Thanks.
--
Kurt Grossman
Ku...@yang.earlham.edu
Follower of Saint MacGyver, Patron Saint of Lifesaving Plot Devices
(Thanks to someone in rec.arts.comics.misc)
"It's human nature to keep doing something as long as it's pleasurable and you
can succeed at it - which is why the world population continues to double every
40 years.
-Peter Lynch w/ John Rothchild, _Beating the Street_
Also, does anyone know of a MODERN map (you know, done to scale,
recognizable kind) that shows the Kingdom boundaries and mundane ones as
well. Just North America would be fine for me though the whole world
would be really nice. If you do know where or how I can get such a thing
please let me know.
Eyrny
PS, Hi Danulf, send me your email address would you? We'll take a picture
of that punch tester sometime soon but please remind me.
>Also, does anyone know of a MODERN map (you know, done to scale,
>recognizable kind) that shows the Kingdom boundaries and mundane ones as
>well.....
There's a map in the centerfold of "Forward Into the Past," available from
the Stock Clerk for some measly sum (a quarter? something like that).
Dorothea of Caer-Myrddin Dorothy J. Heydt
Mists/Mists/West UC Berkeley
Argent, a cross forme'e sable coz...@garnet.berkeley.edu
Disclaimer: UCB and the Cozzarelli lab are not responsible for my
opinions, and in fact I don't think they know I have any.
> Could someone please tell me the mundane areas covered by each of the
> kingdoms.
You can find this information in the file /pub/sca/findsca at the anonymous
ftp site bransle.ucs.mun.ca. (BTW, that file is out of date. Someone may
want to update the seneschals and add Drachenwald). In summary, with my
corrections:
ANSTEORRA (OK and TX (except El Paso))
AN TIR (OR, WA, Northern ID, BC, SK, and AB)
ATENVELDT (AZ, UT, MT, Western CO, Western WY, and Southern ID)
ATLANTIA (MD, DC, VA, NC, and SC)
CAID (Southern CA, HI, New Zealand, and Southern NV)
CALONTIR (KS, MO, IA, NB, and Northwest AR)
DRACHENWALD (Europe)
EAST (NY, NJ, PA, MA, CT, RI, VT, NH, ME, WV, NF, NS, NB, PQ)
MERIDIES (GA, LA, MS, TN, AL, Southern and Eastern AR, and FL Panhandle)
MIDDLE (IL, IN, KY, OH, MI, ONT, WI, MN, MAN, ND, and SD)
OUTLANDS (NM, El Paso TX, Eastern CO, and Eastern WY)
TRIMARIS (Penisular FL)
WEST (Nothern CA, Northern NV, AK, Australia, and Japan)
> Also I'm considering a Saxon persona, any reccomended books would be
> appreciated, especially name books I can use to pass a name.
You can find many good Anglo-Saxon names in E. G. Withycombe, "The Oxford
Dictionary of English Christian Names", but that will only give you names
which have survived in some form to modern times. Any history of
pre-Norman England will give you many more, and if you want something more
scholarly, let me know & I will recommend a few books.
===========================================================================
Arval d'Espas Nord mit...@watson.ibm.com
Feilitzen, Olof von. _The_Pre-Conquest_Personal_Names_of_Domesday_Book_.
Uppsala, Almqvist & Wiksells boktryckeri-a.-b., 1937.
Happy Hunting!
AEthelwine
Emyrs Thandros Morgan, Caer Adamant
.
I know of no map kept on record. Kingdoms are identified by ZIP and I think
that info is kept on file in Milpitas. I learned the divisions when I
was handling renewal and expiration notices. That was a few years ago
and the newer kingdoms I have learned only by observation. I would be
curious to see an updated ZIP list.
Gunwaldt
I may be incorrect on this, but I remember quite clearly seeing a map of
the known world showing both mundane and SCA titles for all of the lands.
It was in a soft bound book (which fell apart) that was published by or
for the SCA. It is in storage and I can't remember its name, but it was
a sort of "Everything you ever wanted to know about the SCA".
