Table of Contents

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Table of Contents 9th Edition Caid Kingdom Seneschal’s Handbook Kingdom of Caid Branch Seneschals’ Handbook This the branch Seneschal’s manual of the Kingdom of Caid, published for the citizens of Caid of the Society of Creative Anachronism, Inc. (SCA) It is not a publication of the SCA, Inc. and does not delineate SCA policy. 9th Edition Caid Kingdom Seneschal’s Handbook Acknowledgements This 9th edition of the Kingdom of Caid Seneschal's Handbook was prepared at the behest of Master David of Caithness, Seneschal of the Kingdom of Caid, by Countess Leonora Morgana, with the invaluable assistance of Messer Giuseppe Francesco da Borgia. Information was compiled from the Governing Documents of the SCA, Caid Kingdom Law, the Society Seneschal's Handbook (SCA, 2005) and previous editions of the Caidan Seneschal's Handbook. Previous editions of the Seneschal's Handbook were written by Duke Jason Griffiths of Shadowhyrst, Master Colin Wynthorpe, Duchess Neptha of Thebes, Mistress Xena Baxter Wynthorpe, Viscountess Caitriona ni Bhriain, Baronesse Cara Michelle du Valier, and Baron Rowen Killian. My heartfelt thanks to all of these hard working Caidan Seneschals! On behalf of all past Seneschals, I would like to thank you for your time and interest in being a Seneschal of Caid. May good fortune and prosperity attend all your endeavors. 9th Edition Caid Kingdom Seneschal’s Handbook Table of Contents Kingdom of Caid............................................................................................................. i Introduction....................................................................................................................1 Chapter 1 ........................................................................................................................ 2 What is the Seneschalate? .............................................................................................. 2 A. Qualifications ............................................................................................................ 2 B. Where does all this leave you as Seneschal?........................................................... 3 Chapter 2 ........................................................................................................................ 5 Office Structure............................................................................................................... 5 A. The Board of Directors (BoD) ................................................................................. 5 1. About the BoD:............................................................................................................................... 5 2. Your Input to the BoD:................................................................................................................... 5 B. SCA officers............................................................................................................... 5 1. Kingdom and branch officers: ........................................................................................................ 5 2. The Crown:..................................................................................................................................... 6 3. The Crown Prince and Princess:..................................................................................................... 6 4. The Landed Baronage:.................................................................................................................... 6 Chapter 3 ........................................................................................................................ 8 Legalities and Procedures............................................................................................... 8 A. Legal matters: ........................................................................................................... 8 1. Legal Representation:..................................................................................................................... 8 2. Contracts:........................................................................................................................................ 8 3. Age of Majority:............................................................................................................................. 9 4. The Law:......................................................................................................................................... 9 5. Weapons:........................................................................................................................................ 9 6. Copyrights: ................................................................................................................................... 10 7. Alcohol:........................................................................................................................................ 10 8. Youth Officers and Background Checks: ..................................................................................... 11 B. Group status ............................................................................................................ 12 1. New Branch Application: ............................................................................................................. 12 2. Group Suspension:........................................................................................................................ 13 Chapter 4 ...................................................................................................................... 14 Branch Office Operations............................................................................................. 14 A. Administration:....................................................................................................... 14 B. Deputies/Staff:......................................................................................................... 14 C. Officers: ................................................................................................................... 15 1. Warrants: ...................................................................................................................................... 15 2. Kingdom chain of command: .......................................................................................................16 3. Local chain of command: ............................................................................................................. 16 D. Meetings: ................................................................................................................. 16 E. Financial Committee: ............................................................................................. 17 9th Edition Caid Kingdom Seneschal’s Handbook F. Communications: .................................................................................................... 18 1. Your Input (Award Recommendations): ...................................................................................... 18 2. Paperwork:.................................................................................................................................... 18 3. Letters:.......................................................................................................................................... 18 4. E-Mail/Electronic Communication:.............................................................................................. 19 5. Telephone: .................................................................................................................................... 20 6. Handling the Media: ..................................................................................................................... 20 G. Staying out of trouble:........................................................................................... 22 H. Organizing Yourself:............................................................................................. 23 1. Burnout:........................................................................................................................................ 24 2. Removal From the Job.................................................................................................................. 25 Chapter 5 ...................................................................................................................... 26 General Operations....................................................................................................... 26 A. Types of Events:...................................................................................................... 26 1. Kingdom Events:.......................................................................................................................... 26 2. Kingdom Sanctioned Events: ....................................................................................................... 26 3. Interkingdom SCA Events:........................................................................................................... 26 4. General event information:........................................................................................................... 27 B. Event Bids:............................................................................................................... 27 C. Event Stewarding: .................................................................................................. 28 D. Calendar Date Request/Change Forms:..............................................................
