Category:The Order of the Beleaguered Shield
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Contents
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Foundation
- 3 Faith and the Church in the Order
- 4 Organization, Subordinate Orders and Hierarchy in the Order
- 5 The Council-Perilous of the Order
- 5.1 The Grand Master of the Order
- 5.2 The Grand Seneschal
- 5.3 The Grand Marshal
- 5.4 The Grand Draper
- 5.5 The Chaplain-General
- 5.6 The Grand Chancellor
- 5.7 The Grand Justiciar
- 5.8 The Grand Preceptor
- 5.9 The Prior-General
- 5.10 The Abbot-General of the Shield Perilous
- 5.11 The Confanonier, Standard-Bearer of the Order
- 5.12 The Grand Serjeant of the Seal
- 5.13 The Knight-Electors
- 5.14 The Lord-Draconarius
- 6 The Grand Chancellery
- 7 Special High Offices of the Order
- 8 Men-at-Arms of the Order
- 9 Honorary Membership
- 10 Social Customs, Traditions and Habit of the Order
- 11 Military Organization of the Order
Introduction
The Sovereign Military Order of the Knight-Palatine and Brothers-Militant of Dwarden, colloquially abbreviated as the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, is the sovereign national military religious order of Dwarden...
Original Notes:
"Based in the fallen lands of Dwarden, the Beleaguered Shields fight almost exclusively within those lands. Dwarden is a hellish land beset with undead, a result of a pagan god's curse. That god's avatar itself still lives within Dwarden. The Beleaguered Shields' mission is to cleanse this land of its curse. Paladins of this Order gain the ability to turn undead, however most steeds fear these rugged holy warriors."
Symbol: A weathered steel shield with reinforced bolts, crossed with a hammer over a sworn coming before the Yathamian trefoil. The Yathamian trefoil bears the golden halo of the Spirit and the silver halo of the Voice, but with both under the iron halo of the Power.
Foundation: The Order was founded upon Saint Stone at Manifold as the Order of the Brotherhood of Paladins of Dwarden in the 585th Year in the Mandadorian epoch.
Basic Concept and Structure
The Order of the Beleaguered Shield is the sovereign national military order of Dwarden. Due to the centuries-long existential crisis in this land, the Order is the effective government for the entire nation. It is composed of four classes: knights, chaplains, serjeants and men-at-arms. Knights of the order are composed strictly of paladins, which is to say that no non-paladin will ever become a knight of the Order. Chaplains are priests that serve the Order specifically. Serjeants are chevaliers and non-knightly leaders of the Order, serving in important command and administrative posts. Men-at-Arms are those men who have sworn allegiance to the Order. All are dedicated to the destruction of all undead in their lands, especially the arch-enemy of Dwarden, the lich priest-king Thagdion the Mad. The Order traces its roots to the ancient landed knightly class which has always been part of Dwarden society and war. The Order of the Beleaguered Shield is in the 9th century AM an order which unifies the Dwarden resistance against the lich-king Thagdion the Mad. Although there still exist lords and knights with private domains, it is the Order which is by far the bulwark of defense against Thagdion. All the lands not under Thagdion thus fall within the domains of either a bailiwick or priory, led by a member of the Order. Lordly domains and independent knightly lands fall under these jurisdictions. The entire resistance falls under the command of the Grand Master of the Order. Although religiously oriented and extremely close with the national Church, the order is technically secular, and is furthermore sovereign in that it draws no charter or authority from any king or lord. The Order does not intend to rule after any theoretical extirpation of the undead. The basic administrative hierarchy of the Order is represented by the chart below.
- Grand Master
- Grand Priory
- Priory
- Bailiwick
- Commandery
In effect, the Order governs the lands of Dwarden not currently fallen to the undead. The Order functions under the theory and the auspices of a permanent national military emergency.
