Difference between revisions of "Jousting" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Jousting renfair.jpg|thumb|350px|Tilting with a [[lance]] at a [[Renaissance Fair]].]]
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[[Image:Modern-Knight.jpg|thumb|220px|Renaissance Fair jousting in Livermore California, 2006.]]
'''Jousting''' is a sport consisting of martial competition between two mounted [[knight]]s or other horsemen using a variety of weapons lances, battle [[axe]]s, [[sword]]s and [[dagger]]s. The sport originate as a ritualized form of friendly battle at medieval [[tournament]]s.
 
 
 
The joust permitted a display of individual skill and often offered large sums of prize money. Many knights made their fortune in these events, while others lost their wealth or even their lives. Most famous of these deaths resulted when a shard of an opponent's broken lance went through the visor and into the eye of [[Henry II of France]].
 
 
 
The first recorded tournament was staged in 1066. However jousting did not gain in widespread popularity until the thirteenth century. In England, jousting was the highlight of the [[Accession Day tilt]]s of [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]] and [[James I of England|James I]], and also was part of the festivities at the marriage of [[Charles I of England|Charles I]]. The sport maintained its status as a popular European event until the early seventeenth century and today has seen a modest resurgence at fairs and dinner theaters.
 
 
 
==Medieval jousting==
 
[[Image:Codex Manesse 081 Walther von Klingen.jpg|thumb|220px|Depiction of a late 13th century joust in the [[Codex Manesse]]]]
 
 
 
The skills and techniques used in jousting were first used in [[combat]], as mounted knights would charge at their enemies with weapons to try to kill or disable them. The primary use of the jousting [[lance]] was to unhorse the other by striking them with the end of the lance while riding towards them at high speed. This is known as "tilting." [[melee weapons|Other weapons]] were used for jousting included maces, morning stars, various pole weapons, swords, and daggers.
 
  
===War put on hold for a joust===
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'''Jousting''' is a sport consisting of martial competition, usually between two mounted [[knight]]s or other horsemen, using a variety of weapons, especially lances. Jousts could also involve contests on foot with [[battle axe]]s, [[sword]]s, and [[mace]]s or other weapons. Another form of jousting is tilting at the rings, in which the galloping rider attempts to insert his lance through small metal or wooden rings.
[[Image:Corbould edward henry thejoustbetweenthelordofthetournament.jpg|thumb|right|350px|''The joust between the Lord of the Tournament and the Knight of the Red Rose'']]
 
The 1300s document ''[[Froissart's Chronicles|The Chronicles of Froissart]]'' contains many details concerning jousting in medieval times. For example, much can be gleaned from its account of a war put on hold for a joust as it illustrates and documents:
 
  
*the connection between romance and jousting
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Jousting is thought to have originated as an informal friendly contest between knights and was later included as a prelude to the main [[melee]] event at medieval [[tournament]]s. The first recorded tournament was staged in 1066. However, organized jousting did not gain in widespread popularity until the thirteenth century.
*the importance associated with jousting
 
*the nonlethal expectations
 
*the use of attendants
 
*the rounds consisting of three encounters with various weapons
 
*jousting being stopped when the risk of death seemed too great
 
*the financial rewards of acquitting yourself well
 
*tournaments contained jousts but jousts were also done outside of tournaments
 
*jousts contained tilts but tilts were but one type of armed encounter during a joust
 
*jousting as sport and not war was done between enemies during a war between warring sides, at least this once
 
*the completion of a joust could be delayed days and finished later
 
*standards of conduct considered honorable
 
  
''[[Froissart's Chronicles|The Chronicles of Froissart]]'' records that, during a campaign in the Gatinois and the Beauce in France during the [[Hundred Years War]] between the English and French, a squire from Beauce named Gauvain Micaille yelled out to the English, "Is there among you any gentleman who for the love of his lady is willing to try with me some feat of arms?  If there should be any such, here I am, quite ready to sally forth completely armed and mounted, to tilt three courses with the lance, to give three blows with the battle axe, and three strokes with the dagger. Now look, you English, if there be none among you in love." This is what Froissart says happened next:
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The joust permitted a display of individual skill and often offered large sums of prize money. In [[England]], jousting was the highlight of the [[Accession Day tilt]]s of [[Henry VIII of England|King Henry VIII]], [[Elizabeth I of England|Elizabeth I]] and [[James I of England|James I]], and was also part of the festivities at the marriage of [[Charles I of England|Charles I]]. Many knights made their fortune in these events, while others lost their wealth or even their lives. Most famous of these deaths resulted when a shard of an opponent's broken lance went through the visor and into the eye of [[Henry II of France]] in 1559.
 +
{{toc}}
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Famed in medieval romances, the sport maintained its status as a popular European event until the early seventeenth century. Today it has seen a modest resurgence at fairs, dinner theaters, and events organized by the International Jousting Association.
  