Recommended publications
  • Critical Analysis of the Roles of Women in the Lais of Marie De France
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 1976 Critical analysis of the roles of women in the Lais of Marie de France Jeri S. Guthrie The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Guthrie, Jeri S., "Critical analysis of the roles of women in the Lais of Marie de France" (1976). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 1941. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/1941 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE ROLES OF WOMEN IN THE LAIS OF MARIE DE FRANCE By Jeri S. Guthrie B.A., University of Montana, 1972 Presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts UNIVERSITY OF MONTANA 1976 Approved by: Chairmah, Board of Exami iradua4J^ School [ Date UMI Number EP35846 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. UMT OissHEH'tfttkffl Pk^islw^ UMI EP35846 Published by ProQuest LLC (2012).
    [Show full text]
  • Accounting in the Thirteenth Century Manuscripts on Estate Management Robert M
    The Accounting Historians Notebook Volume 17 Article 5 Number 1 Spring 1994 1994 Accounting in the thirteenth century manuscripts on estate management Robert M. Kozub Follow this and additional works at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aah_notebook Part of the Accounting Commons, and the Taxation Commons Recommended Citation Kozub, Robert M. (1994) "Accounting in the thirteenth century manuscripts on estate management," The Accounting Historians Notebook: Vol. 17 : No. 1 , Article 5. Available at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/aah_notebook/vol17/iss1/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Archival Digital Accounting Collection at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in The Accounting Historians Notebook by an authorized editor of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Kozub: Accounting in the thirteenth century manuscripts on estate management ACCOUNTING IN THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY MANUSCRIPTS ON ESTATE MANAGEMENT by Robert M. Kozub University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee References to the accounting system Walter of Henley used for manors are contained in three early Due to a boom in farming during the thir­ manuscripts on estate management. These teenth century, a shortage of manorial clerk early manuscripts dealt with husbandry, and auditors developed. To alleviate this that is, the wise use of resources, and were shortage, formal accounting instruction addressed to the lords of the estate. Each began to be taught at Oxford University manuscript provided practical hints intend­ (Chatfield, 1974, p.28). An instructor at ed to aid individuals in the management of Oxford University during this period, their business affairs. Although the institu­ Walter of Henley, wrote a treatise on hus­ tions and practices referred to in these man­ bandry (Circa 1221) which contained a sec­ uscripts have long since passed away, these tion on manorial accounting (Power, 1934, treatises provide a fairly complete picture of p.
    [Show full text]
  • The Nationality of Men-At-Arms Serving in English Armies In
    The Nationality Of Men-at-Arms se rving in English Armies in Normandy and the pays de conquete, 1415-1450: A Preliminary Survey Anne Curry University of Reading This article is based on a computer.-assisted study of muster rolls of the armies with which Henry V and Henry VI invaded and occupied Northern France in the first half of the fifteenth century. At the time of writing, the database contains 50,000 entries derived from almost all the rolls known to survive, but is restricted to those described therein as either mounted or foot men-at-arms. I Men-at-arms constituted about 25% of the total number of military effectives. with archers making up the remainder. Evidence from the contrerol/es of English garrisons in Normandy suggests that there was very little interchange of personnel between the archers and the men-at-arms. Even so, the conclusions reached in this article must be regarded as limited (in that they are specific to the men-at-arms) and tentative (in that the database and research is not yet complete). It is hoped, however, that they will provide some useful preliminary observations re lating to the nationality of those serving in English royal armies in this period. The surviving documentation facilitates investigation of three aspects. First, we can identify government policy towards the service of soldiers of non-English origin, and the consequent attempts to record nationality on the muster rolls. Secondly, we can note the nat.ionalities so recorded, and comment on the patterns of military service of foreign troops in English pay.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 24: Feudal Society, 700 AD
    0364-0379 CH24-846240 11/22/02 9:00 AM Page 364 UNIT The Late 8 Middle Ages Equator ᭢ Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, France 120°E 60° E 60° 180° 60° W 180° 0° Prime Meridian 120°W ᭡ Stained-glass image of a knight 850 A.D. 1000 A.D. 1066 A.D. 1096 A.D. Feudalism Towns and trade routes William the Conqueror wins Crusades begin begins develop in Europe the Battle of Hastings 364 0364-0379 CH24-846240 12/10/02 2:06 PM Page 365 TM Organizing Information Study Foldable Make the following foldable to help you organize information about the changes that occurred during the late Middle Ages. Step 1 Fold two sheets of paper in Step 2 Place glue or tape 1 half from top to bottom. along both ⁄2 inch tabs. Reading and Writing As you read Fold both sheets to leave the unit, list the 1 2 inch tab developments that on top. occurred in western Europe during the late Middle Ages. Write the developments under the correct foldable Roman category. Step 3 Fit both sheets of paper Step 4 Turn the Catholic Church together to make a cube as shown. cube and label Feudalism the foldable as shown. Strong Trade National and Governments Towns PRIMARY SOURCES LibraryLibrary See pages 688–689 for other primary source readings to accompany Unit 8. Read “Plan for a Crusade” from the World History Primary Source Document Library CD-ROM. Journal Notes What was life like during the late Middle Ages? Note details about it as you read.