Foundation
Founding Paladin-Knights of the Order: Ven. Kargal, St. Galdren the Martyred, Bl. Everane the Martyred, Ven. Kellebard, Ven. Tretherane the Martyred, Kardren, Badrian
Faith and the Church in the Order
Within the lands of Dwarden, the secular clergy (those clergymen not officially members of the Order) and the regular clergy of the order exist side-by-side. Within towns and villages, the secular clergy often sees to the spiritual needs of the common people. In the ancient tradition of St. Yathamian, almost all members of the secular clergy are deacons, especially in the east of the country, although due to Thousierisan influence, priests and even bishops provide services to the west. However, in many if not most communities in Dwarden, it is the regular clergy of the Order ("regular" indicating those members of the clergy whose faith and conduct are regulated by a religious order) who shepherd and protect the faithful of Mandador. Generally, both the secular and regular clergy work in concert with one another, and in practice there is little friction between the two institutions of the Faith.
Save for rare outliers, almost the entirety of the regular clergy of Dwarden are members of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield. Ultimately overseen by the Chaplain-General of the Order appointed by the Grand Master himself, the regular clergy of the Order are referred to collectively as the Brothers-Militant. Almost all the Brothers-Militant live under the Rule of St. Karant, the cleric-lawgiver who in the late 6th century laid down the religious rules and customs that now govern the clergy of the order.
The Rule of St. Karant
Organization, Subordinate Orders and Hierarchy in the Order
The Lay Brothers-Militant and the Brothers-Militant-at-Sword are considered to be their own unique sub-classes of either cleric or crusader. All of them enjoy a +1 bonus when attacking any form of undead, and gain a +1 bonus to saving throws involving the undead, death spells or necromancy. Due to their grimness however, they receive a -1 penalty to reaction adjustment rolls, and a -2 penalty to reaction adjustment rolls from those who are strangers to the customs of Dwarden.
Lay Brothers-Militant
The lay brothers-militant are by far the most common of the monks of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield. Although specialty orders with specific rules, habits and powers exist within the Order, almost all the brothers-militant are generic clerics, level 1-4. Almost all such monks are simply addressed as "Brother" in common speech, or as Brother-Militant in formal matters. They are officially designated as Monks-Militant of St. Karant.
Most lay brothers of the Order fall under the rule of an abbey, ruled by its abbot-militant. Sometimes however, abbeys are too small, and having less than nine brothers are not authorized an abbot, in which case they are considered "conventual" abbeys, and are instead ruled by their senior brother. Abbeys of the Order are either independent, or subordinate ("obedientiary") to a Commandery of the Order.
Lay brothers-militant are generally from the lower classes of Dwarden. Selected by brothers- and friars-militant in their youth, usually between the ages of 9-12, they are trained at the abbey in prayer and faith, labor and toil, and shield and mace. All of them learn and specialize in at least one task, such as farming, masonery, blacksmithing, carpentry or other mundane tasks. As men of lower classes, they are rarely afforded the opportunity to learn to read and write, and instead are trained to see to the everyday tasks needed for maintaining an abbey and any attached lands. Their lives are tightly controlled under the Rule of St. Karant, watched over by their seniors. They are however trained thoroughly in combat, drilling at least once a week, often very harshly. It is not uncommon for boys to be removed from the Order for failing to attain the martial discipline of this training period. The boys are generally segregated from the lay-brothers who have taken strict vows and entered the novitiate, but as the years pass and they mature, they slowly graduate in the tradition steps of postulant, petitioner and aspirant.
By young manhood, aspirants may or not be offered the chance to take their formal vows and become novice lay-brothers in the Order (1st level clerics). After having spent ten years or more in becoming aspirants to the novitiate, most of these young men are eager to enter formally into the Order, for if they do not they will generally return to their life as a peasant, which they have abandoned for those many years. If accepted, upon taking their oaths, aspirants are laid on hands by a friar or abbot and become novice brother-militants of the Order (1st level clerics).
Some men of the community, including those not selected for the novitiate, are offered the opportunity to become affiliate-brothers, and assist in the work of the abbey. Such (0th level) affiliate-brothers can often be important members of the abbey, but are not offered the same opportunities. Occasionally, retired men-at-arms of the Order find sanctuary later in life as affiliate-brothers.
