Water bearing: Difference between revisions

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<div style="float:right; margin: 0 0 1em 1em;">[[Image:Waterbearers.png]]</div>
<div style="float:right; margin: 0 0 1em 1em;">[[Image:Waterbearers.png]]</div>
During [[war]]s and [[tourney]]s, [[fighter]]s often risk dehydration. To prevent this, people bring water to the fighters. These people are often the fighter's [[consort]], or of the same [[household]] or group as the fighters. There have been many ingenious ways developed of getting water to weary fighters. Some carry large water barrels carried on their backs with plastic tubing for straws, others carry a box with compartments filled with smaller waterbottles, each bearing the name of the fighter who the bottle belongs to.
During [[war]]s and [[tourney]]s, [[fighter]]s often risk dehydration. To prevent this, people bring water to the fighters. These people are often the fighter's [[consort]], or of the same [[household]] or group as the fighters. There have been many ingenious ways developed of getting water to weary fighters. Some carry large water barrels carried on their backs with plastic tubing for straws, others carry a box with compartments filled with smaller waterbottles, each bearing the name of the fighter who the bottle belongs to.

Often, water bearers also carry snacks to fighters, generally salty ones (pickles, peanuts, and crackers being good examples), in order to help the fighters maintain electrolyte balance. The extra salt in the snacks helps replace the salt lost in the fighers' sweat.


Your friendly neighbourhood [[Chirurgeon]] reminds you to have your own water bottle, to avoid sharing nasty diseases.
Your friendly neighbourhood [[Chirurgeon]] reminds you to have your own water bottle, to avoid sharing nasty diseases.

Revision as of 23:55, 13 October 2005

Waterbearers.png

During wars and tourneys, fighters often risk dehydration. To prevent this, people bring water to the fighters. These people are often the fighter's consort, or of the same household or group as the fighters. There have been many ingenious ways developed of getting water to weary fighters. Some carry large water barrels carried on their backs with plastic tubing for straws, others carry a box with compartments filled with smaller waterbottles, each bearing the name of the fighter who the bottle belongs to.

Often, water bearers also carry snacks to fighters, generally salty ones (pickles, peanuts, and crackers being good examples), in order to help the fighters maintain electrolyte balance. The extra salt in the snacks helps replace the salt lost in the fighers' sweat.

Your friendly neighbourhood Chirurgeon reminds you to have your own water bottle, to avoid sharing nasty diseases.

Water bearing in period

Here's an example from the battle of Dorylaeum, during the First Crusade.

Feminae quoque nostrae in illa die fuerunt nobis in maxilo refugio, quae afferebant ad bibendum aquam nostris peliatoribus, et fortiter semper confortabant illos, pugnantes et defendentes. - Liber III, Gesta Francorum et aliorum Hierosolimitanorum

Roughly: "The women were of great assistance that day, for they brought water for the warriors to drink, and bravely encouraged the fighters and defenders."