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Martial Arts Of The World - Webs

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74 Chivalry<br />

less. Within this very small assemblage of landed gentry rested the wealth,<br />

the political power, and the military strength of the domain, thus enabling<br />

the noble class to become an hereditary aristocracy. <strong>The</strong> numerous remainder<br />

of society was made up mostly of toiling peasants who tilled the<br />

soil they did not own and performed other servile duties that fell to their<br />

lot. <strong>The</strong>ir relationship to the lord whose lands they worked was called<br />

manorialism and had little to do with the feudal hierarchy.<br />

During the decentralization of political power that for centuries followed<br />

the fall of Rome, many displaced warriors sought domestic security<br />

in an inconstant age. <strong>The</strong>ir hope was to find a propertied magnate willing<br />

to accept them as military vassals in return for land. <strong>The</strong> process created<br />

an integrated feudal hierarchy of lords and vassals that rested like a small<br />

pyramid upon the vast populace of peasants. At the apex of this martial<br />

consortium was the king, who held his realm from God. Below him were<br />

the royal vassals, such as viscount and barons, whose fiefs were generally<br />

expansive. <strong>The</strong>se they parceled out among the higher-ranking members of<br />

the noble class, who then became vassals. <strong>The</strong>y, in turn, were able to continue<br />

the practice of subinfeudation, going down the broadening levels of<br />

the pyramid to the bottom, where one would find a few humble knights<br />

holding modest fiefs, whose income was barely enough to support them<br />

and their families. When a lord sponsored every knight and every tract of<br />

feudal land became hereditary, European feudalism became complete, with<br />

the fief serving as the basic bond of lord/vassal dependency.<br />

A collection of feudal estates, little more than a disparate cluster of<br />

landholdings, soon weakened the power of the king. Most fiefs had been<br />

created essentially for military purposes, and the men who received them<br />

had been trained for warfare and became the soldiers who controlled the<br />

military strength of the kingdom. If war threatened, the king was obliged<br />

to call upon his royal vassals to provide arms for the coming encounter.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y, in turn, called upon their own vassals to answer the call to arms. Because<br />

there was so much intermittent fighting in the Middle Ages, warfare<br />

became an oppressive burden for the knightly class, and an agreement was<br />

reached that limited a knight’s obligated military duties to forty days<br />

a year.<br />

At the heart of the feudal fabric was the armored knight, whose ideal<br />

role in life was to uphold the code of chivalry to which he had dedicated<br />

himself. <strong>The</strong> term chivalry, defining the code of western knights, appears in<br />

Middle English as chivalrie and is related to the French chevalier (knight).<br />

In late Latin, we find the word caballarius, meaning horseman or cavalier.<br />

<strong>The</strong> medieval knight, therefore, was an armored horseman, bearing shield,<br />

sword, and lance, the weaponry of his day. Soon chivalry and cavalry become<br />

synonymous.

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