Lay brothers-militant advance from novices (1st), to initiates (2nd), to brothers (3rd), and then to senior-brother (4th). After this, some brothers may advance as brothers-superior and stay within the purview of the abbey. Alternatively, senior-brothers may advance to become friars (5th+), and thereby become free of the rule of the abbey and granted the right to defend the faith and faithful in Dwarden as they see fit in the world abroad. More rarely, senior-brothers may be offered the chance to seek ordination and gain holy orders as a sub-deacon, and thereby become a choir monk in the abbey, and thereby pursue the possibility of eventually becoming a chaplain to the commandery, an abbot, or other positions still higher in the Order's hierarchy. Lastly, some brothers-superior rise to become trainers, managers and even commanders, all with various roles and titles, in senior levels of the Order, with some even serving at the Council-Militant of the Grand Master of the Order.
Choir Brothers-Militant
Choir-brothers are those monks who have taken up holy orders and become ordained clerics of the Church of Mandador, thereby making them automatically superior to all lay-brothers of the Order. Men of the equestrian class or nobility may train at the abbey as youths under the tutelage of choir-brothers militant, and there learn to read and right, and train to become educated clerics of the Order. Those of junior equestrian status who successfully become novices are generally immediately awarded minor orders, advancing as an ostiary, lector, exorcist and acolyte, until being awarded holy orders and made a sub-deacon (5th level). As a sub-deacon, they are now considered choir brothers-militant, and as such are among the leading members of an abbey. Some of these are selected to become chaplains to a commandery, vice-abbots, or abbots. The senior brothers of the Order are always choir brothers-militant.
The Brothers-Militant-at-Sword
On occasion throughout the Order's history, military necessity and the desire of powerful priests in the Order to build more combat effective forces have gained permission from the Grand Master of the Order to appeal to the Patriarch of Dwarden to relieve an abbey or priory of the limitation on clerics of the faith from using weapons designed to draw blood in combat. Rarely given, these exceptions are however permanent and passed down for as long as the monastery stays in righteous service. Such abbeys and priories train soldier-clerics, crusaders, whose fighting skills are put at a higher premium than their works of faith. Their labor is almost totally of a martial nature, and their monasteries are more akin to military camps. They are almost always commanded by senior brothers-militant-at-sword, who do not use the title of abbot, but rather brother-commander, or prior-commander. They advance similarly to traditional lay-brothers, which they are, but they have no friars as they are never released from their oaths of obedience to a commander. Upon reaching the rank of brother-superior, they are often given subordinate commands or other positions of responsibility, such as Brother-Superior of Artillery, or Brother-Superior of the First Band, or Brother-Superior of the Column. Some brothers-militant-at-sword are seconded to traditional abbeys and priories as trainers, councilors or guards, and some rise to senior positions in the Order as a whole. Brothers-militant-at-sword can never receive holy orders.
Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous
Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous
A specialized order within the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, the Militant Order of the Shield Perilous is composed of specially selected and volunteer brothers who undergo advanced training in combat and faith. Steeped in extremism and fanatical defiance of the undead scourge of Dwarden, these brothers-militant are especially empowered to combat the unliving. Training for this order can be extreme, but it is open to all boys who receive the recommendation of both their abbot and prior. Many are found wanting through the training, and are compelled to return to their original abbeys. All brothers-militant of this order are awarded holy orders upon reaching 1st level.
Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous are all composed of sub-deacons, deacons and arch-deacons. They have one bishop, who is the Abbot-General of their order, and who sits at the Council-Militant of the Grand Master of the Order.
Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous are all considered specialty priests. Members of this order gain increased combat abilities, certain defenses and immunities against undead, and a powerful array of granted powers to combat the undead as they advance in level.