{{quote |
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==Jousting and the tournament==
<p>His proposal and request was soon spread among the English, when a squire, an expert man at tournaments, called Joachim Cator, stepped forth and said, "I will deliver him from his vow: let him make haste and come out of the castle."</p>
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[[Image:Jousting-pic-1.jpg|thumb|300px|A historically correct reenactment of jousting in Taupo, [[New Zealand]], 2006]]
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[[Image:Boys King Arthur - N. C. Wyeth - p246.jpg|thumb|250px|[[King Arthur]] and Queen [[Guinevere]] watch a joust from the stands: "Sir Mador's spear brake all to pieces, but the other's spear held."]]
  
<p>Upon this, the lord Fitzwalter, marshal of the army, went up to the barriers, and said to Sir Guy de Baveux, "Let your squire come forth: he has found one who will cheerfully deliver him; and we will afford him every security."</p>
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Tournaments centered on the ''[[mêlée]],'' a fight where the [[knight]]s were divided into two sides and came together in a charge, followed by general combat. [[Jousting]], on the other hand, is single combat between two knights. Jousting was a component of the tournament, but not usually its main feature, serving instead as an evening prelude to the grand charge on the day of the main event. However, since it featured individual knights of substantial fame, it sometimes distracted knights from the main event. Count [[Philip of Flanders]], for example, made a practice in the 1160s of turning up armed with his retinue to the preliminary jousts and then delayed in joining the general mêlée until the initial battle was over. In the twelfth century, jousting was occasionally banned in tournaments because of its tendency to distract from the main event.
  
<p>Gauvian Micaille was much rejoiced on hearing these words. He immediately armed himself, in which the lords assisted, in putting on the different pieces, and mounted him on a horse, which they gave to him. Attended by two others, he came out of the castle; and his varlets carried three lances, three battle-axes, and three daggers. He was much looked at by the English, for they did not think any Frenchman would have engaged body to body. There were besides to be three strokes with a sword, and with all other sorts of arms. Gauvain had three brought with him for fear any should break.</p>
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Jousting became a popular fixture in romantic tales during this period, the most famous being the stories of [[King Arthur]]'s knights. By the early thirteenth century, jousting had its own devoted constituency. In the 1220s jousting events began to be held outside the tournament. Called "Round Tables," these were essentially an elimination event, held for knights and squires alike, in which the winners of preliminary rounds would move on to the next level until only one [[champion]] remained. The first mention of an exclusively jousting event was the Round Table held in [[Cyprus]] by John d'Ibelin, Lord of Beirut in 1223. The biographer of [[William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke]] observed shortly later that in his day, noblemen were more interested in jousting than tourneying. Other forms of jousting also arose—such as armed combat without horses and tilting at rings. By the fourteenth century, with the decline of the tournament, jousting became the leading aristocratic sporting amusement.
  
<p>The earl of Buckingham, hearing of this combat, said he would see it, and mounted his horse, attended by the earls of Stafford and Devonshire. On this account, the assault on Toury ceased. The Englishman that was to tilt was brought forward, completely armed and mounted on a good horse. When they had taken their stations, they gave to each of them a spear, and the tilt began; but neither of them struck the other, from the mettlesomeness of their horses. They hit the second onset, but it was by darting their spears; on which the earl of Buckingham cried out, "Hola hola! It is now late. Put an end to it, for they have done enough this day: we will make them finish it when we have more leisure than we have at this moment, and take great care that as much attention is paid to the French squire as to our own; and order some one to tell those in the castle not to be uneasy about him, for we shall carry him with us to complete his enterprise, but not as a prisoner; and that when he shall have been delivered, if he escape with his life, we will send him back in all safety."</p>
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The fourteenth century ''Chronicles of Froissart'' contains many details concerning jousting in medieval times. It relates that a war was even put on hold for a joust between the two sides. Other facets of the tradition mentioned in this source include:
  
