Offers of elevation to the new peerage should be made to still-active and responsible (for at least the previous year) companions the White Scarf.  The offers and subsequent elevations should be paced and coordinated to preserve the order of precedence within the current collective Orders of the White Scarf. To wit, the first should be offered to Tivar Moondragon, to preserve his premier status. Next, offers/elevations should be made in the date order of those who followed in the same year as Tivar, then to those who followed in the next year, and so on, over the course of a year.  Any current White Scarf not wishing to be elevated may decline and maintain companionship in their particular Kingdom Order of (High) Merit.
 
3. To facilitate the implementation process, the Board of Directors should, for the course and scope of this effort only, suspend or relax portions of Corpora that would inhibit this process, such as restrictions on the Crown of one Kingdom recognizing the accomplishments of individuals whose applicable accomplishments occured in another Kingdom, and allow the Kingdoms' representatives to the implementation committee (as proposed) to coordinate elevations, objections, etc.
 
4. This process is almost certain to result in some "mass elevations" at one event or another, necessary to synchronize the generations of White Scarves across Kingdoms.  Admitted, this could detract from traditional peerage elevation mystique, and will be less than palatable to some.  Nonetheless, I regard this as a fair trade-off in light of the greater structure and longer-held traditions that will be preserved by the effort.
 
5. Some SCA members will quite rationally point out that not every White Scarf Kingdom has always treated its Order as something akin to a peerage when selecting the Orders' companions, and that raising all current White Scarves to a peerage will grant that estate to some who are potentially undeserving of peerage.  Alas, this could be true in some cases.  It would be dishonest to deny it.  However, any current companion of the White Scarf who has not already grown to meet the peerage standards as a result of the responsibility and trust inherent in his Companionship, will quickly do so.  This "adapt or be marginalized" dynamic is nothing new to the SCA's existing peerages, to which individuals so elevated are often held by themselves or others to be lacking in one peerage quality or another.  Such individuals either rise to the occasion, or they do not.  So, too, would it be with a new peerage initially comprising the active White Scarves.  As such, this should not be an impediment.  I openly assert that the overall level of commitment, skill, scholarship, and virtue embodied by the collective Orders of the White Scarf rival that of any existing peerage.
 
Preservation of the current structure, traditions, and mythos of the SCA's rapier community in the implementation of a proposed rapier peerage is, by far, in the best interest of rapier.  As importantly, it is in keeping with previous SCA peerage implementation precedent, which should not be set aside due to the perceived complexity of the implementation task.  Such implementation as I have described above is quite "doable," despite requiring significant cross-Kingdom coordination and possibly the temporary relaxation of a few corporate policies.  In the end, I believe it is the right thing to do.
 
 [1] SCA Census MMX, p. 5.

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

You can never go back...


I live in Meridies. 

Before that I lived in Ansteorra. 

Before that: Meridies, Ansteorra, Meridies, Drachenwald (when it was part of the East), and Meridies. 

Before that, Novgorod. 

I was born in Novgorod, the Northern principality of what is now (but was not then) Russia.  At some point--and the why's and specifics are unnecessary--I left the land of my birth and wound up here in Meridies ((the first time…, in 1982, when I started in the SCA)).  I have not, since that time, taken up residence in Novgorod, or any other part of the Rus lands.  I do not hold lands there, and trouble myself very little with that land's goings on, except for the bits I pick up from others who once lived there, whom I encounter here in the Laurel Kingdoms.

I am not sure how I could manage to live all the way back there, anyway, (like I could ever convince my lady wife to tolerate that much snow!) and still make it to tournaments and courts and revels here in Meridies.  It takes many weeks to accomplish even part of the trip, if I even knew how to get back.

And how would I explain one sovereign to the other?  Rus traditions are certainly more relaxed than those in Western Europe.  I could leave service to one Prince or magnate, shift allegiance to another, and still keep the land I was given by the first.  The ways of the Laurel Kingdoms are even more relaxed.  Nonetheless, I cannot bring myself to pledge my service and fealty to a Meridian King while at the same time espousing similar devotion to a French or English King or claiming to hold lands from a Turkish Emir or a Grand Prince in Tver'. 

No, that doesn’t make sense for (to) me.., temporally or feudally or any-way-ally.

No, I live here in Meridies, full time, with my family and all the retainers, troops, and tenants befitting my station, in my fortified chalet overlooking Altantia’s southern border vale. 

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

There's more to it!


Register some damn heraldry already!

At least adopt and use some consistent heraldry, even if you decide not to register it.  Squatter's rights, or common law registration, or something!

You have no business in an Order of Merit--let alone a peerage Order if you haven't seen fit to get your "estate" in order. If the decision were mine to make, I wouldn't let you enter Crown tournament without registered or "common law" arms.

It's called Franchise, and it is a virtue of chivalry.  Look it up.  Do it.

Being a hot blade or mindless autocrat drone or mad Elizabethan seamstress or [instert other obsessive gig here] shouldn't be enough.  Round yourself out in all the the other aspects, as well.  That includes heraldry. 

Hell, in Meridies your AOA charter/scroll directly charges you to develop and register the arms your King just awarded you.  I'll bet other Kingdoms do the same or similar.

Obey your King. 

Get off your ass and register some damn heraldry, already!

There.., tongue removed from cheek.