What is the SCA?
The SCA is the Society for Creative Anachronism, which is a group
dedicated to researching and recreating the Middle Ages in the
present. Many groups meet weekly, and at these meetings we dance,
talk, study, learn, revel, and make plans. But first, let's get
a little bit of info about the SCA in general.
Where did the SCA come from?
The avowed purpose of the SCA is the study and recreation of
the European Middle Ages, its crafts, sciences, arts, traditions,
literature, etc. The SCA "period" is defined to be Western
civilization before 1600 AD, concentrating on the Western European
High Middle Ages. Under the aegis of the SCA we study dance, calligraphy,
martial arts, cooking, metalwork, stained glass, costuming, literature...
well, if they did it, somebody in the SCA does it (except die
of the plague!).
As you can probably guess, the thing that separates the SCA from
a history lesson in school is the active participation
in the learning process. To learn costuming, you design and build
costumes. To learn SCA infantry fighting, you make armour, weapons,
shields, etc., and put them on and go learn how it feels to wear
them when somebody is swinging a (rattan) sword at you.
To learn brewing, you make (and sample!) your own wines, meads
and beers.
You will frequently hear a SCA person describe the SCA as recreating
the Middle Ages "as they ought to have been." In some
ways this is true -- we have few plagues, indoor plumbing, few
peasants. In the dead of winter we have other things to eat than
King's venison, salt pork and dried tubers. However, a better
description is that we selectively recreate medieval culture,
choosing elements of the culture that interest and attract us.
The SCA was started in 1966 in Berkeley, California by a group
of science fiction and fantasy fans who wanted a theme party.
Following the party, a group got together to discuss the idea
of a medieval re-creation and re-enactment group (which has
ended up being much like the Civil War, Revolutionary War or Buck-skinning
re-enactment groups that were beginning to form in the US).
In Britain, medieval and British Civil War recreation societies
had existed for any number of years. The Californians incorporated
as a non-profit educational society, started forming groups, and
away they went.
Since 1966, the society has grown to include over 24,000 paying
members in the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, Sweden, Finland,
Germany, Italy, Greece, Romania, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa
and Australia. Many of us guess that for every dues-paying member,
there are three or four other active participants.
How is the SCA Organized?
The SCA is a feudal society. The SCA "Knowne World"
is divided into seventeen Kingdoms, each with a King and Queen
(who rule by right of arms), a Prince and Princess (heirs to
the throne), and a council or Curia of Great Officers who
handle the day to day business of running the kingdom.
A feudal society takes its form from the idea of service and
duty. A noble owes duty of service to his lord, who might be a
Baron or Knight. In return, his lord owes protection from danger,
and food, money, etc., when times are bad. For his own part, the
lord owes fealty (the word that encompasses this idea of reciprocal
responsibilities) to his own overlord, and so on up the ladder
to the King. In return for their service as good stewards of the
land and readily available warriors, the King owes Knights, Barons,
and other high nobles protection, honor, and a return of money,
food, etc., in times of hardship. It is something like the idea
of a Pyramid club, but the benefits are greater and the idea of
personal honor and mutual responsibility, not profit, tie the
structure together (or at least it did in Europe for nearly
a thousand years).
In the SCA this structure underlies our Society, although not
nearly as rigidly as in the medieval days. Our King, the head
of our Kingdom and our liege lord, has fought for in a Crown Tournament
for the right to make his Lady Queen and the right to wear the
crown. Royalty are bound by the laws and customs of the kingdom
and the Society as a whole, but still wield significant power
over their subjects. Of course, four to six months later there
is a new King, with different ideas. Life can get interesting.
Fighting in the SCA, or Why are those people hitting each other?
Fighting in the SCA evolved from what happened when two armed
knights were unhorsed and had to fight on the ground. It resembles
nothing so much as medieval foot tournaments. There are two basic
types of SCA fights: single combat, and group or team battles,
known as melees. SCA fighting does have rules. The first, and
most important rule, is that each and every fighter on the field
has honour. The fighter keeps faith with his honour by accepting
blows that would be killing or wounding (more about this a
little later).