<p>[…] On the day of the feast of our Lady, Gauvain Micaille and Joachim Cator were armed, and mounted to finish their engagement. They met each other roughly with spears, and the French squire tilted much to the satisfaction of the earl: but the Englishman kept his spear too low, and at last struck it into the thigh of the Frenchman. The earl of Buckingham as well as the other lords were much enraged by this, and said it was tilting dishonorably; but he excused himself, by declaring it was solely owing to the restiveness of his horse. Then were given the three thrusts with the sword; and the earl declared they had done enough, and would not have it longer continued, for he perceived the French squire bled exceedingly: the other lords were of the same opinion. Gauvain Micaille was therefore disarmed and his wound dressed. The earl sent him one hundred francs by a herald, with leave to return to his own garrison in safety, adding that he had acquitted himself much to his satisfaction.<ref name=Froissart/></p>}}
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* An expectation that no participants would be killed
 +
* The use of attendants
 +
* Rounds consisting of three encounters with various weapons
 +
* Jousts being stopped when the risk of death was great
 +
* Financial rewards for top performers
 +
* Tilting was one form, but not the only type of jousting
 +
* Standards of conduct considered honorable
 +
* The connection between [[romantic love]]and jousting
  
==Equipment==
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==Field and equipment==
[[Image:Dürer Stechhelm.jpg|thumb|left|180px|Jousting helmet ''([[:de:Stechhelm|Stechhelm]])'', late fifteenth century. Illustration by [[Albrecht Dürer]].]]
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[[Image:Horses joust.jpg|thumb|250px|Jousting knights at a [[Texas]] Renaissance fair]]
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===The lists and weapons===
 +
The ''lists,'' or ''list field,'' constituted the roped-off [[arena]] in which a jousting event or similar tournament was held. In the late medieval period, castles and palaces were augmented with special purpose-built ''[[tiltyard]]s'' as a venue for jousting tournaments.
  
===The lists===
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The skills and techniques used in jousting were first used in [[combat]], as mounted knights would charge at their enemies with weapons to try to kill or disable them. The primary use of the jousting [[lance]] was to unhorse the other by striking him with the end of the lance while riding toward him at high speed. This is known as "tilting." [[melee weapons|Other weapons]] were used for jousting included [[mace]]s, [[morning star]]s, various pole weapons, [[sword]]s, and [[dagger]]s.
The ''lists'', or ''list field'', is the arena in which a jousting event or similar tournament is held. More precisely, it is the roped-off enclosure where tournament fighting takes place. It is mentioned frequently in the novel [[Ivanhoe]] by [[Sir Walter Scott]].<ref>[http://www.online-literature.com/walter_scott/ivanhoe/ Ivanhoe]</ref>  In the late medieval period, castles and palaces were augmented by purpose-built ''[[tiltyard]]s'' as a venue for "jousting tournaments."
 
  
===The horse===
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===Armor===
The two most common kinds of horse used for jousting were [[warmblood]] ''[[war horse|charger]]s'' and [[cold bloods|coldblood]] ''[[destrier]]s''. Chargers were medium-weight horses bred and trained for agility and stamina, while destriers were heavy war horses. These were larger and slower, but helpful to give devastating force to the rider's lance through its weight being about twice as great as that of a traditional riding horse. The horses were trained for [[ambling]], a kind of [[pace]] that provided the rider with stability in order to be able to focus and aim better with the lance.
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[[Image:Lance rest on plate armour.jpg|thumb|left|Lance-rest built into 1565 plate armor.]]
 +
[[Image:Dürer Stechhelm.jpg|thumb|125px|Jousting helmet, late fifteenth century. Illustration by [[Albrecht Dürer]].]]
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Jousting was popular from the [[Middle Ages]] until the early 1600s, during which time armor evolved considerably. In early jousts, armor was [[chain mail]] with a solid heavy helmet known as a "[[great helm]]" and shield. By 1400, knights wore full suits of [[plate armor]], called a "harness." A full harness frequently included extra pieces specifically for use in jousting, so that a light combat suit could be reinforced with heavier "bolt-on" protective plates on the [[cuirass]] (breastplate) and helmet. Special jousting arm- and shoulder-pieces, which traded mobility for extra protection, were also added.
  
During a jousting tournament, the horses were cared for by their [[groom (horses)|groom]]s in their respective tents. They wore [[caparison]]s, a type of ornamental cloth featuring the owner's [[heraldry|heraldic signs]]. Competing horses had their heads protected by a [[chanfron]], an iron shield for protection from otherwise lethal lance hits.
+
Special jousting helmets were sometimes used with narrow eye slits, made so that the wearer could only see out by leaning forwards. If the wearer straightened up just before the impact of the lance, the eyes would be completely protected. Some later suits had a small shield built into the left side of the armor. In some cases, this was spring-loaded to fly into pieces if struck properly by the opponent's lance.
  
