Caterina da Savona: Difference between revisions
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
My name is Caterina da Savona. I was born into a successful merchant family in Savona (along the coast in Liguria, west of Genoa), and I was just a child when the Black Death swept through my town. It was devastating. I survived, along with my father and one of my brothers. Like the other girls from important families in the trade, I learned enough arithmetic, reading, and writing to help my family -- and, later, my husband -- with bookkeeping. | |||
My husband was a kind young man, the son of our business partners in Savona. We had two children who survived to adulthood. Sadly, my husband never lived to see our second child reach majority. He was wounded during a battle at sea, against those horrible Genoese merchants. My children are married well and reside in Savona. | My first husband was a kind young man, the son of our business partners in Savona. We had two children who survived to adulthood. Sadly, my husband never lived to see our second child reach majority. He was wounded during a battle at sea, against those horrible Genoese merchants. My children are married well and reside in Savona. | ||
After some time, I re-married to Hugues de Bertoncourt. Now I live in his manor-house near Rethel, in France, not far from Ghent. He has a noble name, although his family is not very large. Together, we have access to Flemish woolens and Italian brocades and many other precious goods, using ships held by my family and to overland routes managed by Hugues. It is a comfortable life. | After some time, I re-married to [[Hugues de Bertoncourt]]. Now I live in his manor-house near Rethel, in France, not far from Ghent. He has a noble name, although his family is not very large. Together, we have access to Flemish woolens and Italian brocades and many other precious goods, using ships held by my family and to overland routes managed by Hugues. It is a comfortable life. | ||
(Caterina's registered SCA arms are inspired by medieval Italian merchant family marks | (Caterina's registered SCA arms are inspired by medieval Italian merchant family marks. Such marks may have been used to label boxes and crates, as well as for correspondence, etc.) | ||
----- | |||
== Arts & Sciences == | == Arts & Sciences == | ||
=== | === Medieval Clothing Construction === | ||
''' 14th Century Italian & French ''' | ''' 14th Century Italian & French ''' | ||
: My primary focus is continental fashion (Italian, or French with some Flemish influence) from the late 14th to early 15th century. Fabrics, styles, and accessories are chosen with the persona of "minor nobles engaged in trade" between 1385--1405. This is a fascinating time in fashion history, with exquisite tailoring, styles that changed every decade or two, and an adequate collection of surviving illuminated manuscripts, effigies, etc., to provide guidance. I strive for a head-to-toe collection of garb in a "capsule wardrobe" style, including outerwear and accessories. | : My primary focus is continental fashion (Italian, or French with some Flemish influence) from the late 14th to early 15th century. Fabrics, styles, and accessories are chosen with the persona of "minor nobles engaged in trade" between 1385--1405. This is a fascinating time in fashion history, with exquisite tailoring, styles that changed every decade or two, and an adequate collection of surviving illuminated manuscripts, effigies, etc., to provide guidance. I strive for a head-to-toe collection of garb in a "capsule wardrobe" style, including outerwear and accessories. | ||
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</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
: Some construction and research details are in my Athenaeum 2020 exhibit: [https://athenaeum.baronyofmadrone.net/exhibits/the-rise-of-fashion-italian-and-french-garb-for-1385/ The Rise of Fashion: Italian and French Garb for 1385] | : Some construction and research details are in my Athenaeum 2020 exhibit: [https://athenaeum.baronyofmadrone.net/exhibits/the-rise-of-fashion-italian-and-french-garb-for-1385/ LINK to "The Rise of Fashion: Italian and French Garb for 1385"] | ||
: A fully lined Flemish-style "proto-doublet" gave me the footage I needed to make a series of videos on intermediate tailoring techniques for medieval clothing: [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/intermediate-sewing-tutorials LINK to "Intermediate Sewing Tutorials"] | |||