The Sacred Order of Saint Kalmantane the Redeemer
The Sacred Order of Saint Kalmantane the Redeemer
Knights of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield
Knighthood
The Knights-Palatine of the Sovereign Military Order of Dwarden, the paladins, are at the height of civic, religious and societal prestige, influence and power. Paladins dominate Dwarden, and especially after the destruction of the Black Crown, they are the paramount power within the country, and ultimately both the greatest prelate of the Church and the mightiest karden lord bow to the will of this order of knights. Easily identified by their iconic gray cloaks and white tabards with shining gold escutcheons, as well as by their ever-present mail, these are the rulers and heroes of Dwarden, recognized by all as shining exemplars of Nine Virtues of St. Yathamian: Faith, Works, Goodness, Discipline, Obedience, Endurance, Bravery, Sacrifice and War. Through the Knights of the Order, the people of Dwarden find hope and physical proof that the Power of Mandador has not deserted them and fights on.
By virtue of the Kargal Oath, all of Dwarden now falls under the legal authority of the Knights of the Order. In all affairs of life, both high and low, great and small, the word and lawful command of a knight-palatine is binding and cannot be defied, and routes of appeal are few and far between, and rarely successful. For the recalcitrant, punishments both temporal and spiritual await the defiant, and especially in cases of military disobedience, failure to heed orders merits punishment even so far as instant execution by the sword. Yet even with such dread power, which even the most junior paladin may exercise, the Knights of the Order are highly respected, admired and even loved. Most every boy of Dwarden dreams of becoming a knight one day, and every young girl dreams to be wed by one. They command respect and authority wherever they go, projecting martial virtue, saintly holiness and divinely imbued authority.
A knight commander can grant the basic knighthood, but only bailiffs and above can create a knight commander. Knight grand commanders can be created by a grand prior. A Knight of the Grand Halos can only be created by the Grand Master. Knighthood in the Order is not equivalent to the hereditary knighthoods of Dwarden, which are technically knights banneret. Knighthood in the Order does however elevate one and his perpetuity to the equestrian class, often allowing first-born sons to enter into the serjeantry, whether in the Order or with lords and knights banneret of the land.
Ranks of Knighthood in the Order
Knight of the Iron Halo - The most prestigious and coveted rank within the Order is Knight of the Iron Halo. Awarded only by the Grand Commander of the Order, or by the Council Perilous if the Grand Commander is not himself a Knight of the Iron Halo. The Iron Halo is awarded to paladins only for legendary acts of heroism and the greatest of accomplishments. There are usually very few paladins with this rank in Dwarden at any given time.
Knight Grand Commander - Only senior knights are awarded this rank, typically for long years of glorious service, or for a series of tremendous tasks demanding recognition. A Knight Grand Commander is usually in a senior position in the Order. It is generally preferred that knights who sit on the Council Perilous are Grand Commanders.
Knight Commander - Generally awarded to knights who complete their first assignment, or who otherwise complete a great feat of arms or other meritorious service. Typically, a Lord Prior will nominate a knight to receive the title of Knight Commander.
Knight - All paladins who wish to serve in the Order of the Beleaguered Shield must be knighted by a knight of the Order. Although the lowest rank of knights in the Order, they are often Lord Commanders of their own commanderies, and enjoy high posts.
Powers of a Knight of the Order
Upon receiving their knighthood from the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, paladins of Dwarden receive their augmented and advanced powers, apart from the standard paladins of Mandadorianism. Many of their powers are exactly the same, but their unique dedication to the salvation of Dwarden and war against the undead that threaten its very existence, sealed by the terrible power of the Kargal Oath, alters and in some cases improves their powers to better meet their foes.
GRANTED ABILITIES
Like the monks of the Order, Knights of the Beleaguered Shield gain +1 bonus when attacking undead. At 2nd level or higher they may choose a specific type of undead for which they receive a +2 bonus to hit.
A Knight of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield can detect the presence of undead up to 60 feet away by concentrating on locating such a creature in a particular direction. He can do this as often as desired, but each attempt takes one round. This ability detects any form of undead, and even those that inhabit adjacent portions of the Border Ethereal and Astral Planes. Paladins of the Order cannot detect evil.
A Knight of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield receives a +2 bonus to all saving throws.
