The month of April was a full and fun month with many
events and happenings. First, I attended the Coronation of Our new King
William and the beautiful Queen Kara. It was a nice event and I was able
to visit with many friends that I don’t usually get to see at Our end
of the Kingdom.
Then, His Excellency and I attended the Investiture of
the new Baronage of Our neighboring Barony of Hidden Mountain. We wish
all the luck to Baron Bor and Baroness Asta. Since it was an
investiture, Their Majesties were both in attendance and it was good to
be able to visit with them again so soon.
Then it was off to Our own
Baronial Birthday that was covered in the other article.Then… whew! …
It was off to the Investiture of new Baronage for the Barony of
Hawkwood, another good neighbor! We also wish Baron Ronan and Baroness
Muriele all the luck. Events at Hawkwood have always been quite …
entertaining … and this event was no exception! And I was able to visit
with Her Majesty again … three times in one month!
It was an exciting
month and We hope the Populace had as much fun as We did!
As Always, In
Service to the Dream
Baroness Ariel
Monday, June 2, 2014
Konnichiwa & Greetings to Our Populace
We wish to thank everyone who attended Nottinghill Coill
Baronial Birthday 2014 for spending the day with Us. We would especially
like to thank the Autocrat, Lord Draco, and his Staff, for a wonderful
Event. After many misadventures and an uncooperative Mother Nature you
all pulled together and the Birthday was very full and enjoyable.
We request that thoughts turn to NCBB 2015. If you, or your group, are interested in hosting this Event contact the Baronial Seneschal, Lord Olaf Stammkopf.
We look forward to the next two Events in Barony. The Collegium on Saturday 7/12 hosted by Cyddlain Downs promises to be full of varied and interesting classes so come out and learn something! WOPP: the Wizard of Oz on Saturday 8/16 hosted by St. Georges should be full of fun an frolicking! Instead of the Wicked Witch, might we see the Wicked Baroness?!?
Our neighboring Shire of Border Vale Keep is hosting an event on May 31 in Augusta. Her Excellency intends to attend this event and would like to see others of Our Barony support Our neighbors.
As always We remain...In Service to the Dream,
Takeda & Ariel, Baron & Baroness, Nottinghill Quill
We request that thoughts turn to NCBB 2015. If you, or your group, are interested in hosting this Event contact the Baronial Seneschal, Lord Olaf Stammkopf.
We look forward to the next two Events in Barony. The Collegium on Saturday 7/12 hosted by Cyddlain Downs promises to be full of varied and interesting classes so come out and learn something! WOPP: the Wizard of Oz on Saturday 8/16 hosted by St. Georges should be full of fun an frolicking! Instead of the Wicked Witch, might we see the Wicked Baroness?!?
Our neighboring Shire of Border Vale Keep is hosting an event on May 31 in Augusta. Her Excellency intends to attend this event and would like to see others of Our Barony support Our neighbors.
As always We remain...In Service to the Dream,
Takeda & Ariel, Baron & Baroness, Nottinghill Quill
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Konnichiwa & Greetings to Our Populace
We are sorry that NCBB had to be postponed and We hope everyone is recuperating from the storm. The autocrat was able to reschedule and We hope all of you can attend Our Baronial Birthday on April 18-20.We wish to thank the Autocrat & the Staff for all that they have done for this Event.
We have extended the deadline for Champions Letters of Intent. If you are interested please email your letters to us at:
gillasd {at} bellsouth.net
barontakeda {at} yahoo.com
We're happy to announce the Heavy & Rapier WarLords for WoW. Lord Olaf Stammkopf (Heavy) & Lord Marcus Octavius (Rapier).We have every confidence that these Lords will bring Honor & Victory to the Barony.
As always We remain,
In Service to the Dream,
Takeda & Ariel
Baron & Baroness, Nottinghill Coill
We have extended the deadline for Champions Letters of Intent. If you are interested please email your letters to us at:
gillasd {at} bellsouth.net
barontakeda {at} yahoo.com
We're happy to announce the Heavy & Rapier WarLords for WoW. Lord Olaf Stammkopf (Heavy) & Lord Marcus Octavius (Rapier).We have every confidence that these Lords will bring Honor & Victory to the Barony.