Other forms of equipment on the horse included long-necked [[spur]]s which enabled the rider to control the horse with extended legs, a saddle with a high back to provide leverage during the charge or when hit, as well as [[stirrup]]s for the necessary leverage to deliver blows with the lance.
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===Lances and other weapons===
 +
[[Lance]]s were often decorated with stripes or the colors of a knight's coat of arms. They were normally of solid [[oak]] and a significant strike was needed to shatter them. However, they were intentionally kept blunt and would not usually penetrate the [[steel]]. The harnesses worn by the knights were lined on the inside with thick cloth to soften the blow from the lance. In modern times, jousting is often done for show or demonstration purposes, and the lances are usually made of light wood and prepared so that they break easily.  
  
===The armor===
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[[Image:Broken lances.jpg|thumb|220px|Broken lances are common in modern jousts. In this picture, airborne fragments of both lances are visible.]]
Jousting was popular from the [[Middle Ages]] until the early 1600s. During that time, armor evolved from being [[chain mail]] (called simply mail at the time), with a solid, heavy helmet, called a "[[great helm]]," and shield. By 1400 knights wore full suits of [[plate armor]], called a "harness." A full harness frequently included extra pieces specifically for use in jousting, so that a light, military-combat suit could be reinforced with heavier, "bolt-on" protective plates on the [[cuirass]] (breastplate) and helmet, and also with jousting-specific arm and shoulder pieces, which traded mobility for extra protection. These extra pieces were usually much stronger on the side expected to take the impact of the lance.  
+
Since the goal of traditional jousts was to unhorse one's opponent, lances were normally the weapon of choice, although other [[spear]]s and other pole arms were also sometimes used, as well as [[mace]]s, [[morning star]]s, [[sword]]s, and even [[dagger]]s. However, these were more common in jousts that involved combat without horses. It is not by any means certain that swords were blunted for most of the history of the tournament, but this seems to have changed by the mid thirteenth century in jousting encounters. The statute of arms of [[Edward I of England]] of 1292 stipulated that blunted knives and swords should be used in tournaments, hinting that blunted weapons were not previously in general use.
  
Special jousting helmets were sometimes used, made so that the wearer could only see out by leaning forwards. If the wearer straightened up just before the impact of the lance, the eyes would be completely protected. Some later suits had a small shield built-in the left side of the armor. In some cases, this was spring loaded to fly into pieces if struck properly by the opponent's lance.
+
===Horses===
 +
The two most common kinds of horse used for jousting were ''[[war horse|charger]]s'' and ''[[destrier]]s''. Chargers were medium-weight horses bred and trained for agility and stamina, while destriers were heavy [[warhorse]]s. These were larger and slower, but helpful to give devastating force to the rider's lance, as its weight was about twice as much as a traditional riding horse. The horses were trained for "[[ambling]]," a [[pace]] designed to provide adequate speed and consequent force, while also giving the rider enough stability to focus and aim with the lance.
  
===The lance===
+
Competing horses had their heads protected by a [[chanfron]], an iron shield for protection from otherwise lethal lance hits. Other forms of equipment on the horse included long-necked [[spur]]s which enabled the rider to control the horse with extended legs, a saddle with a high back to provide leverage during the charge or when hit, as well as [[stirrup]]s for the necessary leverage to deliver blows with the lance.
In modern times, jousting is often done for show or demonstration purposes, and the lances used are usually made of light wood and prepared so that they break easily. Lances were often decorated with stripes or the colors of a knight's coat of arms. In a real joust, the lances were of solid oak and a significant strike was needed to shatter them. However, the (blunt) lances would not usually penetrate the steel. The harnesses worn by the knights were lined on the inside with plenty of cloth to soften the blow from the lance.
 
  
[[Image:Broken lances.jpg|thumb|220px|Broken lances are common in full contact jousts. In this picture, airborne fragments of both lances are visible.]]
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During a jousting tournament, the horses were cared for by their [[groom (horses)|groom]]s in their respective tents. Grroms  wore [[caparison]]s, a type of ornamental cloth featuring the owner's [[heraldry|heraldic signs]].
  