A Knight of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield is immune to all forms of disease. Unlike normal paladins, this includes magical forms and afflictions. Knights of the Order also receive saving throws (PPDM) vs. level-drain, supernatural ageing, and other necromantic/death spells and powers that normally allow for no saving throws.
Undead receive a -2 penalty when saving against the spells or granted powers of a Knight of the Order.
Knights of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield turn undead at the same level as that of a cleric. He may also turn demons and devils starting at 3rd level, but only as a cleric two levels lower than his actual level.
A Knight of the Order can cure disease and relieve the effects of supernatural aging and level drain. Instead of curing disease in others, a paladin of the Order may instead forego that power and restore in himself or another character a drain of one level or drain of 10 human years (or the demi-human equivalent) for every level of the paladin, if he successfully makes a saving throw vs. PPDM with a +2 bonus. Such a laying of hands must be done within one day per level of the paladin from the time of draining. Whether curing disease or relieving the effects of aging or level drain, any such laying of hands can only be done once per week for each five levels of experience (one per week at levels 1 through 5, twice per week at levels 6 through 10, etc.).
A Knight of the Order is surrounded by an aura of protection with a 10-foot radius. Within this radius, all summoned and specifically evil creatures suffer a -1 penalty to their attack rolls, regardless of whom they attack. Creatures affected by this aura can spot its source easily, even if the paladin is disguised. Undead receive a -2 penalty when attacking a paladin of the Order, but only the paladin.
A paladin using a holy sword projects a circle of power 30 feet in diameter when the sword is unsheathed and held. This power dispels hostile magic of a level up to the paladin's experience level. (A holy sword is a very special weapon; if your paladin acquires one, the DM will explain its other powers.
A paladin can cast priest spells once he reaches 9th level. He can cast only spells of the combat, divination, healing, protection and white necromancy spheres. The acquisition and casting of these spells abide by the rules given for priests. The spell progression and casting level are listed in the Player's Handbook. Unlike a priest, the paladin does not gain extra spells for a high Wisdom score. The paladin cannot cast spells from clerical or druidical scrolls nor can he use priest items unless they are allowed to the warrior group.
A paladin of the Order may not possess more than 1o magical items. Furthermore, these may not exceed one suit of armor, one shield, four weapons (arrows and bolts are not counted), and four other magical items.
A paladin of the Order never retains wealth. Knights of the Beleaguered Shield have vowed their lives to the Order. Their excess wealth always goes to their own Lord Commander, of to the coffers of their commandery if they be the Knight Commander himself. Even if a paladin is a karden-lord with his own castle and lands, he is expected to maintain those lands with his private resources, and divert only 10% of any treasure he accumulates to his personal demesne. Many Knights of the Order who are of karden rank are assigned away from their ancestral castles, so they are not tempted to abuse their authority and enrich their own lands. In the case that a paladin of the Order is in command, he diverts his excess treasures to his higher command, or to the Order itself, at least giving 10% to his higher echelon, in addition to the 10% of his commandery's income. Regarding his personal demesne, if he has any, e may keep only enough treasure to support himself in a modest manner, pay his henchmen, men-at-arms, and servitors a reasonable rate, and to construct or maintain a castle or keep (funds can be set aside for this purpose). All excess must be donated to the church or another worthy cause. This money can never be given to another player character or NPC controlled by a player.
A Knight of the Order must tithe to the monks of the Order of St. Karant or the secular clergy of Dwarden. This is either out of his earned treasures, or if lord of a commandery, from the income of those lands. If a karden-knight, he is expected to tithe 10% of the income of his personal demesne. In all cases, tithes are considered to be 10% of the knight's income, whether they be coins, jewels, magical items, wages, rewards, or taxes. Such tithes are expected to be paid immediately, or in the case of land-based incomes, regular intervals (usually annual).
A Knight of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield has no supernatural power over or relationship with his war horse, as the grim nature of his Order and Oath preclude the establishment of such a relationship.