    [Show full text]
  • A.Horn Dissertation (Deposit)
    Presumption and Despair: The figure of Bernard in Middle English imaginative literature Adam Tyler Horn Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy under the Executive Committee of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2021 © 2021 Adam Tyler Horn All Rights Reserved Abstract Presumption and Despair: The figure of Bernard in Middle English imaginative literature Adam Tyler Horn This dissertation pursues two distinct but parallel projects in relation to the work of Bernard of Clairvaux and Middle English imaginative literature. First, I argue for a Bernardine anagogical lens as a way to better understand the deepest theological commitments and most distinctive formal innovations of certain key Middle English literary texts, especially Piers Plowman and The Canterbury Tales. Second, I outline a more genealogical project, tracing the figure of Bernard as it is explicitly invoked in widely circulated Middle English works including Piers, The Parson’s Tale, and the Prick of Conscience. These two threads connect to suggest that the work of Bernard of Clairvaux can offer a new way to understand the relationship between theological and literary texts in the late Middle Ages. Because Bernard’s influence in the vernacular is as much as matter of style as of content, it requires a more capacious way of theorizing the theological implications and even motivations of literary form. The “figure of Bernard” acts as a cipher for later works to explore their deepest intellectual preoccupations, and makes it possible to trace the way they imagine the anagogical interval between the presence and absence of Christ, the over- and under-estimation of the presence of eternity in time.
    [Show full text]
  • D. Heirbaut, the Precursors of the Earliest Law Reports on the Continent As Sources About
    1 PLEASE NOTE This is a draft paper only and should not be cited without the author’s express permission PROVISIONAL TEXT The precursors of the earliest law reports on the continent as sources about the spokesmen, the forgotten experts of customary law D. Heirbaut (Ghent University) A. The problem: the experts of customary are largely unknown to us Legal historians studying customary law in Northern France, the Low Countries and Germany can only be envious of their colleagues working about the ius commune or the early history of the common law. Both of the latter can identify the makers of the law they study, whether these are legislators, professors, notaries, judges, serjeants, attorneys or advocates. Hundreds of their names have come to us and, even if this is not always easy, one can identify their contribution to the development of law. Some of them have even become famous for it and have added a certain ‘star quality’ to the history of the law they created. Continental customary law is different because it lacks these names. True, a few of them, like Beaumanoir1 or Eike von Repgow have become household names amongst legal historians,2 but these few make us even more aware of the fact that we do not know much about their colleagues. Here, one can quote Susan Reynolds about Eike: “He was what I would call an expert, and he cannot have been the only one in Germany to have gained his legal expertise in courts rather than in schools.”3 Abbreviatons used: ADN, B: Archives départementales du Nord (Lille), Series B; Cassel: DE COUSSEMAKER, E., ‘Loy et jugemens des hommes de le baillie de Cassel’, in: Sources du droit public et coutumier de la Flandre maritime, Annales du comité flamand de France, 11 (1873), 204-219 ; HFl: HAUTCOEUR, E., Cartulaire de l’abbaye de Flines, Lille, 1873, 2 vol.
