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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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and Order of the Young Male Falcon, founded between 1377 and 1385 by<br />

the viscount of Thouars and seventeen minor barons in Poitou; the Order<br />

of the Golden Apple, founded in 1394 by fourteen knights and squires in<br />

Auvergne; and the Alliance and Company of the Hound, founded in 1416<br />

for a period of five years by forty-four knights and squires of the Barrois.<br />

In Germany, where they were particularly numerous, the earliest known is<br />

the Company of the Pale Horse of the Lower Rhineland (1349). Its successors<br />

included the Company of the Star of Brunswick (1372), the Company<br />

of the Old Love (ca. 1375–ca. 1378) in Hesse, the Company with the Lion<br />

(1379) in Wetterau and Swabia generally, the Company of the Fool (1381)<br />

in Cleves, and the Company of the Sickle (1391) in southern Saxony and<br />

Franconia. Most of these were founded for precise periods of two to twelve<br />

years, though the last was to endure for as long as its founding members<br />

still lived. Like societies with a fully confraternal form of constitution, they<br />

were intended to serve as military-political leagues promoting the interests<br />

of their members and had no higher goals.<br />

<strong>The</strong> latter set of temporary bodies (which usually had a fixed limit for<br />

their existence of between one and five years) should be called votal societies,<br />

as they were based on a vow (votum in Latin) undertaken by their<br />

members to achieve a set of feats of arms comparable to those of the<br />

knights of the Arthurian romances. Contemporaries commonly knew them<br />

by a name meaning “enterprise” (emprinse, impresa) and transmitted that<br />

name both to profoundly different types of knightly societies and to the<br />

badge or figural sign that represented the undertaking. Such societies appeared<br />

around 1390 (when new forms of tactics were emerging that required<br />

practice of the type actually provided by these societies) and seem<br />

to have flourished only for a few decades after that date, primarily in<br />

France. <strong>The</strong>ir number included the Enterprise of the White Lady with<br />

Green Shield, undertaken in 1399 for a period of five years by the heroic<br />

marshal of France, Jehan le Meingre de Boucicaut, and twelve other<br />

knights; the Enterprise of the Prisoner’s Iron, undertaken in 1415 for two<br />

years by Jehan, duke of Bourbon, and sixteen other knights; and the Enterprise<br />

of the Dragon, undertaken at about the same time, probably by Jehan<br />

de Grailly, count of Foix, and “a certain number of ladies, damsels,<br />

knights, and squires.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> line of cleavage separating the perpetual and the limited-term societies<br />

within the non-confraternal category coincided with another line<br />

that ran across both the confraternal and non-confraternal categories: that<br />

between societies that were endowed with a democratic or oligarchic constitution<br />

(the normal types in confraternities) and those that were endowed<br />

with constitutions of a monarchical nature, which attached the presidential<br />

office on a permanent and hereditary basis to the throne or, in one case, the<br />

Orders of Knighthood, Secular 389

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