[Ansteorra] Nicknames in the SCA-starting a conversation

Miles Grey Kahn at West-Point.org
Tue Dec 18 06:25:37 PST 2012


I handled it by carefully researching, selecting, and registering a 
period, 15th century English name that's easy to say and remember.

   Miles Grey


On 12/17/2012 2:43 PM, Tina Michael wrote:
> Back when I was a kid in school, long before I had ever heard of the SCA,
> my best girlfriend and I, both of us readers into Fantasy with a capital F,
> came up with secret identities for ourselves. We did it so we could pass
> notes in class and if the teacher intercepted them we would not get caught.
> I remember her's was Vanessa en Febra duBray and mine was Augustina Johanna
> Elizabetta Michaela da San Germano. Most of it was just my real name
> fancied up a bit and that of a last name of a character in a book I was
> reading at time and liked the sound of. It had a ring to it. Well, when
> faced with the idea of a society name I just took that one and used it. I
> answer to it, right? But when I go up to people and say, "Hello, my name is
> Augustina Johanna Elizabetta Michaela da San Germano", they invariably say,
> "Bless you", or huh? or Oh my! When I was in Trimaris people called me
> Elizabetta and that was okay but still kinda funny with a Florida accent,
> it came out Elizabella or some such. So I just say call me Tina, all my
> friends do, which is true, they do. But I have been told not to use a
> shortened name or a nickname as that will be the only name you will be
> known by, but the way I see it, if someone see something neat I do and
> wants to comment on me they will make an effort to find my whole name out.
> I would do the same thing.
>    What do you think? Do you have a great long period or family name and go
> by something shorter and more friendly sounding?  Is using a nickname a
> detriment in the society or does it really matter?
>
> Lady Augustina Elizabetta blah blah blah da San Germano
> aka Tina





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