Difference between revisions of "At-Arms"

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Equivalent of [[Page]] in the [[Order of Precedence]].
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An '''At-Arms''', mechanically equivalent to a '''Page''', is a sworn individual similar to a [[Squire]], but differentiated in the [[rulebook]] and in Amtgard custom. They are the equivalent of a Page in the [[Order of Precedence]].
===From the [[V8|Rulebook]]===
 
At-Arms and Pages: At-Arms or Pages are usually individuals who are sworn to [[Knights]], [[Squires]], or [[Nobles]]. In Amtgard, being an At-Arms or Page denotes a special relationship between the individual and their mentor,who is typically a Knight, Noble, or Squire. At-Arms can generally be recognized by a black belt with silver trim or a green belt. Pages can generally be recognized by a yellow belt. At-Arms may also go by Man-at-Arms, Woman-at-Arms, Comrade-at-Arms, Sword-at-Arms, Standardbearer, Shieldmaiden, ShieldBrother, or other similar terms.
 
  
===Historically===
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==From the [[Rulebook]]==
Historically, a man-at-arms was a fighter employed by an army, lord, or individual knights.  In Amtgard, men-at-arms are roughly analogous to [[page|pages]], in that they are taken by [[Squire|squires]].  Although this is theoretically a mentor-student type relationship, there are a multitude of reasons that a squire might take a man-at-arms.
 
  
===Symbols===
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{{rule|'''At-Arms and Pages:''' <onlyinclude>At-Arms or Pages are usually individuals who are sworn to [[Knights]], [[Squires]], or [[Nobles]]. In Amtgard, being an At-Arms or Page denotes a special relationship between the individual and their mentor, who is typically a Knight, Noble, or Squire. At-Arms can generally be recognized by either a black [[belt]] with silver trim or a green belt. Pages can generally be recognized by a yellow belt. At-Arms may also go by Man-at-Arms, Woman-at-Arms, Comrade-at-Arms, Sword-at-Arms, Shieldmaiden, Shield Brother, or other similar terms.</onlyinclude>|{{CurrentRulebookNumber}}}}
Men and Women at Arms wear a black [[Belt|belt]]. In some Kingdoms this is further established  with silver trim but many places don't require or use it.
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{{Awards and Symbols}}
  
===In Amtgard===
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===At-arms and Pages Tradition===
Everything about At-arms is custom, so there are no hard and fast rules.
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Officially, there is no difference, as neither is officially recognized in the Order of Precedence or most [[Corpora]]s. Some kingdoms define an At-Arms as some one who fights, while a page is a non-combatant.  Some kingdoms eschew one in favor of the other.  Some kingdoms allow squires to take a man-at-arms, and a [[noble]] to take a page.  In some places, children too young to fight are pages, while everyone else is an At-arms.
  
===The difference between a Man at arms and a [[page]]:===
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The term 'Page' also sometimes refers to the kind folks that pick up spent equipment for you on the [[Battlegame|battlefield]]. [[Non-Fighting Classes|Non-fighting]] pages may retrieve spent equipment, but may not retrieve or carry new or extra equipment.
Officially, there is no difference, as neither is officially recognized in the Order of Precedence or most [[Corpora]]s.  Some kingdoms define a man-at-arms as some one who fights, while a page is a non-combatantSome kingdoms eschew one in favor of the other.  Some kingdoms allow squires to take a man-at-arms, and a [[noble]] to take a page.  In some places, children too young to fight are pages, while everyone else is a man-at-arms.
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==In Real Life==
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Historically, a man-at-arms and pages were fighters and servants employed by an army, lord, or individual knightsAlthough this is theoretically a mentor-student type relationship, there are a multitude of reasons that a squire might take a man-at-arms.
  
 
===See Also===
 
===See Also===
[[:category:Man-At-Arms|Man at Arms Category]]
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* [[:category:Man-At-Arms|Man at Arms Category]]
[[Category:Amtgard Terms]]
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* [[:category:Pages|Pages Category]]
[[Category: Amtgard Things]]
 
[[Category:Rulebook Terms]]
 
[[Category: Amtgard Things]][[Category:Organizational Rules]]
 

Latest revision as of 05:17, 25 February 2025

An At-Arms, mechanically equivalent to a Page, is a sworn individual similar to a Squire, but differentiated in the rulebook and in Amtgard custom. They are the equivalent of a Page in the Order of Precedence.

From the Rulebook

At-Arms and Pages: At-Arms or Pages are usually individuals who are sworn to Knights, Squires, or Nobles. In Amtgard, being an At-Arms or Page denotes a special relationship between the individual and their mentor, who is typically a Knight, Noble, or Squire. At-Arms can generally be recognized by either a black belt with silver trim or a green belt. Pages can generally be recognized by a yellow belt. At-Arms may also go by Man-at-Arms, Woman-at-Arms, Comrade-at-Arms, Sword-at-Arms, Shieldmaiden, Shield Brother, or other similar terms.
Awards and Symbols
Apprentice · At-Arms and Pages · Color · Knight · Masters · Noble · Paragon · Phoenix · Squire
Amtgard Organization
Circle of Monarchs · Kingdoms · Parks · Reeves · Companies and Households · Awards and Symbols · Code of Conduct · Age of Combatants
V8 Rulebook
Introduction · V8 Made Easy · Organization · Role-playing · Combat Rules · Armor · Weapons · Weapon Types, Shields, and Equipment · Equipment Checking · Battlegames · Magic, Abilities, States and Special Effects · Classes · Magic and Abilities · Magic Items · Rules Revision Process · Award Standards · Kingdom Boundaries & Park Sponsorship · Annexure

At-arms and Pages Tradition

Officially, there is no difference, as neither is officially recognized in the Order of Precedence or most Corporas. Some kingdoms define an At-Arms as some one who fights, while a page is a non-combatant. Some kingdoms eschew one in favor of the other. Some kingdoms allow squires to take a man-at-arms, and a noble to take a page. In some places, children too young to fight are pages, while everyone else is an At-arms.

The term 'Page' also sometimes refers to the kind folks that pick up spent equipment for you on the battlefield. Non-fighting pages may retrieve spent equipment, but may not retrieve or carry new or extra equipment.

In Real Life

Historically, a man-at-arms and pages were fighters and servants employed by an army, lord, or individual knights. Although this is theoretically a mentor-student type relationship, there are a multitude of reasons that a squire might take a man-at-arms.

See Also