 
==Modern-day jousting==
 
==Modern-day jousting==
[[Image:Jousting-pic-1.jpg|thumb|left|200px|International Jousting Association knights in historically correct reproduction armour jousting at a tournament in Taupo New Zealand, 2006]]
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[[Image:Jousting renfair.jpg|thumb|350px|Tilting with a [[lance]] at a [[Renaissance Fair]].]]
Modern-day jousting, or tilting, has been kept alive by the International Jousting Association, [http://www.worldjousting.com], which has strict guidelines for the quality and authenticity of jousters' armor and equipment, and has developed the use of breakable lance tips for safety.  
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The most commonly seen form of jousting in the contemporary era is the theatrically-based variety of the sport in [[dinner theater]]s and [[Renaissance fair]]s. These are often carefully rehearsed for dramatic effect. Some Renaissance fairs feature competitive jousts, tilting at rings, or other jousting contests, in which the outcome is not predetermined.
 
+
Jousting under the IJA rules follows a points system where points are given for breaking the lance tip on the opposing knights shield. However, there are no points given for unhorsing an opponent. IJA sanctioned tournaments also include skill at arms where the riders display their horsemanship and weapons handling skills with swords on the Moors Head, using spears for the rings and spear throw, and employing the lance against a spinning quintain. Many IJA tournaments also include a mounted melee with fully armored riders using padded batons in place of swords for safety. None of the IJA events are theatrically based and they offer the public a chance to observe living history as opposed to the Renaissance Fair-type of entertainment jousting.
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As a competitive sport, modern-day jousting, or tilting, has been kept alive by the International Jousting Association, which has strict guidelines for the quality and authenticity of jousters' armor and equipment and has developed the use of breakable lance tips for safety. Jousting under the IJA rules follows a points system where points are given for breaking one's lance tip on the opposing knight's shield. However, no points given for unhorsing an opponent. IJA sanctioned tournaments also include skill at arms, where the riders display their horsemanship and weapons-handling skills with swords spears, and lances. Many IJA tournaments also include a mounted melee with fully armored riders using padded batons in place of swords for safety. These IJA events are never theatrically based, offering the public a chance to observe living history as opposed to the Renaissance Fair-type of entertainment jousting.
 
 
Today, [[tent pegging]] is the only form of jousting officially recognized by the [[International Federation for Equestrian Sports]]. The sport involves using a lance or sword to strike and carry away a small wooden ground target. The name "tent pegging" is derived from the cavalry tactic of causing confusion in enemy camps by galloping though the camps and collapsing the tents by pulling up the tent peg anchors with well-placed lance tip strikes. The actual sport of tent pegging, however, originates in medieval [[India]], when horse cavalrymen would try to incapacitate elephant cavalry by striking the elephants with lances on their extremely sensitive toenails<ref>[http://www.maharaj.org/tentpegging.shtml "Tent pegging with Unicef Team Canada"], retrieved 2007</ref>.
 
 
 
Ring jousting is the official state sport of [[Maryland]], and was the first official sport of any American state. In [[Port Republic, Maryland]] the annual [[Calvert County]] Jousting Tournament is held every August on the grounds of historic Christ [[Episcopal Church in the United States of America|Episcopal]] Church. In 2005, the tournament was featured in an edition of [[ESPN]]'s [[SportsCenter]].
 
 
 
The Italian town of [[Foligno]] also holds an annual jousting tournament, the [[Giostra della Quintana]], that dates back to the 1613. The Knights have to spear rings from the statue of the Quintana.
 
 
 
The Italian town of [[Arezzo]] continues to hold an annual jousting tournament, which dates to the [[Crusades]]. Jousters aim for a square target attached to a wooden effigy of a [[Saracen]] king, whose opposite arm holds a cat-o-three-tails—three leather laces with a heavy wooden ball at the end of each lace. The riders strike the target with chalk-tipped lances and score points for accuracy, but must also dodge the cat-o-three-tails after they have struck the target.
 
 
 
[[Image:Lance rest on plate armour.jpg|thumb|220px|Lance rest built into 1565 plate armour. {{3d glasses}}]]Modern [[theatrical jousting]] competitions are popular at American [[Renaissance fair]]s and similar festivals, and feature riders on horseback attempting various feats of skill with the lance, which may not always have a basis in history.
 
 
 
Several international organizations, such as the [[Society for Creative Anachronism]] and the International Jousting Association, promote rules to govern their jousting events.<ref>[http://www.sca.org/officers/equestrian/ "Society Equestrian Marshal"], retrieved 2007</ref>
 
 
 
Many [[:Category:Bicycle gangs|bicycle gangs]] participate in jousting at the end of all day parties. <ref>''[http://www.youtube.com/user/EasyBeezie EasyBeezie]'' [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ekVUZSbjgYg "BiKE KiLL"] ''You Tube''. Joust at minute mark 7:39. Uploaded January 14, 2007.</ref>  Two riders mount [[tall bike]]s and ride toward one another with a padded lance made of [[Polyvinyl chloride|PVC]] resembling a giant [[Cotton swab|Q-Tip]].
 