It had sections on the history of the SCA, making garb, weapons, and
recipes for food and even mead. The cover was yellow, I believe. Anyway,
the map was inside the cover.
formerly Robert of Elvegast
Barony of Windmaster's Hill
Kingdom of Atlantia
(now just Bob)
>You can find this information in the file /pub/sca/findsca at the anonymous
>ftp site bransle.ucs.mun.ca. (BTW, that file is out of date. Someone may
>want to update the seneschals and add Drachenwald). In summary, with my
>corrections:
>
>DRACHENWALD (Europe)
What part of 'Europe'? For instance, does it include the (old) Iron
Curtain countries? Turkey? North Africa? If it doesn't, are these
other places claimed by any kingdoms?
Unfortunately, 'Europe' is now a rather undefined area - the European
Community excludes part of Nordmark (I believe that Denmark is the only
Scandinavian country in the EC at the moment), but will include Greece
and Turkey, whereas the geographical term includes part of Russia and
most (if not all) of the states currently in contention.
And, of course, to most British it is still usual to talk about going
"to Europe" for holidays <g>...
***********************************************************************
* ch...@keris.demon.co.uk * *
* chr...@cix.compulink.co.uk * FIAWOL (Filking Is A Way Of Life) *
* 10001...@compuserve.com * *
***********************************************************************
The book you mention is probably the (much maligned) Known World Handbook,
recently released in a third edition containing a series of maps showing the
growth of the known world from 1966 to 1992 C.E. However the maps give only
the society designations, and not the modern place naces: not surprising
considering that their early cartography is more an art then a science.
Pagan le Chaunster
Southron Gaard (note the spelling -- the mapmakers didn't), South Caid.
________________________________________________________________________
Jennifer Geard blood...@sloth.equinox.gen.nz
Christchurch, New Zealand
>>You can find this information in the file /pub/sca/findsca at the anonymous
>>ftp site bransle.ucs.mun.ca. (BTW, that file is out of date. Someone may
>>want to update the seneschals and add Drachenwald). In summary, with my
>>corrections:
>>DRACHENWALD (Europe)
>What part of 'Europe'? For instance, does it include the (old) Iron
>Curtain countries? Turkey? North Africa? If it doesn't, are these
>other places claimed by any kingdoms?
Drachenwald includes everything East of the Sea. Except South Korea. That's
part of the West. For the time being. :-)
>Unfortunately, 'Europe' is now a rather undefined area - the European
>Community excludes part of Nordmark (I believe that Denmark is the only
>Scandinavian country in the EC at the moment), but will include Greece
>and Turkey, whereas the geographical term includes part of Russia and
>most (if not all) of the states currently in contention.
The European Community excludes all Nordmark (Sweden), Aarnimetsa (Finland),
Klakavirki (Iceland), as well as the bit with fjords (Norway). And not only
Greece, EC also includes Portugal, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy and
France, all sadly lacking in, uh, civilised settlements...
Having recently made a map of Drachenwald, I fancy myself quite the
geographer. (I did briefly consider marking France "The Taunted Forest".)
Juhana Maununpoika Kivisuo
Pursuivant at large, armed presumed langued
Aarnimetsa, Drachenwald
--
*** Tero.J.H...@hut.fi *********** Disclaimer wanted: Apply within ***
"Dammit Jim, I'm an accountant, not a doctor!"
Interesting, because the Palentine Barony of the Far West (at least when I was there)
counts everything "West of the Sea" as theirs....
Hmmm perhaps a silly and schtick filled war could be waged over who gets what?
I suspect that the boundaries would level off sensibly if the modern concepts
of force projection were used... Though Drachenwald has many times the number
of active fighters of the Far West, it may be hard for many Drachenwald fighters
to get to the Far West for the conflict. Ditto in reverse.
Perhaps this is a bit dated also, but at one time the Far West included the
Diego Garcia base in the Indian Ocean (geography check?). If so, that is quite
a bit "West" of Warrior's Gate (Korea).
|> >Unfortunately, 'Europe' is now a rather undefined area - the European
|> >Community excludes part of Nordmark (I believe that Denmark is the only
|> >Scandinavian country in the EC at the moment), but will include Greece
|> >and Turkey, whereas the geographical term includes part of Russia and
|> >most (if not all) of the states currently in contention.
|>
|> The European Community excludes all Nordmark (Sweden), Aarnimetsa (Finland),
|> Klakavirki (Iceland), as well as the bit with fjords (Norway). And not only
|> Greece, EC also includes Portugal, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy and
|> France, all sadly lacking in, uh, civilised settlements...
|>
|> Having recently made a map of Drachenwald, I fancy myself quite the
|> geographer. (I did briefly consider marking France "The Taunted Forest".)