''' 9-10th Century Southern Slavic ''' | ''' 9-10th Century Southern Slavic ''' | ||
: I love to teach rectangular construction and how simple it is for new sewists to dive into their first garb, so we also have Slavic clothing from the setting of the First Bulgarian Empire. These represent well-off farmers/landowners, as the Bulgarian ruling class still holds sway over their culture. This was substantially more difficult to research; Slavs practiced cremation during this era and were consummate woodworkers | : I love to teach rectangular construction and how simple it is for new sewists to dive into their first garb, so we also have Slavic clothing from the setting of the First Bulgarian Empire. These represent well-off farmers/landowners, as the Bulgarian ruling class still holds sway over their culture. This was substantially more difficult to research; Slavs practiced cremation during this era and were consummate woodworkers. Little has survived from the early Slavic material culture. I had to study and extrapolate from Slavic cultures before and after the time period and consider the possible effects of contact cultures. Fortunately, some of these early-medieval styles appear to remain similar over centuries, not just decades. | ||
: Some of the construction is detailed in my Athenaeum 2021 exhibit: [https://athenaeum.baronyofmadrone.net/exhibits/early-medieval-slavic-garb-a-beginners-journey-into-embellishment/ Early Medieval Slavic Garb: A Beginner’s Journey into Embellishment] | : Some of the construction is detailed in my Athenaeum 2021 exhibit: [https://athenaeum.baronyofmadrone.net/exhibits/early-medieval-slavic-garb-a-beginners-journey-into-embellishment/ LINK to "Early Medieval Slavic Garb: A Beginner’s Journey into Embellishment"] | ||
: | : My website hosts the online version of my rectangular construction classes, with handouts and video links: [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/rectangular-construction LINK to "Garb tutorials for beginners"] | ||
<gallery mode="packed-hover" heights=240px> | <gallery mode="packed-hover" heights=240px> | ||
File:CatAndHugues-10thCentury.jpg|(click to enlarge) | File:CatAndHugues-10thCentury.jpg|(click to enlarge) | ||
File:CdaSavona HowToVideos.png| | File:CdaSavona HowToVideos.png|(click to enlarge) | ||
File:CdaSavona headband-templerings.jpg|(click to enlarge) | File:CdaSavona headband-templerings.jpg|(click to enlarge) | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
''' 3-5th Century BCE Greek ''' | ''' 3-5th Century BCE Greek ''' | ||
: Finally, our third time period (work in progress) is a deep dive into Anatolian Greece, Ephesus 3rd-5th century BC. | : Finally, our third time period (work in progress) is a deep dive into Anatolian Greece, Ephesus 3rd-5th century BC. The chitons (Ionic for her, simple for him), chlamys, himation, and epiblema are wearable, but I still want to add more details -- block printing most likely. Perhaps woven belts. Shoes and hairstyles are also on the "to do" list! | ||
''' Weaving, Braiding, and Cordage ''' | ''' Weaving, Braiding, and Cordage ''' | ||
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Bread & brews? The history of yeasted breads, both savory and sweet, flat and round, baked and fried, is always a source of joy. I enjoy the challenge of working with dense, whole-grain, and non-wheat flours. | Bread & brews? The history of yeasted breads, both savory and sweet, flat and round, baked and fried, is always a source of joy. I enjoy the challenge of working with dense, whole-grain, and non-wheat flours. | ||
But the journey we've taken in the SCA focuses on the variety of beverages created from brewer's yeast -- from non-alcoholic sodas, to lightly alcoholic "live meads", to fruit wines and sack meads. | But the journey we've taken in the SCA focuses on the variety of beverages created from brewer's yeast -- from non-alcoholic sodas, to lightly alcoholic "live meads", to fruit wines and sack meads. Here's a [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/historical-fermented-beverages link to our website] with the highlights -- and copies of our class handouts with instructions and recipes. | ||