  
[[Image:Modern-Knight.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Renaissance Fair jousting in Livermore California, 2006.]]
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A form of tilting known as [[tent pegging]] is the only form of jousting officially recognized by the [[International Federation for Equestrian Sports]]. It involves using a lance or sword to strike and carry away a small wooden ground target. The name "tent pegging" is derived from the [[cavalry]] tactic of causing confusion in enemy camps by galloping though the camps and collapsing the tents by pulling up the tent peg anchors with well-placed lance tip strikes. The origins of the sport, however, probably date to medieval [[India]], when horse cavalrymen would try to incapacitate [[elephant]] cavalry by striking the elephants with lances on their extremely sensitive toenails.
  
==Notes==
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The Italian town of [[Foligno]] also holds an annual ring-jousting tournament, the [[Giostra della Quintana]], that dates back to the 1613. The Italian town of [[Arezzo]] holds an annual tournament that dates to the [[Crusades]]. Jousters aim for a square target attached to a wooden effigy of a [[Saracen]] king, whose opposite arm holds a cat-o-three-tails. The riders strike the target with chalk-tipped lances and score points for accuracy, but must also dodge the cat-o-three-tails after they have struck the target. Ring jousting is the official state sport of [[Maryland]], the first official sport of any American state. In [[Port Republic, Maryland]], the annual [[Calvert County]] Jousting Tournament is held every August on the grounds of historic Christ [[Episcopal Church in the United States of America|Episcopal]] Church.
<references/>
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Clephan, R. Coltman. ''The Meieval Tournament''. New York: Dover Publications, 1995. ISBN 978-0486286204
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* Clephan, R. Coltman. ''The Meieval Tournament''. New York: Dover Publications, 1995. ISBN 9780486286204.
*Gravett, Christopher. ''Knights at Tournament''. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 1999. ISBN 978-1855329379
+
* Gravett, Christopher and Angus McBride. ''Knights at Tournament''. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 1999. ISBN 9781855329379.
*Strong, Roy. ''The Cult of Elizabeth: Elizabethan Portraiture and Pageantry''. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1977. ISBN 0500232636
+
* Strong, Roy. ''The Cult of Elizabeth: Elizabethan Portraiture and Pageantry''. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1977. ISBN 0500232636.
*Young, Alan. ''Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments''. Dobbs Ferrey, MY: Sheridan House, 1987. ISBN 0911378758
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* Young, Alan. ''Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments''. Dobbs Ferrey, MY: Sheridan House, 1987. ISBN 0911378758.
  
==External Links==
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==External links==
 +
All links retrieved September 7, 2022.
 
*[http://www.nipissingu.ca/department/history/muhlberger/froissart/tales.htm ''Tales from Froissart''] excerpts from 1849 edition of the Thomas Johnes translation (1805).
 
*[http://www.nipissingu.ca/department/history/muhlberger/froissart/tales.htm ''Tales from Froissart''] excerpts from 1849 edition of the Thomas Johnes translation (1805).
 
*[http://www.myarmoury.com/feature_lancepistol.html From Lance to Pistol: The Evolution of Mounted Soldiers from 1550 to 1600] (myArmoury.com article)
 
*[http://www.myarmoury.com/feature_lancepistol.html From Lance to Pistol: The Evolution of Mounted Soldiers from 1550 to 1600] (myArmoury.com article)
*{{cite web |publisher= [[Victoria and Albert Museum]]
 
|url= http://www.tudorbritain.org/joust/
 
|title= Tudor Joust Game (free, educational, online)
 
|work=British Galleries
 
|accessdate= 2007-07-16}}
 
  
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[[category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
 
[[Category:sports]]
 
[[Category:sports]]
 
[[Category:history]]
 
[[Category:history]]
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[[category:military]]
 
{{Credit|202870120}}
 
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Latest revision as of 01:59, 8 September 2022

Renaissance Fair jousting in Livermore California, 2006.

Jousting is a sport consisting of martial competition, usually between two mounted knights or other horsemen, using a variety of weapons, especially lances. Jousts could also involve contests on foot with battle axes, swords, and maces or other weapons. Another form of jousting is tilting at the rings, in which the galloping rider attempts to insert his lance through small metal or wooden rings.

Jousting is thought to have originated as an informal friendly contest between knights and was later included as a prelude to the main melee event at medieval tournaments. The first recorded tournament was staged in 1066. However, organized jousting did not gain in widespread popularity until the thirteenth century.

