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- From: doconnor@sedona.intel.com (Dennis O'Connor)
- Newsgroups: rec.org.sca
- Subject: Re: Heraldic questions...
- Date: 1 Jan 93 10:51:45
- Organization: Intel i960(tm) Architecture
- Lines: 85
- Message-ID: <DOCONNOR.93Jan1105145@potato.sedona.intel.com>
- References: <725862425.F00007@ocitor.fidonet>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: potato.intel.com
- In-reply-to: Tim@f4229.n124.z1.fidonet.org's message of Thu, 31 Dec 1992 18:27:55
-
-
- Tim@f4229.n124.z1.fidonet.org (Tim) writes:
- ] Hans Rancke wrote:
- ] > I'd very much like to know what culture you define medieval
- ] > Scandinavia to be part of.
- ]
- ] Barbarian fringe, like the Arabs and the Slavs (and quite a few of the
- ] Germans), with 'western culture' gradually seeping in on the backs of
- ] Christian missionaries (oops, sorry, used the C-word by mistake...).
-
- You've got a strangley inverted picture of Euro-Arab interchange.
- And I can't imagine why you'd consider Arabs "barbarians".
-
- It was Islam that preserved the classical texts of Greek and Rome
- that became the foundation of Mideaval philosophy [ philosophic
- debate in the Middle Ages was usually definitively settled by
- finding out what the Ancient Philosophers though, even within
- the Holy Roman Catholic Church]. It was Islam that developed the
- number system that made efficient commerce possible. Saying
- "western culture" came "gradually seeping" into Islam is exactly
- the opposite of what really happened : contact between the Europeans
- and Islam was a major factor in ending the European Dark Ages.
-
- What Arabs mainly learned from Europe were the atrocities religous
- fanatics were happy to commit against their fellow humans. Of course,
- if the Europeans hadn't taught them, the Mongols would have.
-
- ] HR> All this sounds (to me) very much like you've decided what
- ] HR> result you want beforehand and then tailored your definitions to fit your
- ] HR> desires.
- ]
- ] No, my desires are much narrower. "South of the Trent, north of the Loire,
- ] west of the Rhine."
-
- Why ? Was there some kind of force-field or Great Wall there that prevented
- the interchange of goods, ideas and culture across them ?
-
- ] HR> Germany and Scandinavia were very much part of western culture.
- ]
- ] Only in the same way that the Mongols were very much a part of Asian
- ] culture.
-
- Considering they ruled most of it, I don't see your point. There's a
- lot more to Mongols than you suspect, I think, or you wouldn't say this.
-
- ] HR> > The College of Arms (to a lesser extent than I do) focuses on the
- ] HR> > practices of the "core" of feudal civilization: south of the Trent,
- ] HR> > north of the Loire, west of the Rhine.
- ]
- ] HR> I should like some evidence to support the contention that the area you
- ] HR> describe is somehow the core of feudal civilization.
- ]
- ] Marc Bloch, *Feudal Society*", esp. c. XIII "General Survey of Europe".
- ] Feudalism developed its highest forms feeding on the fragments of the
- ] Carolingian empire; [...]
-
- Why should the SCA care how fuedal a place was ? Venice wasn't fuedal,
- nor were the Dutch, yet excluding them from "mideaval Western Culture"
- seems insane.
-
- Feudalism isn't the cornerstone of the SCA anyway. The Chivalric Ideal
- more likely is. [end seriousness] Of course, "chivalry" is derived from
- the French for horse if I remember correct, so it seems Intuitively Obvious
- to me that Chivalry is "the Ideals of Those With Horses". And NOBODY
- had more horses than Mongols, who typically had four horses for
- every soldier in the Army, and within whose culture every man, woman
- and child older than 5 could ride. Therefor, it seems to me that if we
- really want to practice Chivalry we should all be Mongols.
-
- And yes, Mongols did have heavily-armoured soldiers who charged
- around killing people with lances, so people who view knights that
- way can still be happy.
-
- Backwaters like England and Scotland should be ignored. In
- period, they just copied others anyway, and lost most of any
- culture they could have honestly called their own. Anyone who
- takes these statements seriously needs their funny-bone checked.
-
- Back to seriousness : I really do think the Chivalric Ideal is the
- core of the SCA. But it didn't really exist in period, except in
- the popular fiction of the time. This is no reason to eschew it.
- But when we emphasize Courtesy and Chivalry over might-makes-right
- and political double-dealing, we are being very OOP.
- --
- Dennis O'Connor doconnor@sedona.intel.com
-