Live meads? The sagas speak of "young mead" and "old mead", and from a variety of sources, we glean that "young meads" were drunk straight from the vat, while still sweet and bubbly. They must be drunk quickly, before it becomes more sour than sweet. When Loki receives the "old mead" in a crystal chalice, this implies a drink prized for its clarity -- suggesting that this might not be the case for young mead. Similarly, many historical mead recipes have '''very''' short fermentation times -- and instructions to drink them quickly. We've interpreted this as a "live" beverage with active yeast, about 5% residual sugar, a 5-6% ABV, and a little cloudy (just like a live ale). We have redacted several recipes, especially historical metheglins, in this style. | Live meads? The sagas speak of "young mead" and "old mead", and from a variety of sources, we glean that "young meads" were drunk straight from the vat, while still sweet and bubbly. They must be drunk quickly, before it becomes more sour than sweet. When Loki receives the "old mead" in a crystal chalice, this implies a drink prized for its clarity -- suggesting that this might not be the case for young mead. Similarly, many historical mead recipes have '''very''' short fermentation times -- and instructions to drink them quickly. We've interpreted this as a "live" beverage with active yeast, about 5% residual sugar, a 5-6% ABV, and a little cloudy (just like a live ale). We have redacted several recipes, especially historical metheglins, in this style. | ||
<blockquote>'''Did you know?''' Soda pop can be dated back at least to the 10th century!</blockquote> | |||
It was made with yeast and honey, not chemical carbonation and sugar, but in all essentials it was soda! I am now diving into the variety of non-alcoholic brews in the 10th century ''Annals of the Caliph's Kitchens''. And considering a side trip into vinegar brewing so we can make ancient Roman "posca" drinks. | It was made with yeast and honey, not chemical carbonation and sugar, but in all essentials it was soda! I am now diving into the variety of non-alcoholic brews in the 10th century ''Annals of the Caliph's Kitchens''. And considering a side trip into vinegar brewing so we can make ancient Roman "posca" drinks. | ||
== Affiliations == | |||
Apprenticed to [[Master]] [[Arion the Wanderer]]. | |||
== | ----- | ||
== Service == | |||
[[ | ===Teaching === | ||
* Rectangular Construction 101 - Patterning & Sewing Your First Tunic/Gown [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/rectangular-construction#h.l7grnfqwb8nk (link to handout & videos)] | |||
* Rectangular Construction 102 - The Fabulously Fashionable Rectangle [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/rectangular-construction#h.oalq6jakruro (link to handout & videos)] | |||
* Live Meads: the Medieval Party Drink (co-taught with [[Hugues de Bertoncourt]]), [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/historical-fermented-beverages#h.m378xg19nr5r (link to handout)] | |||
* Homemade Fermented Soda: Modern Drink, Medieval Roots [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/home/historical-fermented-beverages#h.l42mkf6yyjw (link to handout)] | |||
* Knife Sharpening Basics ([[co-taught with Hugues de Bertoncourt]]) | |||
* How to Advertise Your SCA Event [https://dragonslaire.antir.org/wordpress/resources/resources-for-event-planners/how-to-advertise-your-event/ (link to article)] | |||
Dragon's Laire Culinary Guild | ===Event Support=== | ||
* Harvest Feast 2022: helped with sausage prep, made all the bread | |||
* Harvest Feast 2023: developed a sourdough rye bread, coordinated the bread-making event, advertising lead for the event planning team | |||
* Harvest Feast 2023: Advertising lead | |||
* Baronial website support for June Faire in 2022, 2023, 2024 | |||
===Offices=== | |||
* Deputy to the Baronial Webminister, Jan 2022 -- Jan 2024 | |||
** Front-end web support and maintenance | |||
** Newcomers welcome articles [https://dragonslaire.antir.org/wordpress/welcome/visitors/7-things-i-learned-as-a-newcomer/ LINK to "7 Things I Learned as a Newcomer to the SCA"] and [https://dragonslaire.antir.org/wordpress/welcome/visitors/guide-to-your-first-event/ "Newcomers' Guide to Your First Event"] | |||
* Baronial Social Media Officer, Jan 2024 -- present | |||
----- | |||
== Guild and Group Memberships == | |||
* An Tir Gardening (informal Facebook group) | |||
* [[Embellishers' Guild of An Tir]] | |||
* Dragon's Laire Culinary & Spiritmakers Guild | |||
== Links to Other Websites == | |||
* [https://op.antirheralds.org/index.php?who=10759 An Tir Order of Precendence listing] | |||
* [https://www.youtube.com/@ravenswatchfarm YouTube channel] | |||
* [https://www.instagram.com/ravens_watch_farm/ Instagram feed] | |||
