Attica (Place): Difference between revisions
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==House Attica== |
==House Attica== |
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'''House Attica''' is [[Sir]] Alfar of Attica's [[household]] in the [[SCA]]. Attica is primarily a [[fighting]] household and was made a [[Pillar of the West]] by Uther and Portia on 30th March [[A.S. XXXVI]]. Some [[knight]]s that belong to Sir Alfar's household are Sir Gawyne d'Ibelin, Sir Gui von Oberhausen, Sir Osric Godwinesson, Sir Berenger of Nancy, and Sir Jock Mactavish. |
'''House Attica''' is [[Sir]] Alfar of Attica's [[household]] in the [[SCA]]. Attica is primarily a [[fighting]] household and was made a [[Pillar of the West]] by Uther and Portia on 30th March [[A.S. XXXVI]]. Some [[knight]]s that belong to Sir Alfar's household are Sir Gawyne d'Ibelin, Sir Gui von Oberhausen, Sir Osric Godwinesson (now known as Sir Guillaume d'Oze), Sir Berenger of Nancy, and Sir Jock Mactavish. |
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[[Image:Alfar2.jpg]] |
[[Image:Alfar2.jpg]] |
Revision as of 09:38, 14 April 2010
Attica is the southernmost portion of mainland Greece, a district which includes the city of Athens and her demesne, including the plains of Marathon. In classical antiquity Attica was of central importance to the Hellenic golden age; during the medieval period it remained a prosperous area but of minimal political importance.
The classical Hellenic tongue is referred to as "Attic Greek"; it is in this language that the great Greek playwrights and philosophers wrote and in which most scholars would have studied the classics. It is a older and "purer" Greek than the koine (common) Greek of the Hellenistic and Roman eras, and as different from the Byzantine Greek of the medieval era as Chaucer's English is from modern English.
House Attica
House Attica is Sir Alfar of Attica's household in the SCA. Attica is primarily a fighting household and was made a Pillar of the West by Uther and Portia on 30th March A.S. XXXVI. Some knights that belong to Sir Alfar's household are Sir Gawyne d'Ibelin, Sir Gui von Oberhausen, Sir Osric Godwinesson (now known as Sir Guillaume d'Oze), Sir Berenger of Nancy, and Sir Jock Mactavish.