User:Spearweasel

From Cunnan
Revision as of 11:38, 18 September 2007 by Spearweasel (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

I am called Kamaitachi no Kansuke, a warrior monk from 1570's Japan. I have been a resident of the Barony of Bryn Gwlad, in Ansteorra since Anno Societatis XXXV (2000). I am primarily active in heavy fighting and archery, but I am also very interested in the SCA's online presence, persona development, and the thinking behind both. I currently have no time in SCA kingdoms beyond my own, though I make a point of communicating with SCAdians from all over the world.

I run a website called the SCA Asian Persona Survey[1]. It is a simple collection of links, names, locations, and contact information for SCAdians playing personae that hail from the parts of Asia farthest removed from Europe: China, Japan, Korea, India, Southeast Asia, or the Mongol Empire. It is primarily to foster a sense of community and solidarity among those of us who play personae out of the mainstream of traditional SCA culture.

So, what is a "Spearweasel" you ask?

Many years ago, a friend observed me fighting with a polearm. He thought it looked like I was using a Garden Weasel rather than a polearm, and immediately dubbed me "Spearweasel". This being much easier to say than my original Japanese persona name, it was adopted into general use as my nickname. Catchy, I think, and much easier to say than "Kamaitachi no Kansuke" for most people. I've been using the name since 1998, and its how most know me.

What is a "Kamaitachi", by the way?

The kamaitachi is a creature from Japanese folklore, depicted as three blindingly fast weasels with razor sharp claws - the first knocks you down, the second slices you open, and the third closes your wound, leaving no blood. The term, which apparently is a pun, translates roughly as "sickle weasel". This is pretty close to "Spearweasel", and since it a) already existed in folklore, and b) was a scary monster with slicing and dicing, it seemed like the sort of nickname a warrior might adopt to sound more impressive. Close enough, so I ran with it.