Som-Per-Ideas-art - 12/31/02 "Some Persona Ideas" by by HL Elaine de Montgris (known as 'Lainie). For a good set of bibliographies useful for 12th Century personas, see the files in THE-12TH-CENTURY section, also by Lainie. NOTE: See also the files: persona-msg, Persona-f-Beg-art, Vikng-Persona-wsh, Easy-Persona-art, Persona-Build-art, persona-art. ************************************************************************ NOTICE - This file is a collection of various messages having a common theme that I have collected from my reading of the various computer networks. Some messages date back to 1989, some may be as recent as yesterday. This file is part of a collection of files called Stefan's Florilegium. These files are available on the Internet at: http://www.florilegium.org I have done a limited amount of editing. Messages having to do with separate topics were sometimes split into different files and sometimes extraneous information was removed. For instance, the message IDs were removed to save space and remove clutter. The comments made in these messages are not necessarily my viewpoints. I make no claims as to the accuracy of the information given by the individual authors. Please respect the time and efforts of those who have written these messages. The copyright status of these messages is unclear at this time. If information is published from these messages, please give credit to the originator(s). Thank you, Mark S. Harris AKA: THLord Stefan li Rous Stefan at florilegium.org ************************************************************************ Date: Fri, 10 May 2002 14:05:16 -0700 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Unique persona ideas- was Re: [Sca-cooks] Japanese Ok folks, this is part of my list. As usual, the caveat 'My notes/books/etc.' are 180 miles away. This is what I scribbled down at Stefan's goading last night (and Stefan, you are welcome to lift this if you want. Now, the what's and why's: Moorish Spain- Of course, you can be a Moor, but I'm interested in the offbeat. Jews in Moorish Spain had rather interesting lives. They were relatively unmolested by the Arab authorities, and while they had to pay the fines and taxes for not being Moslem, they were allowed to practice thier own religion fairly consistently (as always there were occasional exceptions). They were much valued by the Arabs as doctors and scientists, and of course, as Bankers. Christians in Andulasia had similar lives- higher taxes and able to practice their religion *unless* they attempted to proselytize, in which case they were in deep trouble. Because of the heavy tax situation, quite a number of Christians made a nominal conversion to get out from under the financial burden (in fact a girlfriend of mine had this persona for awhile, till she dropped out and married an Englishman to live happy ever after...). Moorish Spain (aka Andulasia) was a seriously cool place- very civilized, clean cities, lighted streets, INCREDIBLE ARTS, and best of all- LIBRARIES! The library at Cordoba was a worldwide center of learning (and guess who destroyed it? Not the Moors...). Basques- Almost never see them done, and they're pretty cool. An area ripe for research. And a great place for someone who wants to be in the middle of everything but not necessarily part of it... County of Toulouse, esp. 12th-13th c, and particularly (I think) during the commune years in the late 12th. The Good Men of Toulouse set up something very like a city-state and it ran remarkably well, until Raymond (which one? Dunno- pick a Raymond, any Raymond) decided he didn't like it (they were using tax monies for civic inmprovements instead of giving him all the cash) so he borrowed an army from the Pope, took his own city, and hung the council of Good Men (Nice guy, yes?) That's the short form- there's more of course. But I think Toulouse is fascinating. Southern France on the whole- 12th-13th CATHARS! Ok- there was some persecution intermittently until well into the 13th century (Mostly when Raymond was hacked off at his Barons and he'd ask the Pope for an army, and the Pope says 'Smack those Cathars and you've got it' so he did. Problem is that the Northern French fighters he imported wanted to stay, and they wanted land...). For the most part, the Cathars were a substantial minority and in some places even a majority. As to using them as a persona, I would suggest that the life of a perfecti (their highest clergy, strict vegan diet, no sex at all ever, just intinerant preaching) would not work in the SCA context. But the believers, that is, the jay random Cathar, led pretty standard lives. (I suggest the work of Zoe Oldernbourg for an overall, and Ladurie for the very late Cathar remnant). *Food content*- it seems that while the prefecti were vegans, the rank and file Cathars ate a moderate vegetarian or even light omnivorous diet, unless they wanted to rise in the ranks of the clergy, in which case nothing that came of sexual reproduction, meat, milk, eggs, etc, was eaten. (They didn't understand plant propagation to be sexual). Merovingian France- major cool. Before Charlemagne, of course. Kings rising and falling all over Fortune's wheel! Occasional raids from the friendly neighborhood Gothas and Vandals ("Clotilde! Someone painted Saxon words on our barn! And there's privay paper in the trees!" "Damn Vandals. Can't they leave a decent villa alone?") keep things exciting when the nobility aren't killing each other. And for guys with long hair- this is perfect. They don't call it the Age of the Long-Haired Kings for nothing. But the women- they have it all over! Bloodthirsty? Boy-Howdy! Fredegunde and Brunhilde were busy killing each other's children and grandchildren for decades (Brunhilde's grandson finally got the old battle-axe). And some of the names are really nifty... Lombards- sitting in the foothills at the top of Italy, they controlled a lot of traffic for a long time. Not friendly either. But they have thier own laws (I have a copy- miraculously in the bookshelf here) and while considered a barbarian tribe for some time, they were hardly barbaric. One of the royal house was married briefly to Charlemagne. I highly recommend the period from about 500-800. Kingdom of the Two Sicilies- one of my favorites. First- Norman Sicily- in the 11th century the Normans turned their ships south, and found territory ripe for conquer. I'd love to see someone tackle it if only to show a different kind of Norman and a different kind of Sicily! Sicily under the Holy Roman Emperor- wow. Especially under Frederick II. Under his rule, three peoples- Christian, Saracen, and Jew- lived in relative peace, much like the earlier regime in Andulasia. The society made major inroads in the study of medicine and other sciences, much due to the availablity of some of the ancient texts. (FredII himself wrote the treatise on falconry). Again, the arts flourished, there were substantial civic improvements such as water and sewr lines, roads, public buildings, etc. And there was mondo amounts of trade going through. Someone with an interest in trade could find a lot to do there! How about western Christians living in the Crusader states? the 12th century crusader kingdoms of Jerusalem, Antioch, Aleppo, Acre, etc, must have been very interesting (if a little unstable) places to be. And the records we have indicate that many a soldier went somewhat 'native', married locally, wore an mix of western and local clothing, ate the local food. Bosnian/Serbian/Albanian/Croatian/Herzogovnian/etc- all very interesting, very convoluted, and there has been quite a lot of work done on them recently... Don't see many Swiss. Wonder why? Ooh- there are other interesting heretics besides the Cathars. How about: Lollards early 16th c Protestants Waldensians Huegenots (sp?) and there's more... For someone who is single and not looking, a clerical persona could be fun. Father Abelard is Dominican, he has a tall friend who is Franciscan (IIRC), and there are all sorts of interesting orders. Something interesting for women are the Beguines- the sort of nuns that you find in the Low Countries and Northern France. Semi-cloistered, they did a great deal of nursing and needlework and such, and were not under vows if they managed to find a husband, though life in the beguinage was pretty strict (not a bad idea for a couple of teenaged girls I know...). And of course they were poius, and had an intersting tendency to have visions. I'd like to see someone take a real run at a Lithuanian persona- that could be interesting. Or Anatolian. Or Manx, or Orkney. Visigoth Spain? (They were Arian heretics and pretty interesting themselves.) It's a start... 'Lainie Date: Fri, 10 May 2002 15:04:36 -0700 To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org From: "Laura C. Minnick" Subject: Re: Unique persona ideas- was Re: [Sca-cooks] Japanese >A response, will provide better book cites privately if requested:> Nifty! I'm just adding a couple notes- >> Moorish Spain- >Read "The Rise and Fall of Paradise" Cool. My book is... you know. >> Southern France on the whole- 12th-13th CATHARS! > >Read "The Promised Land of Error" This is the Ladurie. My only problems with him are: He is writing very late (early 14th c.) and things have changed substantively since the 12th c, both in conditions and in teh practice of the faith. Too many people take his book as though it were the definitive view of the whole movement. T'ain't. Also- he bases most of his work not on the writings of the Cathars (as in earlier works), but on the records left by the Inquisitors, and what the Cathars in Montaillou said when questioned. Interesting, but not the whole picture. What would _you_ say if you were being questioned in similar circumstances? Modern studies on such have given discouraging results. Terrified people will say _anything_. Not that I am totally discounting the work, but I think Ladurie serious lacks balance. (Yes, I had to do a conference paper on Cathar family relationships- I know a little about them.) >> Kingdom of the Two Sicilies- one of my favorites. > >Read "The Normal Fate". I highly recommend reading a bio on FredII. He was an amazing man. >A question, what did they serve up for Vespers in Sicily? > >> How about western Christians living in the Crusader states? the 12th >> century crusader kingdoms of Jerusalem, Antioch, Aleppo, Acre, etc, must >> have been very interesting (if a little unstable) places to be. And the >> records we have indicate that many a soldier went somewhat 'native', >> married locally, wore an mix of western and local clothing, ate the local >> food. > >Read "A History of the Crusades" by Runciman followed by "Arab Historians of >the Crusades" and "The Moslem Discovery of Europe" Runciman gives an overview. Zoe Oldenbourg's _The Crusades_ devotes most of the book to the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, and to the rather nasty infighting between the petty princes. If they had just been able to stop squabbling, they could have held out much longer. But nooooo... The um... (searching memory- search complete) _The Crusades through Arab eyes_ is based on contemporary accounts and is quite useful for Saracen personas. But I would dearly love to see a good book on Queen Melissande of Jerusalem... This is definitely one of those days that I wish I and my library were in the same place... 'Lainie Edited by Mark S. Harris Som-Per-Ideas-art Page 5 of 5