As always We remain,
In Service to the Dream,
Takeda & Ariel
Baron & Baroness, Nottinghill Coill
Wednesday, February 19, 2014
Pokerounce Master John le Burquillun (Les Shelton)
Original recipe source: Austin, Thomas. Two Fifteenth Century Cookery-books: Harleian Ms 279 (ab. 1430) and Har. Ms. 4016 (ab. 1450) With Extracts from Ashmole Ms. 1429, Laud. Ms. 553 & Douce Ms. 55, Early English Text Society, N. Trubner & Co., London, 1888.
Harleian Ms 279,–xxxvj Pokerounce Take Hony & caste it in a potte tyl it wexe chargeaunt y now take & skeme it clene Take Gyngere Canel & Galyn gale & caste Jer to take whyte Brede & kytte to trenchours 2 & toste ham take Jin paste whyle it is hot & sprede it vppe 3on Jin trenchourys wi tA a spone & plante it with Pynes & serue f orth
Translation: Take honey and heat it in a pot until it stiffens, then skim it. Add ginger, cinnamon and galingale to the honey. Take white bread and cut it into trenchers and toast. While the honey is hot, spread it upon the trenchers with a spoon, add pine nuts, and serve.
Redaction (for a table of 8):
1 loaf dense bread
1 cup honey
½ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp ginger
¼ tsp galingale
2 tbs pine nuts
Slice and toast the bread. Toast the pine nuts in a medium oven or toaster until golden brown. Warm honey on medium heat and skim if needed. Stir in the spices and then add the pine nuts. Spoon onto toast slices.
Comments:
Can be served as a first course (as an alternative to the standard bread and honey butter) or as a dessert. The original recipe doesn’t call for the pine nuts to be toasted but I think it gives it a much better flavor. If you can’t find galingale you can double the amount of ginger. I’ve seen an alternative redaction that uses nutmeg and cardamom in the recipe instead of galingale.
Harleian Ms 279,–xxxvj Pokerounce Take Hony & caste it in a potte tyl it wexe chargeaunt y now take & skeme it clene Take Gyngere Canel & Galyn gale & caste Jer to take whyte Brede & kytte to trenchours 2 & toste ham take Jin paste whyle it is hot & sprede it vppe 3on Jin trenchourys wi tA a spone & plante it with Pynes & serue f orth
Translation: Take honey and heat it in a pot until it stiffens, then skim it. Add ginger, cinnamon and galingale to the honey. Take white bread and cut it into trenchers and toast. While the honey is hot, spread it upon the trenchers with a spoon, add pine nuts, and serve.
Redaction (for a table of 8):
1 loaf dense bread
1 cup honey
½ tsp cinnamon
¼ tsp ginger
¼ tsp galingale
2 tbs pine nuts
Slice and toast the bread. Toast the pine nuts in a medium oven or toaster until golden brown. Warm honey on medium heat and skim if needed. Stir in the spices and then add the pine nuts. Spoon onto toast slices.
Comments:
Can be served as a first course (as an alternative to the standard bread and honey butter) or as a dessert. The original recipe doesn’t call for the pine nuts to be toasted but I think it gives it a much better flavor. If you can’t find galingale you can double the amount of ginger. I’ve seen an alternative redaction that uses nutmeg and cardamom in the recipe instead of galingale.
Monday, January 27, 2014
Musings from the Mad Monk: Plague Ships By Brother Amos the Pious
This has been a rough month for the Mad Monk. I have been recovering from a plague that has been sweeping through our fair barony. Luckily it is just a cold but it got me thinking about just how dangerous it was to get sick in the dark days before modern medicine.