A paladin of the Order does not attract a body of followers upon reaching 9th level or building a castle. However, he can still hire soldiers and specialists, although these men must be lawful good in comportment.
A Knight of the Beleaguered Shield may employ only lawful good henchmen (or those who act in such a manner when alignment is unknown). This is why subordinate non-paladin commanders and other trusted subordinates of Knight Commanders, such as serjeants-at-arms, seneschals, and ensigns are always lawful good within the Order. A Knight of the Order will cooperate with characters of other alignments only as long as they behave themselves. He will try to show them the proper way to live through both word and deed. A paladin of the Order realizes that most people simply cannot maintain his high standards. Even thieves can be tolerated, provided they are not evil and are sincerely trying to reform. He will not abide the company of those who commit evil or unrighteous acts. Stealth in the cause of good is acceptable, though only as a last resort.
Knights of the Order are treated with great respect within Dwarden. Although necessarily already possessing enormous charisma, Knights of the Order presenting themselves as such within their own country gain a +2 bonus to reaction adjustments. However, outside of Dwarden, or to strangers to Dwarden lands, the harshness and grimness of these knights causes them to suffer a -2 penalty to their reaction adjustments.
Votary of the Order
Paladins knighted by monastic bishops of the Order of St. Karant are considered brothers-palatine, and are bound both by the Kargal as well as by the Karantine Oath. As such, they deserve directly at the throne of their appointed abbot or bishop. Champions and defenders of the Church of Dwarden, they tend to be extremely religious, and as such receive greater spell powers than their peers. Colloquially called Votaries, these brothers-palatine are also referred to as knights of the Church. Although they may hold the ranks of knighthood awarded to them by senior knights of the Order, they never hold the positions of commander, bailiff, prior, etc. Instead, they serve the leadership of the increasingly higher echelons of the Church.
Within the Church, the most senior of the brothers-palatine is the Votary Paramount, who typically serves at the pleasure of the Prior-General. Votaries may rise as high as the Grand Draper, but no higher, as it their fate to serve the Church, and not to command it.
Echelons of Command
The Order is currently divided into four grand priories, these into priories, priories into bailiwicks, and bailiwicks into their constituent commanderies. Each of these domains is commanded by either a knight-palatine of the Order, a brother-militant of the Order of St. Karant, or on occasion a man of the order of serjeantry. The right of command is very great within the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, and those who have it, as it gives the near total right over life and death within a domain, especially with regards to military requirements.
Priories
Between the grand priories and bailiwicks are the priories. Commanded by lord priors, these powerful domains are composed of multiple bailiwicks and many commanderies, and as such can deploy considerable military might. Powerful heroes often reside at the prior's court, and almost necessarily the lord prior is a knight or monk-militant of great experience and achievement. Although priories range in scales of power with some hardly greater than a bailiwick, a few priories might have more troops, heroes, magic and castles than some grand priories. Indeed, whereas the seats of grand priories are often places for strategic reserves of might and magic, priory seats are often chosen for their suitability to support major combat operations, typically being at the center and forefront of their constituent bailiwicks.
Lord Priors almost always enjoy a powerful court to support their command, employing large numbers of men-at-arms and serjeants, raised both locally and from their various commanderies. Although he may create from among his knights a bailiff-general to be his deputy, this is relatively rare or used only in emergencies, as the Lord Prior's chief agent within his domains is his marshal. Necessarily a man of serjeantry rank, the marshal is in charge of all military combat and military support operations within his domains. They typically see to the order of battle, and whereas the lord prior is expected to lead his troops from the front as best he may, the marshal commands the army during battle from the center.
The Council-Perilous of the Order
The Council-Perilous is the ruling council of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, composed entirely of the Grand Officers of the Order. These high ministers advise the Grand Master, carry out his commands, and enforce his rulings. Together, with equal vote, they elect their own replacements by a 2/3 +1 super-majority vote, with all nominations coming from the Grand Master himself. The Council-Perilous is led by the Grand Master of the Order, a paladin who sits upon the Throne-Militant, possessing ultimate authority over the entire Order, with only a very few exceptions and limitations. All the Grand Officers of the Order hold their offices for life, unless they resign or are expelled by the Grand Master. In order for the Council-Perilous to meet and vote on high matters such as their internal elections or other grave issues, a quorum of 2/3+1 of their numbers must assemble in person.