    [Show full text]
  • Economic and Social Conditions in France During the 18Th Century
    Economic and Social Conditions in France During the Eighteenth Century Henri Sée Professor at the University of Rennes Translated by Edwin H. Zeydel Batoche Books Kitchener 2004 Originally Published 1927 Translation of La France Économique et Sociale Au XVIIIe Siècle This edition 2004 Batoche Books [email protected] Contents Introduction ...................................................................................................................5 Chapter 1: Land Property; its Distribution. The Population of France ........................10 Chapter 2: The Peasants and Agriculture ..................................................................... 17 Chapter 3: The Clergy .................................................................................................. 38 Chapter 4: The Nobility ................................................................................................50 Chapter 5: Parliamentary Nobility and Administrative Nobility ....................................65 Chapter 6: Petty Industry. The Trades and Guilds.......................................................69 Chapter 7: Commercial Development in the Eighteenth Century ................................. 77 Chapter 8: Industrial Development in the Eighteenth Century ...................................... 86 Chapter 9: The Classes of Workmen and Merchants................................................... 95 Chapter 10: The Financiers ........................................................................................ 103 Chapter 11: High and Middle
    [Show full text]
  • Emotion, Space, and Place in Middle High German Courtly Literature Around 1200
    LOCATING FEELING: EMOTION, SPACE, AND PLACE IN MIDDLE HIGH GERMAN COURTLY LITERATURE AROUND 1200 Nicolay Ostrau A dissertation submitted to the faculty of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures. Chapel Hill 2011 Approved by: Kathryn Starkey Jonathan Hess Clayton Koelb Ann Marie Rasmussen Brett Whalen ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS A doctoral dissertation is never the work of one individual. I am forever indebted to the many people who made it possible for me to complete this project. I am most especially grateful to my advisor, Kathryn Starkey, for her extraordinary guidance, her remarkable support and her unlimited patience. I am equally grateful to Ann Marie Rasmussen for her invaluable advice, encouragement, and faith in this project. This project also benefitted greatly from the expertise of the other members of my dissertation committee, Jonathan Hess, Clayton Koelb, and Brett Whalen. Their encouragement and support for this project were invaluable. I am no less grateful to Haiko Wandhoff, Horst and Edith Wenzel, and Janice Koelb who helped me to think about this project in new ways. I am also greatly indebted to my wife, Colleen, and my children, Jonas and Emma, for their sacrifices and unbroken optimism. Last but not least, I am thankful for the support from the faculty, staff, and graduate students of the German programs at UNC-Chapel Hill and Duke University who shared this incredible journey. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION Spatial Practices of Emotion in Middle High German Texts (1200) 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Henry II and Ganelon
    Syracuse Scholar (1979-1991) Volume 4 Issue 1 Syracuse Scholar Spring 1983 Article 4 1983 Henry II and Ganelon Paul R. Hyams Follow this and additional works at: https://surface.syr.edu/suscholar Part of the Medieval History Commons Recommended Citation Hyams, Paul R. (1983) "Henry II and Ganelon," Syracuse Scholar (1979-1991): Vol. 4 : Iss. 1 , Article 4. Available at: https://surface.syr.edu/suscholar/vol4/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by SURFACE. It has been accepted for inclusion in Syracuse Scholar (1979-1991) by an authorized editor of SURFACE. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hyams: Henry II and Ganelon Henry II and Ganelon Paul R. Hyams nee upon a time, there was a king of Nantes, called Equitan, 0 a good and courteous ruler, filled with a proper enthusiasm for princely things: Equitan had a seneschal, a good knight, brave and loyal, who took care ofhis landfor him, governed and administered it. Unless the king was making war, he would never, no matter what the emergency, neglect his hunting, his hawking or other amusements. 1 [lines 21-28] In time Equitan fell in love with his seneschal's wife and seduced her, while the ''seneschal sat in court, trying pleas and accusations.'' Now these two illicit lovers came to a hot and sticky end. The wronged Paul R. Hyams was educated at Ox­ husband killed the couple by upending them in a tub of boiling water ford University and is now a fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford.
