Michael FitzGeoffrey
Full Name and Style: Lord Michael FitzGeoffrey, GdS, OLM, Midhaven Pursuivant
Arms: Vert, a Latin cross and on a chief potenty argent, three mullets of eight points pierced gules.
Email: michaelfitzgeoffrey@gmail.com[1]
Blog: http://www.michaelfitzgeoffrey.blogspot.com/
Personae
Michael FitzGeoffrey is actually two different personae, but with the same name:
(1) Michael FitzGeoffrey was born 21 February 1170 in Dover, England. At the time he was conceived, his Anglo-Saxon mother was employed as a barmaid at the Inn of the Red Star, an establishment with a reputation for quality among those in the area. In early June 1169, this inn boarded a small party of Norman travelers returning to London, England from Calais, France. The most distinguished guest in this party was none other than the son of King Henry II, Geoffrey, Duc de Bretagne! It was Michael’s mother who caught the prince’s eye and was chosen to keep His Grace’s bed warm during the three nights of His stay. As it turns out, her monthly cycle had concluded but that very morning. His mother took ill just after the departure of her royal patron, causing her to be unable to perform similar services for other clients for a solid fortnight, by which time she had begun to suspect that she was expecting.
Knowing that if she was, indeed, with child that her babe could only be the prince’s offspring, and recognizing the potential for this to become a source of wealth and status for her the likes of which she had never before dreamt of, she fled the inn and sought refuge in a priory where her older sister had recently taken holy orders as a Benedictine nun. She remained at the priory living on the charity of the house until her son was weaned.
At his birth, she had him baptized Michael FitzGeoffrey, naming him Michael after the parish priest, whom she chose for his godfather, and FitzGeoffrey to indicate his father’s identity. Although it was her intention, should the babe turn out to be a boy, to present him before the prince and seek his recognition as a royal bastard, the opportunity never came, and she also had no evidence to support such a claim other than her own word.
Having a parish priest for his godfather, and living in the vicinity of the priory wherein he was born, Michael divided his time between his mother, who took up the art of embroidery during her pregnancy, and eventually married a journeyman armorer employed by the local baron, by whom she had a daughter and a son. Father Michael, taught him his catechism, some Latin, some Anglo-Norman[2], some politics, and scribal skills. Michael was equally at home at the priory, among the baron’s servants, and in the village.
From an early age, the colors of armorial display always fascinated him and became a focus of abiding interest. As a lad of 11 to 15 years of age, he came and went throughout the village as a messenger. By the time he was 16 he was regularly working as a village crier. When the calls went abroad recruiting for the Third Crusade, Michael took leave of his mother, stepfather, and godfather, with whose written recommendation he joined the crusade as a herald for the local baron, who also followed King Richard Cœur de Lion to Jerusalem. During the course of the Crusade, he left the service of the baron in order to accept a position as a pursuivant of arms in the service of the King himself, and in that employ, was awarded arms by the king-of-arms that supervised him.
Returning to England, he left his employment in the royal household, and bought himself a small estate using moneys that he had acquired. This estate was in the county town of the county that included the priory where he was born and the village where his mother had lived when the journeyman armorer married her. Michael was subsequently employed as a herald for the Earl, and eventually married one of the Countess’s nieces.
(2) Lord Michael FitzGeoffrey was born on Michaelmas (29 September) of 1350. He was the third son of an English earl. He married Lady Avelyn de Mowbray, a kinswoman of the Duke of Norfolk.
Lord Michael had from time to time served at court and had attended a few parliaments as a member of the House of Commons (seeing that his honorific is merely a courtesy title, derived from his being an earl’s son, but not heir). He came to be regarded as a capable administrator in the variety of offices to which he was posted, and more particularly as an officer-of-arms.
He often occupied his free time with various pursuits, at which he demonstrated a potential for talent, yet rarely with sufficient practice to become renowned, the chief exception to this being his work with the crafting of mail armor.
Household
Lord Michael and his family are in a household with: the family of Lady Elewys Cuylter of Finchingefeld, Martha at Gore, and the family of Elizabeth of Fernhill. The household currently doesn’t have a name, but they called themselves House Finchingefeld at September Crown 2012 to reserve group camping.
Family
Lord Michael FitzGeoffrey is happily married to Lady Avelyn de Mowbray. They have three young children: Emily, Jaren, and Edwin.
Interests
Lord Michael’s interests cover a variety of areas, including:
- the making of mail armor
- calligraphy (particularly Gothic, Carolingian, and Insular), and wordsmithing
- heraldry of all sorts (especially protocol/etiquette and court heraldry and the creation/customization of ceremonies.
- Lord Michael has had the opportunity to herald royal courts on a few occasions for the Crowns of both the West and An Tir.)
- singing (especially choral)
- drumming
- thrown weapons (especially spear/javelin)
- embroidery and blackwork
- weaving and braiding
- enameling
- youth armored combat (as a parent/spectator/herald/lists page)
- writing in award recommendations
- Ithra
SCA Beginnings
When Michael first became involved with the Society for Creative Anachronism, his mundane alter ego was serving in the United States Navy, and was stationed in Okinawa, Japan. In the Society, this was a part of the Palatine Barony of the Far West (West Kingdom) called Canton of the Isle of Blue Mists. (Incidentally, this name was never registered, and since that time the canton has been renamed Stronghold of Battle Rock.)
While living and participating there, He developed an interest in heraldry, and was graciously instructed by the Barony’s heraldic officer (known as the Golden Peach Pursuivant), Lady Serra da Estrella. Lady Serra’s husband, Lord Robert de Fecamp, organized a household called Oyasumi Nasai, and because of Michael’s student relationship to Lady Serra, Lord Robert invited Michael to affiliate himself with it, which he did until he moved from the Far West. (Incidentally, oyasumi nasai is a Japanese phrase meaning, “good night”, which Lord Robert chose because of its being a homonym for “good knight”.)
Oddly enough, the place to which Michael moved was still in the Marches of the West Kingdom. It was the Shire of Ravenshore, which corresponds to the Counties of Lake and Mendocino in northern California. While there, Michael was rostered as a Pursuivant Extraordinary at Large by the West Kingdom College of Heralds, before becoming the Pursuivant Extraordinary for Ravenshore.
After a while, his mundane employment necessitated yet another though much nearer move, where he spent a very brief time in the Barony of Vinhold (Principality of the Mists, Kingdom of the West - mundanely, Napa County and southern Solano County, still in northern California) before becoming completely inactive in the SCA for some thirteen years.
During that interval, Lord Michael’s mundane alter ego got married and subsequently moved to Snohomish County, Washington, which corresponds to the Barony of Aquaterra. Eventually, in the summer of A.S. XLIII, he brought his lady wife, Avelyn de Mowbray, and his sister, Adela Bowman, to their first event, Hot Summer Lights (held by the Shire of Druim Doineann).
Awards
In about June of 1992 (A.S. XXVII), Michael was awarded the Order of the Empty Shell by the Coronet of the Palatine Barony of the Far West. This award is given to recognize the service and contributions of those who have been active participants in the Barony, and is normally awarded to them on the occasion of their moving away from it.