Do you think you might do another map of Drachenwald for profit or SCA trade?
I would be very interested in a fanciful map of that region. I confess to
being a map nut, especially those with lots of artist interpretation.
|> Juhana Maununpoika Kivisuo
|> Pursuivant at large, armed presumed langued
|> Aarnimetsa, Drachenwald
|> --
|> *** Tero.J.H...@hut.fi *********** Disclaimer wanted: Apply within ***
|> "Dammit Jim, I'm an accountant, not a doctor!"
Scott Nolan
sno...@marge.hq.af.mil
aka: Lord Duncan Tiercel MacLeod
Barony of Ponte Alto, Atlantia
==============================================================
We are lucky we don't have as much government as we pay for!
- will rodgers
>|> Drachenwald includes everything East of the Sea. Except South Korea. That's
>|> part of the West. For the time being. :-)
>Interesting, because the Palentine Barony of the Far West (at least when
I was there)
>counts everything "West of the Sea" as theirs....
East is East and West is West, and... uh... Anyway.
>Hmmm perhaps a silly and schtick filled war could be waged over who gets what?
Yes, that would be fun! Let's see, now: the loser gets Siberia? :-)
>|> Having recently made a map of Drachenwald, I fancy myself quite the
>|> geographer. (I did briefly consider marking France "The Taunted Forest".)
>Dou]Mo you think you might do another map of Drachenwald for profit or SCA trade?
>}eI would be very interested in a fanciful map of that region. I confess to
>being a map nut, especially those with lots of artist interpretation.
For $1 a copy, I'll send you as many as you want. (I'm trying to get rich
beyond the dreams of avarice.) My map is in A3 landscape format, with both
baronies marked by castles, and shires, cantons and pre-incipient groups (in
Sweden and Finland) by towers. There's no monsters, but it does have the arms
of TRM's and all local groups in the margins. The arms are finished in vivid
Petra Sancta (tm) "Better Than Colour" hatching.
>Scott Nolan
>sno...@marge.hq.af.mil
>aka: Lord Duncan Tiercel MacLeod
> Barony of Ponte Alto, Atlantia
Juhana Maununpoika Kivisuo
>I know of no map kept on record. Kingdoms are identified by ZIP and I think
>that info is kept on file in Milpitas. I learned the divisions when I
>was handling renewal and expiration notices. That was a few years ago
>and the newer kingdoms I have learned only by observation. I would be
>curious to see an updated ZIP list.
Do they still do them by (American) ZIP codes? If so, what ZIP codes
are allocated to Britain, Sweden, Germany, etc.? And do our Governments
know about them? The Post Office won't, but then they can't even find
my house on a main street with big numbers on the house...
I remember we did have some problems with this in Europe several years
ago, since the SCA (Milpitas) were only interested in US military bases,
not 'natives', but I believe this has been ironed out. I'd be
interested to know what they do (at corporate level) instead...
>The European Community excludes all Nordmark (Sweden), Aarnimetsa (Finland),
>Klakavirki (Iceland), as well as the bit with fjords (Norway). And not only
>Greece, EC also includes Portugal, Denmark, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy and
>France, all sadly lacking in, uh, civilised settlements...
Oops! Last time I heard (quite a few years ago) Nordmark was claiming
all of Scandinavia; I hadn't realised they were separate groups now...
I gather that the settlement in the Netherlands is still thriving, from
your list...
>Having recently made a map of Drachenwald, I fancy myself quite the
>geographer. (I did briefly consider marking France "The Taunted Forest".)
Is this map generally available? I'd be interested in a copy...
In article <747249...@keris.demon.co.uk> ch...@keris.demon.co.uk (Chris Croughton) writes:
> Last time I heard (quite a few years ago) Nordmark was claiming all
> of Scandinavia; I hadn't realised they were separate groups now...
Sigh. Here we go again. Nordmark have _never_ claimed anything more
than what's mundanely known as Sweden. There are, however, people
who'd like to see Nordmark include all the Nordic countries. But they
are few, and do not live in our barony.
And while I'm at it: The king of Sweden is *NOT* interested in the SCA.
In fact, I doubt he knows about us.
your humble servant
Peder Klingrode | Leif Euren Stockholm, Sweden
Holmrike, Nordmark, Drachenwald | le...@celsiustech.se