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SCA Scrolls by the Scribes of Lochac

All images copyright 2003-2006. All artwork remains the property of individual artists, and may not be reproduced in part or in full in any medium without written permission from the artists.

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  Index of Artists

Beatrice Delfini

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Mistress Evelynne van der Haagen

Caristiona nic Beathain

Grant of Arms for Charles du Bois

Giles de Laval

 

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Catherine of Chester

Grant of Arms, Mistress Isabeau of the Wilde Woode

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Mistress Branwen of Werchesvorde

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Eleanor of Caithness

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Filippa Ginevra Francesca di Lucignano

Award of Armsfor Marared coed Radnor

Leofwynn Wulfinga

Grant of Arms for Mistress Bryony Beehyrd

Leonie de Grey

Patent of Arms (Knight) for Snorri Ottarson

Myfanwy of Aberystwyth

Award of Arms for Lord Richard de Montfort of Hastings

Madelaine de Bourgogne Leaf of Merit for Lord Hirsh von Henford

Nerissa de Saye

Leaf of Merit with Award of Arms for Alaric of Bangor

Royal Patent of Arms for Duchess Juana Isabella de Montoya y Ramirez

Royal Patent of Arms for Viscountess Elspeth of Turberville

Richard de la Croix

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Mistress Juana Isabella de Montoya y Ramirez

Rowan Perigrynne

Patent of Arms (Knight) for Sir Torold of Hawkhurst

Rohesia le Sarjent

Patent of Arms (Knight) for Sir Inigo Missaglia

Yseult de Lacy

 

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Master Dafydd of the Glens

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Master Arenwald von Haagenberg

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Leaf of Merit for Lord Hirsh von Henford

Madelaine de Bourgogne

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Catherine of Chester

Giles de Laval

The project's inspiration was the Prayerbook of Charles the Bold, late 1400s.  It is painted on vellum measuring 203mm x 152mm (8" x 6"), using Winsor and Newton gouache and shell gold, and has what is probably the shortest text in existence for a Pelican scroll:  Iussu Rex Silvaedraco(ni)s Catherina Cestrensis Comitem Pelicani fit ("By order of the King of Drachenwald, Cathryn of Chester is made a Companion of the Pelican").

Master Giles has also written an essay of the making, influences, and symbology of this beautiful scroll.     Large image (450Kb).

Royal Patent of Arms for Viscountess Elspeth of Turberville

Nerissa de Saye

This work is based on the Book of Kells and the Lindisfarne Gospels (8th century). The intricate illumination includes anthropomorphic and zoomorphic forms, as well as celtic interlace and geometric patterns, and incorporates the recipient's arms into the capital (view details of the illumination and the capital).

Royal Patent of Arms for Duchess Juana Isabella de Montoya y Ramirez (You Killed My Father, Prepare to Die)

Nerissa de Saye,

Inspired by late 15th century Spanish manuscripts. The miniature illumination shows the recipient embarking on her new estate as a Duchess, symbolised by setting sail in a ship (view detail).

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel)  for Mistress Evelynne van der Haagen

Beatrice Delfini

This is a magnificent example of the Renaissance Humanist style (also known as vermiculato or white vine) found throughout Italy in the 15th century, using letterforms and designs based on Classical and Ottonian texts. The intricate illumination contains references to the recipient's many skills and interests (view details of the capital, the arms and the illumination).  Silver instead of gold was uised at the recipient's request.

Patent of Arms (Knight)  for Sir Inigo Missaglia

Rohesia le Sarjent

A magnificent manuscript in the international gothic style, based on the Bible Historiale, c. 1357.

For a step-by-step progression of this scroll, click here.

The miniature shows the story of St George: top left, the dragon ravages the country and eats all the sheep. Top right, the people draw lots to decide who will be fed to the dragon, and the Princess is about to draw the short straw. Centre, St George comes to the rescue. Bottom left, the subdued dragon is led into the city, and finally bottom right, St George slays the dragon and inspired by his courage the people become Christians.

The border miniatures illustrate the seven knightly virtues. Clockwise from the left: measure, justice, courage, humility, loyalty, courtesy and magnanimity. Naturalistic grisaille portraits of the King and Queen of Caid flank the recipient's arms.

The scroll was written with Chinese ink and illuminated with gold leaf, gold powder and period pigments on goat vellum. Red tones are made from brazilwood and dragon's blood, flesh tones are red ochre and zinc oxide with some egg shell. Blues are lapis lazuli, some with a little black nightshade juice. Greens are Malachite or veridigris, and some parsley juice. Yellow is made from saffron, white from zinc oxide. Paints were prepared by hand by the scribe, bound with gum acacia or glair; the raised gold work is laid on gesso.

Laurel Scroll, 158K

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Master Dafydd of the Glens

Yseult de Lacy

This scroll is painted on goat parchment and has raised gilding on plaster-based gesso which has been inscribed with patterns of dots. The hand is Gothic Textura Quadrata.

