Swearing Fealty - What does it mean?
Posted: Fri Apr 11, 2008 11:38 am
Coming off another thread and based upon my (limited) understanding, I thought I'd bring up the idea of Swearing Fealty.
What are your views on fealty?
Is loyalty the same as fealty?
If not how does loyaltydiffer?
Who/What do you swear Fealty to?
Contridicting Loyalties/Oaths?
In period, when one swore fealty, it was a contract between an individual (and sometimes their household) and their liege. The contract stated that the vassal would serve the liege in some capacity (goods or services) and the liege, in turn, would provide the vassal with some form of service, often in a protective manner. Being in fealty implies there exists a formal relationship, in our case, between an individual and the Crown.
In the SCA, the bonds of fealty are recreated for our purposes, by swearing and renewing our bonds of fealty to the crown upon Coronation. However, since this is a game, the vassal may provide valuable services to the Crown (by going to events and Wars and serving the Kingdom in some way) but there is no requirement for the Crown to provide specific recompense. The Crown serves the entire populace regardless of who has or has not sworn fealty.
Loyalty can exist with or without fealty. Loyalty is informal and personal. When someone swears fealty, it is often a public announcement of where one’s loyalties lie. The gold chain a Knight wears is a symbol of his fealty to the Crown and in the Midrealm, any vassal who swears fealty may wear an unadorned silver chain as a symbol of that relationship.
There are several kingdoms, Caid being one of them if I'm not mistaken, where fealty is counted down the ranks. If a Knight swears fealty to the king, then his squires automatically assume the same fealty. The same goes for the royal peers, Barons and such.
In the Middle Kingdom, Fealty is sworn directly to the Crown, not the Man or Woman wearing the Crown. It is stated in the Oath of Fealty the Chivalry uses:
"I here swear fealty and do homage
To the Crown of the Middle Kingdom:
To ever be a good knight and true,
Reverent and generous,
Shield of the weak,
Obedient to my liege-lord,
Foremost in battle,
Courteous at all times,
Champion of the right and the good.
Thus swear I, Sir/Master <<Name>>."
This allows a Knight to swear to the crown even if he has a personal grudge against the King who acended to the thone.
I've got more, but I'll wait for some resonses.
Reference Material
http://chivalry.midrealm.org/
To Squire or Not to Squire? That is the question.
by Viscount Sterling, KSCA
http://www.florilegium.org/files/CHIVAL ... t-art.html
On Fealty and Other Relationships in the SCA (or, Are Waffles Period?)
by Hector of the Black Height
http://nicolaa5.tripod.com/articles/Hec ... Fealty.htm
The Feudal Contract: Fealty in the SCA
by Ioseph of Locksley
http://members.tripod.com/~whitebard/onfealty.htm
Of the Vertues that Apperteyne to Chyvalry
by Count Sir Garick von Kopke
http://www.chronique.com/Library/Chivalry/garick1.htm
What are your views on fealty?
Is loyalty the same as fealty?
If not how does loyaltydiffer?
Who/What do you swear Fealty to?
Contridicting Loyalties/Oaths?
In period, when one swore fealty, it was a contract between an individual (and sometimes their household) and their liege. The contract stated that the vassal would serve the liege in some capacity (goods or services) and the liege, in turn, would provide the vassal with some form of service, often in a protective manner. Being in fealty implies there exists a formal relationship, in our case, between an individual and the Crown.
In the SCA, the bonds of fealty are recreated for our purposes, by swearing and renewing our bonds of fealty to the crown upon Coronation. However, since this is a game, the vassal may provide valuable services to the Crown (by going to events and Wars and serving the Kingdom in some way) but there is no requirement for the Crown to provide specific recompense. The Crown serves the entire populace regardless of who has or has not sworn fealty.
Loyalty can exist with or without fealty. Loyalty is informal and personal. When someone swears fealty, it is often a public announcement of where one’s loyalties lie. The gold chain a Knight wears is a symbol of his fealty to the Crown and in the Midrealm, any vassal who swears fealty may wear an unadorned silver chain as a symbol of that relationship.
There are several kingdoms, Caid being one of them if I'm not mistaken, where fealty is counted down the ranks. If a Knight swears fealty to the king, then his squires automatically assume the same fealty. The same goes for the royal peers, Barons and such.
In the Middle Kingdom, Fealty is sworn directly to the Crown, not the Man or Woman wearing the Crown. It is stated in the Oath of Fealty the Chivalry uses:
"I here swear fealty and do homage
To the Crown of the Middle Kingdom:
To ever be a good knight and true,
Reverent and generous,
Shield of the weak,
Obedient to my liege-lord,
Foremost in battle,
Courteous at all times,
Champion of the right and the good.
Thus swear I, Sir/Master <<Name>>."
This allows a Knight to swear to the crown even if he has a personal grudge against the King who acended to the thone.
I've got more, but I'll wait for some resonses.
Reference Material
http://chivalry.midrealm.org/
To Squire or Not to Squire? That is the question.
by Viscount Sterling, KSCA
http://www.florilegium.org/files/CHIVAL ... t-art.html
On Fealty and Other Relationships in the SCA (or, Are Waffles Period?)
by Hector of the Black Height
http://nicolaa5.tripod.com/articles/Hec ... Fealty.htm
The Feudal Contract: Fealty in the SCA
by Ioseph of Locksley
http://members.tripod.com/~whitebard/onfealty.htm
Of the Vertues that Apperteyne to Chyvalry
by Count Sir Garick von Kopke
http://www.chronique.com/Library/Chivalry/garick1.htm