Marie l'Englois
Persona
Marie l'Englois is an Englishwoman living in France in the mid-16th century (circa 1530-1570).
Marie initially traveled to France in the retinue of a politically-climbing male relative assigned to the French court (identity of said relative occasionally varies between brother, uncle, and husband depending on random whim). When this relative passed suddenly, she managed to obtain herself a place in service to a minor noble household as a music tutor (and in later years secretly a scribe as well), and somehow convinced her remaining family that a) this was their idea, and b) it was to their political advantage for her to remain there with the remaining retinue rather than being summoned home.
Marie is educated, literate and well-read, and is mostly self-supporting with the assistance of the family she serves and the occasional contribution from home. She enjoys rather more independence than is generally considered appropriate for a lady, mostly because her remaining family members don't consider her important enough to marry off, and it costs them less money to leave her in place than to fetch her home. She values this independence and doesn't do anything to draw undue attention to herself and risk changing that. As a consequence, her family has mostly forgotten she exists, beyond the occasional letter, bit of gossip, or political machination they require of her.
Marie greatly enjoys experiencing the many music and fashion styles she is exposed to through the household she serves and the larger French court. It almost makes up for the careful politics she has to play in order to stay there.
Whereabouts
Within the SCA, Marie resides in the Canton of Caldrithig, in the Barony of Skraeling Althing, in the Kingdom of Ealdormere (and has done so since Ealdormere was part of the Midrealm).
Heraldry
Current Office(s)
Director, Caldrithig Choral Group
Director, Caldrithig Instrumental Group
Past Offices
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Pursuivant, Canton of Caldrithig, jointly with Jaqueline de Bucquoy (late 90s ish, Jaqueline did the reporting, Marie did the court and field heraldry, both did research and submissions)
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Phone Tree Administrator, Canton of Caldrithig (In the days before mailing lists were common or Yahoo groups or FB existed, local SCAdians used a phone call-up tree to contact people about local happenings of interest. Created the first Caldrithig e-mail list.)
SCA History
Interests
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Singing (choral music and solo bardic, can cover soprano, alto, and tenor parts)
Instrumental Music (proficient on SSATBB recorders, crumhorns, cornemusen and assorted other early woodwinds, along with renaissance drum and other percussion)
Composition (solo and multi-part, vocal and instrumental, spanning multiple countries and time periods)
Reading, Writing, and Transcription of various forms of historic music notation
Instrument Making and Repair, primarily woodwinds and percussion, have also studied reed construction for early woodwinds
Director of the local SCA choral and instrumental ensembles, and hosts weekly practices for both ensembles in her home
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Has studied historic folk and street music not just court and religious music, has a particular fondness for 16thC secular/humourous multi-part choral pieces, and early drinking and bawdy songs.
Other ongoing bardic pursuits include
Poetry Composition and Recitation,
Storytelling, and learning
Harp and Bodhran.
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mainly focused on 1530-1570 England, France, Italy and Spain, with occasional dabbling in German-Saxon and the low countries
in past has also done a fair bit of 14thC, along with some Norse and early Irish, as well as several sets of rapier garb in different styles
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proficient in a variety of hands, from futhark runes to gothic, general tendency to be more proficient at the structured/patterned/mathematical hands over the free-flowing artistic ones
illumation is limited to gold/silver/copper leaf and mathematically-based knotwork… and sheet music of course (especially
eye music!)… but, y'know, don't ask her to actually DRAW anything! :p
enjoys wordsmithing, especially really restrictive poetic forms and acrostics
has cut her own quills and dabbled with ink making
hosts bi-weekly scribal nights in her home
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Games: not an expert on period games, but enjoys playing them when the opportunity arises
Pentathlon: on the TODO list… projects have been picked for years, but life keeps intervening
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Research: Marie reads insanely fast (around 900 words per minute), so can do deep dives into pretty much anything that interests her, and frequently does so. This page may someday be expanded to contain a list of topics covered to date, if some kind of non-wall-of-text-format can be found for the purpose.
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Thrown Weapons: recently tried throwing axes for the first time, and loved it enough that she has concluded she must do a great deal more of it, if her troublesome joints will cooperate with the endeavour. :)
Classes Taught
12th-16thC Bawdy Songs: Street songs from the Troubadours to the Tudors, naughty nuns and other “nothings”, musical fantasies, fetishes, and political incorrectness, and a look at the English Country as you've never seen it before. Ages 18+ only.
12th-16thC Drinking Songs: There are more drinking songs suited to our campfires and feast halls than many can even dream of. Human nature hasn't fundamentally changed, people have been sharing drink and song for centuries. We'll belt out drinking songs in five languages, spanning multiple centuries, from sources ranging from the Carmina Burana to Ravenscroft.
8th-16thC Holiday Songs: Some of our favourite carols are older than we think! Others are a fair bit younger. We'll explore Christmas, Yuletide, and holiday celebration songs in multiple languages, from a cross-section of the many different centuries covered by the SCA.
Contrefait/Contrafacta (aka writing period-style filk): Caught the bardic bug, have you? Not sure about composing original tunes yet? That's ok, reusing tunes is TOTALLY a period practice, and using period sources for filking avoids all those pesky copyright laws. We'll look at several pre-17thC examples, then create something as a group about current SCA happenings.
Choral Jam: Like to sing? Curious about pre-17thC choral music? Give it a try! I'll bring the music, you bring your voice, we'll skip the theory and just start singing. Perfectionism not required. You'll be surprised how quickly it all comes together.
Instrumental Jam: Play an instrument? Curious about pre-17thC ensemble music? Give it a try! I'll bring the music, you bring the instrument(s), will skip the theory and just start playing. Perfectionism not required. You'll be surprised how quickly it all comes together. Some loaner instruments available by pre-arrangement.
Recorder 101: AKA “Which end do you blow in?” Basic beginner recorder instruction, focusing on simple rounds and easy SCA dance music. Loaner instruments available by pre-arrangement.
Bunny Scout Recorder Chorus: similar to Recorder 101, but targetted towards children ages 6-10 years.
Easy Period Rounds: Not sure where to start with period music? This is your class! Adults and children, ages 6 and up.
Knotwork Workshop: Basic and intermediate illuminated knotwork techniques taught at various scribal nights in Caldrithig and Harrowgate Heath.
Metal Leafing Workshop: Basic and intermediate gold, silver and copper leaf techniques for scribes, taught one on one in people's homes and at Caldrithig A&S days.
Awards
Other
Marie shares heart and home with
Auríkr Biarnarsson, a Norse blacksmith, singer, musician, poet, and scribe, who would look utterly FABULOUS in Tudor if he ever decided to time travel. :)
Marie deals with a number of chronic pain conditions that impact her mobility and energy levels. She sometimes doesn't know how actively she'll be able to participate in an event until the day of the event, which can make scheduled activities a challenge. It also sometimes requires garb compromises her inner costuming geek doesn't like.
Marie is an introvert and isn't always comfortable approaching people she doesn't know. If we have interests in common, please do introduce yourself!!