Difference between revisions of "Page"
m (Reverted edits by 24.208.147.229 (Talk); changed back to last version by Linden) |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | + | ===Historically=== | |
+ | Historically, a [[page]] was a servant employed by an army, [[Lord|lord]], or individual [[Knight|knights]]. In Amtgard, pages are roughly analogous to [[man-at-arms]], 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. Everything about pages is custom, so there are no hard and fast rules. | ||
===Symbols=== | ===Symbols=== |
Revision as of 04:44, 29 July 2008
Historically
Historically, a page was a servant employed by an army, lord, or individual knights. In Amtgard, pages are roughly analogous to man-at-arms, in that they are taken by 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. Everything about pages is custom, so there are no hard and fast rules.
Symbols
Pages wear a yellow belt. Garb consisting of his master’s device is optional.
The Difference
The difference between a page and a man-at-arms: Officially, there is no difference, as neither is officially recognized in the Order of Precedence or most Corporas. Some kingdoms define a man-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 a man-at-arms.
The term 'Page' also 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. Must wear a gold enchantment strip around right wrist.