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      • Many early knights were given their title on the battlefield by a lord or monarch (often symbolically in the form of spurs, hence the expression 'to win one's spurs') typically after displaying particular valour and effectiveness in fighting the enemy.
      www.worldhistory.org/Medieval_Knight/
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  2. May 24, 2024 · Knight, now a title of honor bestowed for a variety of services, but originally in the European Middle Ages a formally professed cavalryman. The first medieval knights were professional cavalry warriors, some of whom were vassals holding lands as fiefs from the lords in whose armies they served.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • How to Become A Knight
    • Weapons & Armour
    • Jousting & Tournaments
    • Clothes
    • Leisure Pursuits
    • Chivalry
    • Death

    The process of becoming a knight started from early childhood. The typical starting point for a young lad of 7 to 10 years old was to become a page when he learned to handle horses, hunt, and use mock weapons while serving a knight proper. From age 14, the next step was to become a squire (or esquire), who had more responsibility than a page, learn...

    A knight had to be accomplished in riding a horse while carrying a long, triangular leather and wood shield and a wooden lance 2.4-3.0 metres (8-10 ft) in length, so he needed to practise guiding his steed using only the knees and feet. He must be capable of using a heavy sword with a blade up to one metre (40 inches) in length for a sustained peri...

    When not on active military duty, a knight could keep their weapons and horse riding skills sharp by practising in tournaments. These competitions took two formats, either a mêlée which was a mock cavalry battlewhere knights had to capture each other for a ransom or the joust where a single rider armed with a lance charged at an opponent who was si...

    Knights were amongst the most dedicated of all medieval fashion followers, indeed, other professions such as the clergy were often rebuked for trying to make themselves look as flashy as the knights did. Although clothes were not too dissimilar between the classes, those who could afford it tended to wear better quality materials with a much better...

    The most common leisure activity for knights was hunting. Beaters and dog handlers stalked the animals in the local forest or a protected deer park using leashed dogs. When ready a horn was blown to signal the off, and then the nobles rode with a pack of hunting dogs to chase down animals such as deer, boars, wolves, foxes, and hares. Once an anima...

    A knight was expected to be chivalrous at all times. The ethical, religious and social code of chivalry pervaded the upper echelons of medieval society and was made ever more important with an endless stream of romantic literatureextolling the virtues of chivalrous conduct. In order to maintain a good reputation and gain favour with those in power,...

    When a knight came to the end of his fighting days, it was not uncommon to join a military order and so ensure a nice spot in one of their cemeteries or even churches. Sir William Marshal employed just such a strategy, invested as a Knight Templar at the last minute, he was interred in Temple Church in London where his effigy still rests. Effigies ...

    • Mark Cartwright
  3. Dec 8, 2020 · Knights arrived in England with William the Conqueror in the Norman Conquest of 1066. The Anglo-Saxons saw how they followed their lords and used their word for a serving youth: ‘cniht’.

    • How did early Knights get their name?1
    • How did early Knights get their name?2
    • How did early Knights get their name?3
    • How did early Knights get their name?4
    • How did early Knights get their name?5
  4. Feb 18, 2009 · Secular orders of knighthood (the earliest of which were founded after 1300, 200 years after the military orders) were founded in imitation of the groups of knights associated with King Arthur, especially the Knights of the Round Table.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › KnightKnight - Wikipedia

    The order has its chapter. There were no particular honorifics that would accompany a knight's name, as historically all (or at least by far most) of its members would be royals or hereditary lords anyway. So today, a knight is simply referred to as "Name Surname, knight of the White Eagle (Order)".

  6. Nov 22, 2018 · What was life like for medieval knights? The life of a medieval knight involved training from childhood with mock weapons and horses. From around 14, the boy might become a squire to assist a knight. They trained with real weapons and learnt about chivalry. Once made a knight, he was the most important element of a medieval army.

  7. The medieval period, spanning from the 5th to the 15th century, was marked by the rise of knights as warriors and protectors of the land. Knights were trained from a young age in the art of combat, and their weapons and armor evolved throughout the centuries.

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