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Showing posts from September, 2021

Lecture: Raglan Castle

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 This was given as one of the Mynydd Gwyn "Learned Discourses" in August 2021... it tied in with "Raglisn't Fair", the event which replaced the usual Raglan Fair, impossible to arrange in the COVID situation applying at the time. Raglan Castle has a special place in the hearts of many in Insulae Draconis and beyond as a venue for our activities, but it is also site of particular historical interest.  So absorbed are we by our tourneys, camping and classes, that we may perhaps have failed to pick up on that history.  Or maybe not… in which case you probably don’t need to listen to this talk. Perhaps the first thing that makes Raglan unusual is that it is a Welsh castle. For proof, see this picture!  “What?”, say you, “Castles in Wales are two-a-penny.” And you would be right.  Wales had about 400 to 600 castles (depending which source you believe), of which about 100 are still standing today, albeit in various states of ruination.  It is the highest concentration

Lecture: Edward IV, founder of the Royal Library

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   This talk was done for a seminar on the War of the Roses ("To uncrown a King") done online.  I was asked to contribute a talk by Guy de Dinan, the organiser the event, and thought that as somebody best known in the SCA for my work with mediaeval manuscripts, this might give an interesting twist to the subject matter. My personal interest in this subject is practical, in that the books commissioned by Edward IV are in a consistent style, one which I chose initially as my model when I was looking to illustrate a poem of my own as a spoof mediaeval manuscript.  In the event, my own illustrations branched out a bit and I drew upon other Flemish manuscripts from the 1470s, but the books collected by Edward IV were my own starting point. The claim of Edward IV to be the founder of the Old Royal Library needs a certain amount of qualification and explanation.  Certainly, kings and queens before him had owned books!  But he was the first to systematically assemble a collection of