The joust permitted a display of individual skill and often offered large sums of prize money. In England, jousting was the highlight of the Accession Day tilts of King Henry VIII, Elizabeth I and James I, and was also part of the festivities at the marriage of Charles I. Many knights made their fortune in these events, while others lost their wealth or even their lives. Most famous of these deaths resulted when a shard of an opponent's broken lance went through the visor and into the eye of Henry II of France in 1559.

Famed in medieval romances, the sport maintained its status as a popular European event until the early seventeenth century. Today it has seen a modest resurgence at fairs, dinner theaters, and events organized by the International Jousting Association.

Jousting and the tournament

A historically correct reenactment of jousting in Taupo, New Zealand, 2006
King Arthur and Queen Guinevere watch a joust from the stands: "Sir Mador's spear brake all to pieces, but the other's spear held."

Tournaments centered on the mêlée, a fight where the knights were divided into two sides and came together in a charge, followed by general combat. Jousting, on the other hand, is single combat between two knights. Jousting was a component of the tournament, but not usually its main feature, serving instead as an evening prelude to the grand charge on the day of the main event. However, since it featured individual knights of substantial fame, it sometimes distracted knights from the main event. Count Philip of Flanders, for example, made a practice in the 1160s of turning up armed with his retinue to the preliminary jousts and then delayed in joining the general mêlée until the initial battle was over. In the twelfth century, jousting was occasionally banned in tournaments because of its tendency to distract from the main event.

Jousting became a popular fixture in romantic tales during this period, the most famous being the stories of King Arthur's knights. By the early thirteenth century, jousting had its own devoted constituency. In the 1220s jousting events began to be held outside the tournament. Called "Round Tables," these were essentially an elimination event, held for knights and squires alike, in which the winners of preliminary rounds would move on to the next level until only one champion remained. The first mention of an exclusively jousting event was the Round Table held in Cyprus by John d'Ibelin, Lord of Beirut in 1223. The biographer of William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke observed shortly later that in his day, noblemen were more interested in jousting than tourneying. Other forms of jousting also arose—such as armed combat without horses and tilting at rings. By the fourteenth century, with the decline of the tournament, jousting became the leading aristocratic sporting amusement.

The fourteenth century Chronicles of Froissart contains many details concerning jousting in medieval times. It relates that a war was even put on hold for a joust between the two sides. Other facets of the tradition mentioned in this source include:

  • An expectation that no participants would be killed
  • The use of attendants
  • Rounds consisting of three encounters with various weapons
  • Jousts being stopped when the risk of death was great
  • Financial rewards for top performers
  • Tilting was one form, but not the only type of jousting
  • Standards of conduct considered honorable
  • The connection between romantic loveand jousting

Field and equipment

Jousting knights at a Texas Renaissance fair

The lists and weapons

The lists, or list field, constituted the roped-off arena in which a jousting event or similar tournament was held. In the late medieval period, castles and palaces were augmented with special purpose-built tiltyards as a venue for jousting tournaments.

The skills and techniques used in jousting were first used in combat, as mounted knights would charge at their enemies with weapons to try to kill or disable them. The primary use of the jousting lance was to unhorse the other by striking him with the end of the lance while riding toward him at high speed. This is known as "tilting." Other weapons were used for jousting included maces, morning stars, various pole weapons, swords, and daggers.

Armor

Lance-rest built into 1565 plate armor.
Jousting helmet, late fifteenth century. Illustration by Albrecht Dürer.

Jousting was popular from the Middle Ages until the early 1600s, during which time armor evolved considerably. In early jousts, armor was chain mail with a solid heavy helmet known as a "great helm" and shield. By 1400, knights wore full suits of plate armor, called a "harness." A full harness frequently included extra pieces specifically for use in jousting, so that a light combat suit could be reinforced with heavier "bolt-on" protective plates on the cuirass (breastplate) and helmet. Special jousting arm- and shoulder-pieces, which traded mobility for extra protection, were also added.

Special jousting helmets were sometimes used with narrow eye slits, made so that the wearer could only see out by leaning forwards. If the wearer straightened up just before the impact of the lance, the eyes would be completely protected. Some later suits had a small shield built into the left side of the armor. In some cases, this was spring-loaded to fly into pieces if struck properly by the opponent's lance.

Lances and other weapons

Lances were often decorated with stripes or the colors of a knight's coat of arms. They were normally of solid oak and a significant strike was needed to shatter them. However, they were intentionally kept blunt and would not usually penetrate the steel. The harnesses worn by the knights were lined on the inside with thick cloth to soften the blow from the lance. In modern times, jousting is often done for show or demonstration purposes, and the lances are usually made of light wood and prepared so that they break easily.

