North Woods

A Barony of the Middle Kingdom
AKA The "Lost Barony"
motto: "Beware the Wolf"

 Armor 
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Side Trips to our Cantons:

Ealdnordwuda

Riding of Hawkland Moor

Weldlake

Iron Oak

East Fairlight

Side trips to the Knowne World:
Pentamere

a region of

The Kingdom of the Middle (Midrealm)
a part of
The SCA
(Society of Creative Anachronism)
Or visit with Lady Seadhli at the Pentamere and Canton of Weldlake Minister of Youth Website
Check out a medieval wedding at Aliyah's Wedding Day
Come see what we are about on the online SCA demo
And after your visit, come back - we missed you!

Armored Combat in the SCA

Archery Armor Fencing Arts and Sciences

Our heavy fighting includes the use of Siege Engines as well as combat Archery, when conditions permit.  Heavy fighting encompasses both melee or "battle" fighting as well as one on one "tournament" combat. Both forms use the medieval "training swords" or wooden swords in the foot combat mode - no hitting from horses. In all cases - safety first! The regulations vary from Kingdom to Kingdom. 

For information on the web, you can go to the Kingdom's

website http://www.midrealm.org/marshal/ or the Society's website http://sca.org/chivarts.html.

To see fighters in action, there is weekly fighter practice at the Barony of Cynnabar (Ann Arbor, MI) practice on Sunday afternoons, with information at http://marshal.cynnabar.org/, or the Barony of North Woods fighter practice (in Lansing, MI) at the field behind Demonstration Hall (MSU Campus--Red Cedar and Chestnut Roads; just west of Spartan Stadium) from 6 - 9 pm on Wednesdays, weather permitting.

Below taken from http://www.midrealm.org/chatelaine/

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 honor. The fighter keeps faith with his honor 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.

For more information, see above.

This is the recognized Web Site for the Barony of North Woods of the Society for Creative Anachronism, Inc. The Maintainer of this page is Mark Meyer aka Áindle ÓDiarmada (e-mail: webminister@SCANorth Woods.org). It is not a corporate publication of the Society for Creative Anachronism, Inc., and does not delineate SCA policies. © 2005, 2006,  2007, 2008, 2009 Barony of North Woods and its members. All material hereon should be considered under copyright protections according to U.S. law and international treaty, and may not be reused or linked to without the permission of the author, artist, or other copyright owner as designated. The original contributors retain the copyright of certain portions of this site. In case of conflict with printed versions of material printed on this page or its links, the dispute will be decided in favor of the printed version unless otherwise indicated.  Many thanks to the prior webminister R. Wright aka Mikhalis for the original design and artwork. For information on using photographs, articles, or artwork from this website, please contact the web minister at webminister@SCANorth Woods.org. They will assist you in contacting the original creator of the piece. Please respect the legal rights of our contributors.