Activities

Members of the SCA study and take part in a variety of activities, including combat, archery, equestrian activities, costuming, cooking, metalwork, woodworking, music, dance, calligraphy, fiber arts, and much more. If it was done in the Middle Ages or Renaissance, odds are you’ll find someone in the SCA interested in recreating it.

What makes the SCA different from a Humanities 101 class is the active participation in the learning process. To learn about the clothing of the period, you research it, then sew and wear it yourself. To learn about combat, you put on armor (which you may have built yourself) and learn how to defeat your opponent. To learn to brew, you make (and sample!) your own wines, meads and beers. Activities happen at events, practices, or in the home.

Martial Activities

There are a wide variety of SCA Martial Activities you can watch and participate in. For all martial activities, safety officers (marshals) are always on hand to ensure that the combat is performed safely and to ensure that all equipment being used meets established safety standards.

Combat is based on a system of honor – the combatants themselves determine if the attacks they receive were successful based on the angle, location, and force of the strike.

Combatants participate in tournaments one-on-one and in teams, in melees involving dozens of combatants, and even in large-scale wars with hundreds of participants! Unlike reenactments of battles from history, our combat activities are unchoreographed and the outcome is entirely based on the skill and training of the combatants involved.

All these combatants wear protective armor made from a variety of materials (metal, leather, padded fabric, plastic, etc.), as well as steel helmets (or fencing masks), which must meet a minimum standard.  They train in fighting safely before they are allowed to participate in combat.

Armored Combat

At many events you will see armored fighters wearing steel helmets and facing off with shields and weapons made of rattan (a springy bamboo-type wood).

Rapier & Fencing Combat

You will also see rapier combatants fencing in the round with real (but blunted) steel blades.

Youth Combat

Even youth fighters could be competing against each other with padded weapons.

Equestrian

At other events, you may encounter equestrians on horseback jousting against each other and playing medieval training games.

Archery & Thrown Weapons

See archers shooting at targets with longbows and crossbows, thrown weapons participants hurling axes and spears at wood targets, combat archers shooting tubular arrows at the opposing side.

Siege Engineering

Or see siege engineers using ballistae, catapults, and trebuchets to fling soft ammunition at advancing armies.

Arts & Sciences Activities

The practice and display of SCA-period Arts and Sciences is nearly as diverse as the populace. Below is an incomplete list of Arts and Sciences practiced in Atenveldt:

Crafting

  • Costuming (sewing, tailoring, haberdashery, cobbling, etc.)
  • Fiber Arts (spinning, weaving, embroidery, dyeing, rope-making, etc.)
  • Metal Arts (armoring, weapon-making, casting, blacksmithing, etc.)
  • Scribal Arts (calligraphy, illumination, bookbinding, etc.)
  • Wood Arts (furniture-making, carving, pyrography, etc.)
  • Heraldic Artwork (working with scribes and crafters to display heraldic designs on scrolls, flags, banners, armor, garb, etc.)

Food & Drink

  • Brewing (alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages)
  • Culinary Arts (cooking, feast preparation, recipe redaction, etc.)

Entertainment

  • Bardic Arts (vocal and instrumental music, poetry, storytelling, etc.)
  • Dance (research, teaching, performing court, country and ethnic dances)
  • Games and Pastimes

Research

  • History & Culture (studies about all aspects of SCA-period life)
  • Documentation (researching the historical context of crafted and performed works)
  • Book Heraldry Research (research period naming and armorial practices for the registration of names and armory for the populace)

Service Activities

Administration

  • Seneschal Duties (head administrator coordinating with the other kingdom officers as required for the smooth operation of a group or branch, etc.)
  • Exchequer Duties (maintaining the financial records, supervising the finances, assembling financial reports of a group or branch, etc.)
  • Chronicler Duties (supervising all publishing activities, announcements of business of a group or branch)
  • Other Officer Duties (supervise and facilitate activities/practices/gatherings of the respective office, attend officer meetings, provide reports, etc.)

Marshallate

For all martial activities, below is an incomplete list of a marshal's duties:

  • Ensuring safe conduct in an active combat or projectile zone
  • Overseeing martial activities
  • Inspecting equipment and protective gear
  • Verifying fighter authorization for combatants
  • Organizing combatants in tournaments

Heraldry

  • Book Heraldry Consultation (consulting the populace in registration of names and armory)
  • Voice Heraldry (calling announcements, proclaiming who is fighting upon the field, and acting as the voice of nobility in court)
  • Protocol Heraldry (recording awards and honors bestowed, drafting ceremonies, and determining precedence and other period legal niceties in all sorts of situations)

Media & Outreach

  • Social Media
  • Website Administration
  • Newcomer Relations
  • Demonstrations

Events

  • Stewardship/Autocrating (organizing and coordinating events)
  • Gate (handling incoming attendants' event admission and event registration)
  • Kitchen (helping at a kitchen to prepare for a feast or banquet at an event)
  • Setup-Teardown (assist in setting up and taking down pavilions, thrones, décor, regalia, equipment, etc. for an event)
  • Watch (monitor and patrol event grounds, typically at camping events)
  • Refreshments (provide water and other refreshments to combatants between combat)