Every Grand Officer of the Order is entitled to a personal chaplain, although this may in practice be a titular position only. They also generally have assigned to them deacon-seneschals as secretaries to their office.
The Grand Master of the Order
The Grand Master (Magnus Magister) is the elected head of state of the Sovereign Military Order of the Knight-Defenders and Monks-Militant of Dwarden. He is the most senior knight-paladin of the Order, and is its supreme lawgiver and military commander. All officers of the Order serve at the Grand Master's pleasure. He chairs the Council-Perilous, the ruling council of the Order, sitting from the Throne-Militant, and may convoke or prorogue the Council as he sees fit. Once elected, the Grand Master serves for life, unless he resigns. In theory, there is no way for a Grand Master who does not wish to be removed from the supreme office to be so removed.
The office of the Grand Master historically derives from the tradition of elected War Kings in Dwarden's past, when in times of great upheaval or general danger, the kings of Dwarden would elect amongst them a war leader who could exercise enough authority to unify them against a common threat. The Grand Master's position fulfills this requirement from Dwarden's distant past. Additionally, the Grand Master fills the role of the king of a unified Dwarden, not realized since before the coming of Mandador. Although never utilizing the actual title of king, he acts with the power of one, and in dealings with foreign nations is typically treated as would a sovereign. In the image of the Grand Master, all coinage is minted, and years are counted.
When the Host of Dwarden is assembled, the Grand Master may place himself where he wishes, but typically he leads the entire force in the Van, leaving the mundane aspects of generalship to the Grand Marshal.
The Grand Master enjoys several titles which accompany his office, among the most important of which is title to the Duchy of Veronay in Thousiers, which provides the Order with extra funds to help support the Battle of the Grand Master's Guard, the Grand Master's personal fighting force.
The Grand Seneschal
Second in rank of the Grand Officers of the Order is the Grand Seneschal of Dwarden, the Grand Master's deputy and second-in-command. In the absence of the Grand Master, the Grand Seneschal takes the Throne-Militant, and governs the Order in the Grand Master's stead. The Grand Seneschal of Dwarden is a paladin of excellent reputation, and who is responsible for the day-to-day operations of the entire Order, and thus all Dwarden. He oversees all lesser Grand Officers of the Order, and all the grand priories. His power also extends over the secular hereditary knights and kings of Dwarden, over whom he governs.
If the Host of Dwarden is assembled, he is traditionally given overall command of the Cavalry.
In the case of the absence of the Grand Master, but his expected return, the Grand Seneschal possesses all the powers of the Grand Master, and governs the Council-Perilous. If the Grand Master is killed, the Grand Seneschal maintains the power of the Grand Master until a quorum is attained amongst the Council Perilous for a new Grand Master to be elected.
The Grand Marshal
Third in rank among the Grand Officers of the Order is always the Grand Marshal of Dwarden. A man of the order of serjeantry and not a paladin, he has risen to the highest rank he might aspire to attain. The Grand Marshal is the overall military leader of the Order, responsible for the management, logistics, and military readiness of all the Order's forces. As a man outside equestrian rank, the Grand Marshal is therefore outside the chain of command of the Order, and cannot become acting Grand Master of the Order.
If the Host of Dwarden is assembled, the Grand Marshal holds command of the Center and thus the entire host, and sees to the regular order of battle for the assembled armies of Dwarden.
The Grand Draper
The Grand Draper is directly tasked with the upholding of uniforms, appearance and personal regulation in the Order. This function is considered so important that he ranks fourth in order of precedence among the Grand Officers.
His subordinate, the Grand Registrar (typically a Senior Monk-Militant), records all paladins, cavalier-companions and marshals in the Order. He also records the ranks and command offices in the Order, such the rank of Knight Grand Commander and Bailiffs. The Grand Draper reviews all entries in the rolls of the Grand Registrar to ensure their accuracy and suitability.
