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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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knight in the name of God and St. George, to guard loyally faith and justice,<br />

to sustain just quarrels loyally with all your power, and to protect the<br />

church, widows, and orphans.”<br />

Late Classic Knighthood (1430/50–1600/25)<br />

In the years following 1430, knighthood was finally detached from its traditional<br />

military role and converted into a mere dignity, whose sole purposes<br />

were to honor recipients and to bestow a minimal rank within the hierarchy<br />

of the nobility. <strong>The</strong> clearest signs of this change were the removal<br />

of the distinction in the pay scale traditionally maintained between knights<br />

and squires, the complete merger of the two ranks in military contexts into<br />

the single status of man-at-arms, and the gradual replacement of the<br />

knightly status of banneret with the new military office of captain. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

changes were accompanied by the completion (by 1500) of the process by<br />

which the knighting ritual was reduced to the collée—renamed the accolade—and<br />

by a tendency in some countries for the eldest sons of knights to<br />

assume that title on attaining adulthood, without benefit of any form of<br />

dubbing. This did not happen in the British kingdoms, but it was widespread<br />

on the continent.<br />

Nevertheless, throughout this phase all kings and princes, and probably<br />

the majority of barons, continued to seek knighthood for at least their<br />

eldest son at the age of majority, and other men of noble birth continued<br />

to undergo the traditional training and to fight as heavy cavalrymen wearing<br />

armor encasing their whole bodies. Rather than surrender the status of<br />

knight, indeed, the lesser nobles of some kingdoms began to treat it as a<br />

hereditary dignity that could be assumed at majority without any ceremony<br />

at all. Furthermore, the joust in its growing variety of forms remained the<br />

most important form of noble sport (though many of the type called the<br />

pas d’armes [French; passage of arms] were little more than allegorical<br />

plays), and different types of armor (often with interchangeable pieces)<br />

were created for each of its many forms. <strong>The</strong> armorers of this period—now<br />

concentrated in northern Italy (especially Milan) and Germany (especially<br />

Augsburg)—continued to produce armors of ever higher technical sophistication<br />

and finish, and even developed a series of different forms of helmet<br />

derived both from the great basinet (the sallet, barbut, armet, and close-helmet)<br />

and from the great helm (the barred and grilled helms) to suit different<br />

tastes and purposes. Finally, the code and mythology of chivalry remained<br />

powerful forces in many kingdoms to the end of the period. Thus,<br />

although their military role was steadily reduced through the rise of newer<br />

forms of both infantry and cavalry, the knights of this period retained most<br />

of their prestige. Knighthood remained an idealized status central to the<br />

contemporary definition of nobility until at least 1550.<br />

Knights 283

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