Master Dafydd of the Glens received his Laurel for choir direction, pageantry, and verse. The initial O shows him conducting a small group of singers, while his coat-of-arms is supported by two of the characters from his play "Macbeth: the Musical." The border decoration tells the story of one of his best-loved humorous verses, The Enchanted Gambeson , beginning with the death of Sir Arbalest, and continuing with Kevin finding the gambeson, his rise in the tournament circuit, his proposal rejected, the attempt to bury the gambeson, and finally King Kevin victorious with his lady, holding the Bar of Soap.

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Mistress Juana Isabella de Montoya y Ramirez

Richard de la Croix

Based on the Visconti Hours, Italian 1325-13240. An ornate architectural capital encloses the recipient's arms, and is complemented by a stylised floral border.

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Eleanor of Caithness

Giles de Laval

Design and illumination inspired by the Mira Monumenta Calligraphiae (view details).

Patent of Arms (Knight) for Sir Torold of Hawkhurst

Rowan Perigrynne

Based on late 14th century Bohemian manuscripts such as the Golden Bull and the Wenceslas Bible. The historiated capital depicts the recipient swearing fealty to the King (view detail) and the form and delicate colouring of the foliage is peculiar to Eastern European manuscripts of this time.

Patent of Arms (Order of the Pelican) for Mistress Filippa Ginevra Francesca di Lucignano

Giles de Laval

This manuscript is based on several early 16th century Flemish books of hours, in particular the Sloane and Hastings Hours. The text was written with quill. The border design is typical of the Ghent-Bruges school of illumination, depicting illusionistic, highly natural flowers and insects strewn on a luminous liquid gold background. Many of the flowers carry symbolic meaning, including the lily for purity, heartsease for devotion, speedwell for success, pinks for sacrifice and strawberry for good works. The recipient's arms are painted in the capital only 11mm high; the entire scroll measures only 15 x 10.5 cm.

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Master Arenwald von Haagenberg

Yseult de Lacy

This scroll is based on Elizabethan Grants of Arms, with a portrait of the recipient in the initial istead of the King of Arms giving the grant. A grisaille portrait of King Jade of the West occupies the laurel wreath at top centre. Goat parchment, W&N gouache, raised gilding on plaster-based gesso. In its finished state the bottom section of the scroll is folded up and tags with pendant seals are threaded through it.

The patchwork effect is due to the scroll having been scanned in six sections and joined to make the whole piece--it measures about 50x40cm. (Parchment is difficult to scan evenly since it transmits and reflects light quite differently from paper.)

Grant of Arms for Lord Charles du Bois

Caristiona nic Beathain

Design and illumination inspired by the Mira Monumenta Calligraphiae, the last great manuscript produced in Europe for the Emperor Rudolf II, written in 1562 and illuminated in the 1590's. The Mira's illumination programme consisted of extremely naturalistic and illusionistic flowers, animals and insects; shown here are scarlet gillyflowers surrounding the recipient's arms, a common fly and a garden snail.

Patent of Arms (Order of the Laurel) for Mistress Branwen of Werchesvorde

Giles de Laval

In the style of the magnificent Winchester Bible, c1145. The historiated capital (view detail) has a raised gold border, and depicts a scribe with scroll and quill, and by her ear the dove of wisdom (also a play on the white raven in the recipient's Arms). The banner versals spell Laureatus (crowned with Laurels).

Leaf of Merit with Award of Arms for Sir Alaric of Bangor

Nerissa de Saye

In the style of several French manuscripts of the 14th century, including sources from the artist's collection. The manuscript on vellum features delicate gold foliage and pen-drawn embellishment, raised gold work and a detailed miniature of knights and squires at training. The entire scroll measures only 20 x 15 cm.

Grant of Arms for Mistress Isabeau of the Wilde Woode

Giles de Laval

This scroll is based on early 16th century German documents such as the Prayerbook of the Emperor Maximilian (1514) and Cardinal Wolsey's Letters of Credence (1527).The scroll features an intricate Cadel style capital with delicate pen-drawn filigree, German Fraktur script and the recipient's Arms.

 

Grant of Arms for Mistress Bryony Beehyrd

Leofwynn Wulfinga

Based on design elements from the Lindisfarne Gospels. (Detail of Arms/initial.)

Award of Arms for Lord Richard de Montfort of Hastings

Myfanwy of Aberystwyth

The design is based on several manuscripts in the gothic style, mid-13th century. The illumination features extensive whitework and diapering, and a hunting scene in the upper margin (view detail of the capital). Chinese ink, gouache and shell gold on archival rag paper.

 

Patent of Arms (Knight) for Sir Snorri Ottarson

Leonie de Grey

Done with gouache and gold leaf on Kangaroo vellum. The apparent fold down the middle is caused by having to scan the grant in two sections.

The illumination is based closely on a English Grant of Arms of 1492 (Richard III). The 1492 text was in French. This text is based on a English Grant of Arms of 1547 (Edward VI).

Award of Arms for Lord Marared coed Radnor

Giles de Laval

Based on the Winchester Bible, English c1145-1170. (Detail of capital)

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Authored by Jehan, Giles, and Yseult AS XXXVIII (2003)