    [Show full text]
  • The Gift-Giving Objectives of Duke Philip the Bold of Burgundy
    THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN TREE: THE GIFT-GIVING OBJECTIVES OF DUKE PHILIP THE BOLD OF BURGUNDY CAROL M. CHATTAWAY Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History, University College London 2004 UMI Number: U591666 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Dissertation Publishing UMI U591666 Published by ProQuest LLC 2013. Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest LLC 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 DECLARATION THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN TREE; THE GIFT-GIVING OBJECTIVES OF DUKE PHILP THE BOLD OF BURGUNDY CAROL M. CHATTAWAY Thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of History, University College London, 2004 I hereby declare that the work presented in this thesis is my own, and has not been undertaken as part of a wider investigation, or with any other researcher. CAROL M. CHATTAWAY ABSTRACT OF THESIS THE ORDER OF THE GOLDEN TREE: THE GIFT-GIVING OBJECTIVES OF DUKE PHILIP THE BOLD OF BURGUNDY This thesis explores the policy objectives underlying the gift of this Order, to sixty men, on jjanuary^T] 1403. Drawing primarily on Philip's household accounts, it undertakes complementary iconographical and prosopographical analyses (of the Order insignia's nature, form, materials, design and motto; and of distinguishing common features in recipients' careers, strengths, relationships with Philip, and activities in 1402-3), refined by reference to his policy concerns around the occasion of its bestowal, rigorously to test seven hypotheses.
    [Show full text]
  • Imagined Geographies and the Production of Space in Occitània and Northern Catalunya in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
    Imagined Geographies and the Production of Space in Occitània and Northern Catalunya in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries by Jonathan C. Farr A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History) in the University of Michigan 2016 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Diane Owen Hughes, Chair Associate Professor Hussein Anwar Fancy Professor Elizabeth L. Sears Professor Paolo Squatriti 1 © Jonathan C. Farr 2016 Acknowledgments The project that would become this dissertation began in a seminar on “Medieval Cities” with my adviser, Diane Owen Hughes, to whom I owe a great debt. Her advice at every stage of my graduate career has been tremendously helpful and her confidence in the project—and in my ideas and their written expression—was unwavering, even when mine was lacking. The other members of my committee also deserve thanks; Hussein Fancy, Paolo Squatriti, and Betsy Sears each provided invaluable feedback and have influenced my research, writing, and teaching (always for the better) over the course of my time at the University of Michigan. I would also like to recognize Peggy McCracken, Ray Van Dam, Christian de Pee, and Katherine French for their encouragement and advice, and Tom Green and Tom Willette for organizing the Premodern Colloquium, where part of this dissertation was workshopped. Portions of my research were presented at the Eisenberg Institute for Historical Studies, where I was a graduate fellow, and I would especially like to thank Greg Parker there. My fellow graduate students have always been generous both in devoting their time and intellect to reflecting on my project and in giving of their friendship.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 18: the Franks, 400 A.D
    0274-0287 CH18-846240 11/16/02 10:10 AM Page 274 CHAPTER The Franks 18 400 A.D.–843 A.D. ᭡ Frankish jewelry A bronze statue of Charlemagne on horseback ᭤ 481 A.D. 711 A.D. 732 A.D. 800 A.D. 843 A.D. Clovis is chosen Arab Muslims Battle of Tours Charlemagne Treaty of Verdun king of the Franks conquer Spain crowned emperor 274 UNIT 6 THE EARLY MIDDLE AGES 0274-0287 CH18-846240 11/1/02 11:03 AM Page 275 Chapter Focus Read to Discover Chapter Overview Visit the Human Heritage Web site • How Clovis united the Franks and brought them at humanheritage.glencoe.com Christianity. and click on Chapter 18— • How Charles Martel’s defeat of the Arabs kept western Chapter Overviews to preview Europe Christian. this chapter. • How Charlemagne brought all of western Europe under his rule. • What life was like in Charlemagne’s empire. • Why Charlemagne’s empire collapsed. Terms to Learn People to Know Places to Locate converted Clovis Paris anointed Charles Martel Tours counts Pepin Aachen lords Charlemagne serfs Roland minstrels Louis the Pious Why It’s Important The decline of the Roman Empire led to disorder everywhere in western Europe. Many of the Germanic invaders were too weak to govern well. As a result, towns and villages fell into ruin. Roads and bridges were not repaired. Robbers roamed the countryside, making it unsafe for travel- ers. Trading and business slowed down, and there were short- ages of food and other goods. People were no longer interested in learning, and many books and works of art were damaged or lost.
    [Show full text]