From Deseret News archives:
Society researches and re-creates life between 400-1600 A.D.
Mostly, they come because they have fallen in love with a time so removed from our own that many people never give it a thought yet it's a time that laid our foundations and shaped our thoughts in important and intriguing ways.
Welcome to the Current Middle Ages or as some say, the Middle Ages "as they ought to have been."
This is the period researched and re-created by members of the Society for Creative Anachronism. They study martial arts, dance, calligraphy, cooking, stained glass, metalwork, costuming, literature and almost everything else that happened in Western civilization from roughly 400 to 1600 A.D. As they like to say, if someone in the Middle Ages did it, somebody in the SCA does it everything except die of the plague, of course.
Since it was founded in 1966 in Berkeley, Calif., by some science-fiction and fantasy fans, SCA has grown into an international organization with more than 24,000 dues-paying members. For its purposes, SCA has divided the "knowne world" into 17 kingdoms, each made up of principalities, baronies and shires.
Loch Salann holds weekly meetings, where the medieval folk socialize, perfect their crafts, practice fighting. Special events, often with other baronies, sometimes involving the whole kingdom, are held five or six times a year.
The way it works it this: Each person chooses a personae who fits the time period and creates a life for that person. "You choose the country and the time period. You develop a name, come up with the clothing," says Halfdon, a 10th-century Viking. "So, I try to do everything a Viking would have done fighting, card weaving, archery, singing everything but rowing the boat and pillaging the coast of France."
It's a hobby, he says, and like any hobby, "you can get as deep into it as you want."
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