Broken lances are common in modern jousts. In this picture, airborne fragments of both lances are visible.

Since the goal of traditional jousts was to unhorse one's opponent, lances were normally the weapon of choice, although other spears and other pole arms were also sometimes used, as well as maces, morning stars, swords, and even daggers. However, these were more common in jousts that involved combat without horses. It is not by any means certain that swords were blunted for most of the history of the tournament, but this seems to have changed by the mid thirteenth century in jousting encounters. The statute of arms of Edward I of England of 1292 stipulated that blunted knives and swords should be used in tournaments, hinting that blunted weapons were not previously in general use.

Horses

The two most common kinds of horse used for jousting were chargers and destriers. Chargers were medium-weight horses bred and trained for agility and stamina, while destriers were heavy warhorses. These were larger and slower, but helpful to give devastating force to the rider's lance, as its weight was about twice as much as a traditional riding horse. The horses were trained for "ambling," a pace designed to provide adequate speed and consequent force, while also giving the rider enough stability to focus and aim with the lance.

Competing horses had their heads protected by a chanfron, an iron shield for protection from otherwise lethal lance hits. Other forms of equipment on the horse included long-necked spurs which enabled the rider to control the horse with extended legs, a saddle with a high back to provide leverage during the charge or when hit, as well as stirrups for the necessary leverage to deliver blows with the lance.

During a jousting tournament, the horses were cared for by their grooms in their respective tents. Grroms wore caparisons, a type of ornamental cloth featuring the owner's heraldic signs.

Modern-day jousting

Tilting with a lance at a Renaissance Fair.

The most commonly seen form of jousting in the contemporary era is the theatrically-based variety of the sport in dinner theaters and Renaissance fairs. These are often carefully rehearsed for dramatic effect. Some Renaissance fairs feature competitive jousts, tilting at rings, or other jousting contests, in which the outcome is not predetermined.

As a competitive sport, modern-day jousting, or tilting, has been kept alive by the International Jousting Association, which has strict guidelines for the quality and authenticity of jousters' armor and equipment and has developed the use of breakable lance tips for safety. Jousting under the IJA rules follows a points system where points are given for breaking one's lance tip on the opposing knight's shield. However, no points given for unhorsing an opponent. IJA sanctioned tournaments also include skill at arms, where the riders display their horsemanship and weapons-handling skills with swords spears, and lances. Many IJA tournaments also include a mounted melee with fully armored riders using padded batons in place of swords for safety. These IJA events are never theatrically based, offering the public a chance to observe living history as opposed to the Renaissance Fair-type of entertainment jousting.

A form of tilting known as tent pegging is the only form of jousting officially recognized by the International Federation for Equestrian Sports. It involves using a lance or sword to strike and carry away a small wooden ground target. The name "tent pegging" is derived from the cavalry tactic of causing confusion in enemy camps by galloping though the camps and collapsing the tents by pulling up the tent peg anchors with well-placed lance tip strikes. The origins of the sport, however, probably date to medieval India, when horse cavalrymen would try to incapacitate elephant cavalry by striking the elephants with lances on their extremely sensitive toenails.

The Italian town of Foligno also holds an annual ring-jousting tournament, the Giostra della Quintana, that dates back to the 1613. The Italian town of Arezzo holds an annual tournament that dates to the Crusades. Jousters aim for a square target attached to a wooden effigy of a Saracen king, whose opposite arm holds a cat-o-three-tails. The riders strike the target with chalk-tipped lances and score points for accuracy, but must also dodge the cat-o-three-tails after they have struck the target. Ring jousting is the official state sport of Maryland, the first official sport of any American state. In Port Republic, Maryland, the annual Calvert County Jousting Tournament is held every August on the grounds of historic Christ Episcopal Church.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Clephan, R. Coltman. The Meieval Tournament. New York: Dover Publications, 1995. ISBN 9780486286204.
  • Gravett, Christopher and Angus McBride. Knights at Tournament. Oxford: Osprey Publishing, 1999. ISBN 9781855329379.
  • Strong, Roy. The Cult of Elizabeth: Elizabethan Portraiture and Pageantry. New York: Thames and Hudson, 1977. ISBN 0500232636.
  • Young, Alan. Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments. Dobbs Ferrey, MY: Sheridan House, 1987. ISBN 0911378758.

External links

All links retrieved September 7, 2022.

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