The second basic principle is like the first; A fighter keeps
faith with his brother fighters by acknowledging his opponent's
word -- if he says a blow was too light to cause injury, then
it was light. Since we prefer that no one get hurt, SCA fighting
is done with real armor (made with leather, metal, padding, kydex,
etc) and rattan swords. Rattan is that bamboo-y stuff, only with
a solid core, that furniture is made of. Rattan, surprisingly
enough, is springy enough to absorb some of the force of the blow
(although blows are 'real solid') and light enough to approximate
a real steel sword. Swords are made by wrapping rattan staffs
with strapping tape, covering them with duct tape for aesthetic
reasons, and attaching some sort of crosspiece or guard. Armor
is much more complex -- some armor, being made of steel, rivets,
leather, etc, can take more than 40 hours per piece of armor (for
example, a gauntlet, or armored glove, with moving fingers and
joints can take upwards of 75 hours to complete).
There are several essential and required pieces of armor -- a
helm, and protection for the neck, cervical vertebrae, elbows,
knees, kidneys, hands, and groin. In addition, most SCA fighters
wear chest, leg, arm and forearm, and foot protection.
Before being allowed to participate in combat without close supervision,
each fighter is trained by senior fighters, known as "marshals."
This training aims at ensuring that the fighter is safe to himself
or herself and to others, and typically lasts a few months. As
part of this training, the novice fighter is taught how to recognize
a "good" blow. Each fighter judges whether blows received
in combat strike hard enough to do injury through armor. If the
blow is "good" to an arm or leg, the fighter will give
up use of that limb; if the blow is good to the head or body,
the fighter is "dead," and falls to the ground, signaling
that his opponent is victorious. At the end of training, each
fighter must prove to a panel of marshals that he is competent
to fight on his own. If the panel decides the fighter is safe
(not good, you understand, but unlikely to hurt him or herself
or an opponent) they authorized him or her to fight in tournaments.
This process (from starting to fight to being authorized)
can take from a couple of months to a year or more.
Why Do you all have such funny names?
Every person in the SCA picks a name to use in the Society. It
could be something simple and familiar (John of Wardcliff)
or something elaborate and exotic (Oisin Dubh mac Lochlainn).
Most people pick a time period in the SCA "period" (pre-1600)
and a country (any place that can documented and proven to
have had trade with western civilization during the period),
and choose a name from that. Some SCA members try to create a
"persona" which could have lived in some time and place
within the scope of the SCA, and fit their garb and activities
to that persona; some people try to live at events as if they
were their personae. Other folk simply pick a name and go ahead
with life if the "Current Middle Ages."
Even our towns have medieval names. Belfast if the Northlands,
Toronto is Eoforwic, London is Thamesreach, the San Francisco
bay area is the Principality of the Mists, etc.
The SCA has its own College of Arms, which assists members in
choosing a registering their SCA names and heraldic devices. The
College of Arms assists members in their research, to ensure that
their names and devices are appropriate to the medieval world
we try to create, and ensures that each person's name and device
will be unique.
Rank in the SCA, or How Come She is Wearing a Crown?
The SCA has an elaborate system of rank, awards, and honors,
which are granted to individual members by the royalty in return
for various kinds of service to the Society. SCA rank is earned,
not inherited: Everyone is presumed to be minor nobility to start,
but any noble titles or honors used in the SCA must be earned
in the SCA. Many new members (and lots of long-time members!)
find the SCA's system of rank to be rather peculiar, in that it
differs rather radically from medieval practice. Like many of
the SCA's institutions, our system of rank wasn't so much planned
as evolved. It seems to serve our needs most of the time, but
don't be surprised to hear people discussing how it could be improved.
There are two sorts of peers in the SCA; Royal Peers and Awarded
Peers. Royal Peers are folk who have ruled a Kingdom or Principality
at least once. Ex-Princes are Viscounts, Ex-Princesses Viscountesses,
and from there it gets complex. Those who have been King or Queen
once are Counts/Countesses. Those who have been King or Queen
twice are Dukes/Duchesses. Those who have been King or Queen more
than that are generally considered masochistic! (small in-joke!)
