[ANSTHRLD] Chronological list of groups
Tim McDaniel
tmcd at panix.com
Fri Nov 6 08:24:42 PST 2009
On Fri, 6 Nov 2009, Donnchadh Beag mac Griogair
<donnchadh at cornelius.norman.ok.us> wrote:
> I would guess that the provence comes after the baronies
Why? Corpora III.C <http://sca.org/docs/pdf/govdocs.pdf> says
C. Branch Designations
The designations given below are considered standard, and their
use for branches of the appropriate type needs no special
justification: ...
* Province: equivalent of barony without ceremonial representative
...
Later:
2. Lateral changes in branch designation (such as between barony
and province or between shire and college) ...
and later still
5. Baronies and Provinces: Baronies and provinces are large
branches within and subject to the administration of a kingdom
(or principality, if any). They are alike in status and in the
ability to administer other branches within their borders, but
differ in that baronies possess a Baron and/or Baroness,
ceremonial representatives appointed by the Crown, and
therefore have the ability to create and administer awards,
while provinces do not. ...
I think that any province should rank among the baronies.
Dannet de Lyncoln
--
Tim McDaniel, tmcd at panix.com
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