* [https://www.ravenswatchfarm.com/ Website] | |||
[[Category:People]] | [[Category:People]] | ||
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[[Category:Italian Personas]] | [[Category:Italian Personas]] | ||
[[Category:Dragon's Laire]] | [[Category:Dragon's Laire]] | ||
[[Category:Apprentices]] |
Revision as of 12:18, 11 July 2024
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Caterina da Savona | ||||||||
Information | ||||||||
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Heraldry | ||||||||
Or, a triangle inverted gules within in annulo five roundels sable |
Introduction
My name is Caterina da Savona. I was born into a successful merchant family in Savona (along the coast in Liguria, west of Genoa), and I was just a child when the Black Death swept through my town. It was devastating. I survived, along with my father and one of my brothers. Like the other girls from important families in the trade, I learned enough arithmetic, reading, and writing to help my family -- and, later, my husband -- with bookkeeping.
My first husband was a kind young man, the son of our business partners in Savona. We had two children who survived to adulthood. Sadly, my husband never lived to see our second child reach majority. He was wounded during a battle at sea, against those horrible Genoese merchants. My children are married well and reside in Savona.
After some time, I re-married to Hugues de Bertoncourt. Now I live in his manor-house near Rethel, in France, not far from Ghent. He has a noble name, although his family is not very large. Together, we have access to Flemish woolens and Italian brocades and many other precious goods, using ships held by my family and to overland routes managed by Hugues. It is a comfortable life.
(Caterina's registered SCA arms are inspired by medieval Italian merchant family marks. Such marks may have been used to label boxes and crates, as well as for correspondence, etc.)
Arts & Sciences
Medieval Clothing Construction
14th Century Italian & French
- My primary focus is continental fashion (Italian, or French with some Flemish influence) from the late 14th to early 15th century. Fabrics, styles, and accessories are chosen with the persona of "minor nobles engaged in trade" between 1385--1405. This is a fascinating time in fashion history, with exquisite tailoring, styles that changed every decade or two, and an adequate collection of surviving illuminated manuscripts, effigies, etc., to provide guidance. I strive for a head-to-toe collection of garb in a "capsule wardrobe" style, including outerwear and accessories.
-
(click to enlarge)
-
(click to enlarge)
-
(click to enlarge)
- Some construction and research details are in my Athenaeum 2020 exhibit: LINK to "The Rise of Fashion: Italian and French Garb for 1385"
- A fully lined Flemish-style "proto-doublet" gave me the footage I needed to make a series of videos on intermediate tailoring techniques for medieval clothing: LINK to "Intermediate Sewing Tutorials"
9-10th Century Southern Slavic
- I love to teach rectangular construction and how simple it is for new sewists to dive into their first garb, so we also have Slavic clothing from the setting of the First Bulgarian Empire. These represent well-off farmers/landowners, as the Bulgarian ruling class still holds sway over their culture. This was substantially more difficult to research; Slavs practiced cremation during this era and were consummate woodworkers. Little has survived from the early Slavic material culture. I had to study and extrapolate from Slavic cultures before and after the time period and consider the possible effects of contact cultures. Fortunately, some of these early-medieval styles appear to remain similar over centuries, not just decades.
- Some of the construction is detailed in my Athenaeum 2021 exhibit: LINK to "Early Medieval Slavic Garb: A Beginner’s Journey into Embellishment"
- My website hosts the online version of my rectangular construction classes, with handouts and video links: LINK to "Garb tutorials for beginners"
-
(click to enlarge)
-
(click to enlarge)
-
(click to enlarge)
3-5th Century BCE Greek
- Finally, our third time period (work in progress) is a deep dive into Anatolian Greece, Ephesus 3rd-5th century BC. The chitons (Ionic for her, simple for him), chlamys, himation, and epiblema are wearable, but I still want to add more details -- block printing most likely. Perhaps woven belts. Shoes and hairstyles are also on the "to do" list!