There are many who have reigned at least three times, and in the
West there is a legendary Duke who has been King eight times.
Other sorts of Peers are folk who, by dint of talent, hard work,
and long effort, have earned recognition for their contributions
and skills. There are three awarded peerage orders, all of which
have the same basic requirements: new companions must be honorable
and courteous, familiar with the basic gentle arts of a medieval
court, and should have proven their dedication to the Society
and its ideals. These orders rank equally. The oldest of the peerage
orders is the Chivalry. The chivalry, who include the Knights,
are fighters who have achieved great skill at arms, and who are
considered by the other members of the Chivalry to be models of
prowess, chivalry, and honor. The knight is considered by many
to be the central figure in our medieval mythos. Second oldest
is Order of the Laurel, which is awards to craftsmen and artists
recognized for their research in medieval crafts, their willingness
to teach their skills, and their skill at their arts. The laurel
wreath was anciently used to crown victors at Greek games, great
poets, etc., and has always been a mark of achievement and skill.
Finally, there is the Order of the Pelican, given to those whose
work in service to the SCA has made a great difference. Companions
of the Pelican are often skilled bureaucrats -- somebody 'has'
to do the hard paperwork of running a Kingdom of 3000 people in,
and some people keep working at this sort of task for years. The
Pelican was thought in medieval times to be the most self-sacrificing
animal: It was thought a Pelican would pierce her breast to allow
her heart's blood to drip into the mouths of her offspring when
food was short. Peers are created by the desire of the King and
Queen in accordance with the recommendations of the companions
of the order.
Feasting, Dancing and Merrymaking
One of the most interesting parts of the SCA is "events",
our word for the times when we put on our medieval clothing, go
out and dance those dances we've been practicing, flirt, eat,
talk, and generally have a good time. Events are held almost every
weekend of the year somewhere; some weekends there may be as many
as a couple dozen events scattered around the SCA. Most groups
hold at least one event per year; some larger groups will hold
two or more. At events there are often tournaments, art exhibits
or competitions, classes on all manner of medieval skills, workshops,
and, later in the evening, a medieval feast, Royal or Baronial
Court, and dancing. There are many different kinds of events,
and the common pattern varies from place to place and season to
season. The events are the most fun to most folk, because you
get to go and show off all the things you have been learning in
the past few months.
What Kind of Person Joins the SCA?
SCA folk tend to be people like you and me -- just plain folks,
but people who enjoy doing something more with their weekends.
It seems that a high percentage of SCA members are involved in
high tech fields -- Computers, Aerospace, high energy physics,
etc. Perhaps the attraction the SCA holds for them can be attributed
to the fact that people who spend all week with highly complex,
modern technology find it relaxing to spend their leisure time
working with a different kind of technology, in a less modern
setting. There are lots of people in all fields in the SCA --
historians, writers, secretaries, law enforcement personnel, teachers,
programmers, insurance agents -- the appeal of the SCA is widespread.
A housemate of a SCA person recently said: "From what I
can tell about these wild and crazy SCA people, they do more than
just this fighting thing. They really like to make and wear the
medieval clothes (garb), eat the medieval food, dance the medieval
dances to the medieval music, maybe even make their own medieval
music, and other medieval party type activities. They also seem
to like to be medieval so they can relax and have a good time.
They are quite willing to talk about SCA or invite you to the
SCA stuff or whatever."
How You Can Get Involved
We welcome you to attend our local meetings and our events. You
needn't join the SCA, Inc, to attend and participate (although
if you decide to be with us regularly you may wish to join). The
only requirement to come to an event is that you make some attempt
at pre-1600 costume -- and most groups have "loaner"
costumes for people who want to come to their first event. Each
SCA participant remembers the day s/he started, and most people
are happy to help out a newcomer. Many local groups have officers
whose sole duty is to help new members find their way into the
SCA.