A big factor in people getting ill was simple malnutrition. Most foods were seasonal and if a famine or pestilence took a crop it could leave entire villages and towns without essential nutrients that the body requires to fight off sickness and disease.
Another large factor was ignorance of simple sanitation practices, such as washing hands, which would lead to the rapid spread of sickness. One prevalent illness that resulted from poor sanitation was Dysentery, known then as “the Flux” or “Bloody Flux”, could cause death due to dehydration. In 1191 Philip II of France was forced to abandoned the third crusade because of a case of the flux. Later, in 1596, while anchored off the coast of Panama, Sir Francis Drake died from an acute case at age 55.
Most afflictions of the skin were labeled as Leprosy, including sever fungal infections and Syphilis, which could cause lesions and deformation as well as seizures and dementia. True Leprosy, known today as Hanson’s Disease, is a bacterial infection that attacks the skin, eyes, cartilage and nervous system. In the 12th century the Benedictine Matthew of Paris estimated that there were as many as 19,000 leper hospitals throughout Europe. During the 12th century, one famous leper hospital located near Jerusalem was the Hospital of St. Lazarus, which spawned a military order made up entirely of leper knights. Lepers were thought by many to be going through purgatory on earth and therefore it was considered a holy affliction.
Tuberculosis has long been one of the most feared diseases, it has been discovered in human remains dating back as far as 7,000BC. The ancient Greek physician Hippocrates named it phthisis and identified it as the most widespread illness of his time. In the later Middle ages it was also known as Consumption because it seemed to consume victims from within. Upon seeing the afflicted, one 12th century inquisitor wrote that a dog shaped demon occupied the person and began to eat the lungs. In England and France during the 14th century, it was believed that the royal touch could cure Consumption and whole days were set aside for the Kings to touch the afflicted and give them alms.
One of the earliest documented plagues was the Antonine Plague of 165AD-180AD, which is now believed to have been either Smallpox or Measles. It killed as much as 30% of the population in some areas of Italy and decimated the Roman army. Smallpox most likely was introduced to Europe from Africa during the Islamic invasion of Spain in the 7th and 8th centuries, but it did not become endemic to Europe until it was brought home by soldiers returning from the crusades. The Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya ar-Razi was the first to differentiate between the two in his 9th century treatise “The book of Smallpox and Measles”.
Fevers were a very dangerous symptom of illness as it could cause permanent damage to the brain. One illness that caused fever was Malaria, known as Roman Fever because it was so prevalent during the Roman Empire. Typhus was a common illness first described in 1489AD during the Spanish siege of Moorish Granada. 3,000 men were lost in battle but an estimated 17,000 died of Typhus which was spread by fleas. Influenza, first described by Hippocrates, remains a major killer even in modern times killing 250,000 to 500,000 people worldwide every year. One early documented outbreak of influenza began in Russia in 1580 and spread through Europe killing 8,000 in Rome and killing entire towns in Spain. Little is known about Sweating Sickness which afflicted Europe between 1485-1551 but modern scholars believe that it could have been Hantavirus, a lung infection spread by rodents, due to the sudden onset of fever resulting in death within hours.
The worst of all Plagues to hit Europe was the Bubonic Plague. First documented in the 6th and 7th centuries it was known as the Plague of Justinian and killed 40% of Constantinople and 50% of Europe. after that it disappeared until the 14th century when it returned as the Black Plague in 1348-1350AD. The plague was transmitted through rat fleas carried aboard merchant ships from Asia. Most victims died within 2-7 days of the first symptoms and 80% of victims die within 8 days. By its end it had killed 30% to 60% of the European population and is estimated to have reduced the world population by a staggering 100,000,000 people by the year 1400AD. It took Europe 150 years to recover from the Black death which returned several times before finally disappearing in the 19th century.
In recreating the middle ages I found a love for the old ways and often wish to experience life back then. But modern medicine is definitely one thing that I do not wish to live without! I begin to ponder the old adage, “An apple a day keeps the doctor away”. Now go wash your hands!
Pax Vobiscum - The Mad Monk
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