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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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1120, the eldest sons of most noblemen of northern France and its colonies<br />

destined for a lay career were trained in this way and were dubbed to<br />

knighthood between the ages of about 16 (if they were the sons of princes)<br />

and 21. <strong>The</strong> same ceremony was adopted for the initiation of the heirs of<br />

the landed ignoble knights. <strong>The</strong> rite still involved the delivery of knightly<br />

equipment, including a horse, but it was now centered on the attachment<br />

of the sword belt (to which was attached the classical Latin term cingulum<br />

militiae, meaning “belt of military status”) and of spurs to the heels, and<br />

concluded either with an embrace or with a blow with the flat of the officiant’s<br />

sword blade to the candidate’s neck: a blow called in both French<br />

and English the collée, from col (French; neck). This rite could be performed<br />

either on the eve of a battle in which the candidates were to fight<br />

or in the court of a castellan, prince, or king, where it took on the characteristics<br />

of a graduation ceremony. Civil dubbings probably tended to become<br />

ever more splendid throughout this phase, but truly elaborate rituals<br />

involving vigils and the like are not attested before the next phase. Apparently,<br />

dubbings were normally performed on a group of candidates, numbering<br />

from three or four to several hundred, who had either trained together<br />

or completed their training at roughly the same time. <strong>The</strong> officiant<br />

at dubbings was normally either the seignior of the candidate’s father or the<br />

lord at whose court the candidate had been trained.<br />

Since only the sons of landed knights were dubbed, a distinction arose<br />

among the ignoble knights generally between the landed milites accincti<br />

(Latin; belted knights) who had received the belt of knighthood and the unlanded<br />

milites gregarii (Latin; flock knights) who had not. Miles finally superseded<br />

caballarius as the title for the status in Latin, though eques (classical<br />

Latin; horseman) was occasionally used instead, and the abstract<br />

word militia came to represent the ideas best represented in English by the<br />

term knighthood. Vernacular equivalents appeared for the first time<br />

around 1100, including the Romance derivatives of caballarius, Germanic<br />

and Slavic derivatives of the Old Flemish ridder (rider), such as Old High<br />

German rîter, ritter, and Old English ridder. After 1066, the peculiarly English<br />

cniht (“boy,” formerly applied to all male servants) was employed.<br />

New titles also began to appear for apprentice knights, including the<br />

late Latin scutarius (shield-man) and its vernacular derivatives scudiero, escudero,<br />

escuier, and squire (which became the standard titles in Italian,<br />

Castilian, French, and English). Armiger (arms-bearer) became the standard<br />

title in Latin; vaslettus (little vassal) and its vernacular derivatives (such as<br />

valet) were preferred in certain regions of France; and domicellus (little lord)<br />

and its vernacular derivatives damoisel, donzel, and the like were preferred<br />

in lands of Occitan and Catalan speech. <strong>The</strong> first three families of titles,<br />

however, were also used for servants who assisted noble knights but had no<br />

Knights 271

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