Weaving, Braiding, and Cordage
- In support of costume construction, I do some narrow-band weaving. I prefer plain weaving to tablet weaving and am comfortable with cotton or wool. Fingerloop braids add a splash of color to the never-ending 14th century need for MORE ties and drawstrings. And twisted cord is a quick-and-dirty way to make longer lengths of lightweight "rope" for a variety of uses.
Simple Embroidery
- Simple embroidery in wool yarn adds a bit of "extra" to several of my pieces -- carrying bags, hoods, capes, etc. This is something I continue to add to existing pieces, time permitting.
Accessories in Metal and Leather
Veil pins, fibulae, belts, and sheaths, oh my! I brought my pre-existing skills in wireworking and leatherworking into my SCA hobby, and I pull them out as needed for small accessories.
Fermented Foods & Beverages
Bread & brews? The history of yeasted breads, both savory and sweet, flat and round, baked and fried, is always a source of joy. I enjoy the challenge of working with dense, whole-grain, and non-wheat flours.
But the journey we've taken in the SCA focuses on the variety of beverages created from brewer's yeast -- from non-alcoholic sodas, to lightly alcoholic "live meads", to fruit wines and sack meads. Here's a link to our website with the highlights -- and copies of our class handouts with instructions and recipes.
Live meads? The sagas speak of "young mead" and "old mead", and from a variety of sources, we glean that "young meads" were drunk straight from the vat, while still sweet and bubbly. They must be drunk quickly, before it becomes more sour than sweet. When Loki receives the "old mead" in a crystal chalice, this implies a drink prized for its clarity -- suggesting that this might not be the case for young mead. Similarly, many historical mead recipes have very short fermentation times -- and instructions to drink them quickly. We've interpreted this as a "live" beverage with active yeast, about 5% residual sugar, a 5-6% ABV, and a little cloudy (just like a live ale). We have redacted several recipes, especially historical metheglins, in this style.
Did you know? Soda pop can be dated back at least to the 10th century!
It was made with yeast and honey, not chemical carbonation and sugar, but in all essentials it was soda! I am now diving into the variety of non-alcoholic brews in the 10th century Annals of the Caliph's Kitchens. And considering a side trip into vinegar brewing so we can make ancient Roman "posca" drinks.
Affiliations
Apprenticed to Master Arion the Wanderer.
Service
Teaching
- Rectangular Construction 101 - Patterning & Sewing Your First Tunic/Gown (link to handout & videos)
- Rectangular Construction 102 - The Fabulously Fashionable Rectangle (link to handout & videos)
- Live Meads: the Medieval Party Drink (co-taught with Hugues de Bertoncourt), (link to handout)
- Homemade Fermented Soda: Modern Drink, Medieval Roots (link to handout)
- Knife Sharpening Basics (co-taught with Hugues de Bertoncourt)
- How to Advertise Your SCA Event (link to article)
Event Support
- Harvest Feast 2022: helped with sausage prep, made all the bread
- Harvest Feast 2023: developed a sourdough rye bread, coordinated the bread-making event, advertising lead for the event planning team
- Harvest Feast 2023: Advertising lead
- Baronial website support for June Faire in 2022, 2023, 2024
Offices
- Deputy to the Baronial Webminister, Jan 2022 -- Jan 2024
- Front-end web support and maintenance
- Newcomers welcome articles LINK to "7 Things I Learned as a Newcomer to the SCA" and "Newcomers' Guide to Your First Event"
- Baronial Social Media Officer, Jan 2024 -- present
Guild and Group Memberships
- An Tir Gardening (informal Facebook group)
- Embellishers' Guild of An Tir
- Dragon's Laire Culinary & Spiritmakers Guild