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The Behourdium Tradition:
Historical precedents for SCA Combat
Sir Michael DeLacy
In the
middle ages, martial sports evolved out of the training
exercises that knights and squires practiced to hone their
skills. These mock combats, or hastiludium (games
with spears) [1], took many different forms
throughout the middle ages; the more famous ones were the
spectacular tournaments, involving teams of combatants in
melees, and the joust, in which champions engaged in single
combat. Both of these forms were elaborate and expensive to
produce or participate in; the weapons used were usually of
steel, and although they were often blunted, they still made
expensive armour a necessity for the participants.
Alongside these more visible and spectacular events,
another older type of hastiludium called the
behourd also existed throughout the middle ages.
This form of combat was much less formal and dangerous to
participate in, and was often used as a training ground for
young knights and squires [2]; indeed, its roots
stretch back to the training exercised practiced in the
Roman Empire [3]. The behourd was also used as an
informal and friendly type of tournament to be held at
special occasions such as weddings, knightings, coronations
and other social occasions where the chivalry gathered.
These behourds were often fought using mock swords,
usually made of wood, or more rarely of whalebone. The
painting of a melee on an early fifteenth century chest (see
details) at the Musee de Tours shows the knights and
foot-soldiers armed in normal field armour, but wielding
simple undecorated staves of wood. These wooden practice
swords, called batons, are also referred to in medieval
documents and accounts; a fifteenth century treatise on
cries des joustes specifies a wooden baton two and
a half feet long as the main offensive weapon [4]
and another text refers to swords made of wands from lime
trees [5] - King Richard I of England is even
recorded as haven taken part in a tournament fought with
sugar canes outside the walls of Messina during his journey
to the Holy Land! [6]
For the more formal behourds, it was sometimes the case
that the weaponry was decorated to make them look more like
real swords. For example, in 1278 Edward I of England hosted
a behourd in Windsor park in which the weapons were swords
made of whalebone with leather hilts. The whalebone blades
were decorated with strips of silvered parchment held on
with glue (period duct-tape!) and the leather hilts were
gilded [7].
In the fifteenth century the baton was becoming ever more
popular in tournaments; in Germany, a form of tournament
called the Kolbenturnier, or club-tourney, was
gaining wide popularity among the nobility - Historian
William H. Jackson relates;
"We can then see a decisive change in the form
of the tournament emerging in the late fourteenth century
and crystallizing in the early fifteenth century, as the
Kolben, the club or baton emerges as the chief
weapon of the tournament, beside the blunt sword."
[8]
and;
"Throughout the fifteenth century the club
remained the main weapon of the tournament, to be used
for striking only above the belt, whilst the -blunt-
sword was used for hacking at the crest of an opponent.
These were separate operations, the normal pattern being
that the club tourney came first, and then a signal was
given after an hour or two to change to the sword stage."
[9]
Then,
as now, the use of practice swords allows the warrior to
train and compete in the medieval martial arts with safety -
and it is clear from the regulations of the Fifteenth
century German tournament societies that safety was a
factor. Hitting below the belt was forbidden (a precedent
for our own off-target areas), the steel sword was only used
to hack at an opponents' crest, and to prevent accidental
injury to the face, there were strict controls on the size
of weapons;
"The club was of wood and, like the tourneying
sword, had to be broad enough not to pass through the
grille of the participants' helmes;. . ." (German
tourneying standards of the time stipulated a width no
less than 3 and 1/2 fingers) [10]
The Fifteenth century tournament, like a modern SCA war
also had its weapon checks and Marshals' marks;
"On the day before the tournament the maces and
swords were presented to the judges, who marked them with
a hot iron "to ensure that they were not of outrageous
weight or length." [11]
Thus it seems that even in the fifteenth century they
were worried about marshaling standards - some things never
change.
[1] Barber & Barker, Tournaments.
p.2.
[2] "If the joust was the first chivalric
activity of the newly dubbed knight, the behourd was one of
the most popular means of training him before he attained
knighthood." Barker, Juliet, The Tournament in Medieval
England. P. 148.
[3] Connolly, Peter, Greece And Rome at
War. London; Macdonald Phoebus Ltd., 1981. p.218
[4] Barker, Juliet, The Tournament in
England. pp. 149. ref. to Bodleian MS Ashmole 764 fo.
32r.
[5] 1375 encounter; du Cange, Glossarium mediae
et infimae Latinitatis (Paris 1840) I 713
[6] Roger of Hoverden, Chronica ed. W. Stubbs,
Roll Seriese 51 (1868-71) iii, p. 93-93
[7] Barber & Barker, Tournaments. p.
153
[8] Jackson, William H, "Tournaments and the
German Chivalric renovatio: Tournament Discipline and the
Myth of Origins", Chivalry in the Renaissance, S.
Angelo ed., Woodbridge; Boydell Press, 1990. pp. 80.
[9] Ibid, p. 81.
[10] Ibid, p. 80-81.
[11] Arms and Armour: Essays by Stephen V.
Granscay from the Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin
1920-1964. Ed. O'Neill, John P., New York, 1986. p. 280.
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