The Grand Draper sees to the orderliness, comeliness and holiness of the commanderies, bailwicks, priories and grand priories. He ensures the proper decorum and way of life is being maintained.
The Grand Draper is also chief among the paladins who have taken the votary vows of St. Karant, and thus observe the strictest of codes. Thus, his authority also extends over the monastic branch of the Order.
When the Host of Dwarden is assembled, he typically rides in the Van, or is in command of the Van should the Grand Master be placed elsewhere.
The Chaplain-General
The Chaplain-General advises the Grand Master and the Council-Perilous on all matters involving the chaplains of the Order. He is senior to the Prior-General, and oversees the overall faith of the Order. When the Host of Dwarden is assembled, the Chaplain-General stays with the Grand Master, advising him and fighting alongside him. The Chaplain-General is also overall responsible for the state of the faith, and as such he is superior to the Inquisitor-General, the faith for whom he is also responsible, along with all the inquisitors of the Sacred Order of St. Kalmantane
The Chaplain-General of the Order is entitled the Grand Prior of the Church of Sts. Kalakran and Tarmayn, of which he is Grand Arch-Deacon. He also retains the titular archbishopric of Kalnak, a great castle of ancient kings. He leads the Sacred Order of Sts. Kalakran and Tarmayn, a small but elite force of selected clerics, crusaders and specialty priests.
The Chaplain-General, like the Grand Marshal, lies outside the chain of command of the Order.
The Grand Chancellor
A paladin or monk chosen to administer the Grand Chancellery, or the internal bureaucracy of the Order and thus Dwarden itself.
The Grand Justiciar
This Grand Officer of the Order is responsible for all justice in Dwarden, and is the keeper of the law in the Order, and in all secular matters. A justiciar-paladin himself, the Grand Justiciar appoints justiciars as roaming knights-visitor, or resident justiciars and high justiciars assigned to the priories and grand priories. In matters of law and justice, those of equestrian and regnal class are entitled to the appeal to the justice of the Order if they reject the ruling of the knight-commanders, bailiffs, or priors. The classes of serjeantry and commoner may also appeal, but justiciars are not entitled to hear their cases.
The Grand Justiciar is generally the last level of appeal, although the Grand Master himself may hear a case before his court if he so chooses.
The Grand Justiciar is also a teacher of Dwarden law. He is also often the final executor of the Order's justice, and will behead rebellious petty kings and hereditary knights personally.
The Grand Preceptor
The master of all learning and curriculum in the Order is the Grand Preceptor. He conducts research for the Grand Master and the Order at large, and is responsible for their libraries and records. He is the custodian of lore and wisdom in the Order, and is keeper of magical and holy items belonging to the Order. He nominates the Warrior-Poet Laureate of Dwarden.
The office of the Grand Preceptor has been held by both paladins and clerics.
The Prior-General
The most senior monk and cleric in the Order. The Prior-General governs all monastics in the Order, save for the Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous.
The Abbot-General of the Shield Perilous
The commander of the Brothers-Militant of the Shield Perilous, the Order's fanatical branch dedicated to the total destruction of the undead, he is often among the most powerful clerics of the land. He nor his order answer to the Prior-General, and he answers only to the Grand Master himself. He rarely ventures anywhere without his personal chaplain.
The Confanonier, Standard-Bearer of the Order
The "Squire-General" of the Order, the Confanonier is selected by the Council-Perilous from among the professional squires serving the knights of the Order. He is generally a veteran warrior, often of the equestrian class, and leads a squadron of mounted Honor Guard men-at-arms and crusaders which are his to command as he wills.
In practice, the Confanonier serves as roaming support for the Order, riding his standing squadron of elite cavalry to where aid is needed. He enjoys the support of his own assigned chaplain, a brother-commander crusader, and a white necromancer and his apprentice. He is also served by his own paladin-squire.
The Confanonier rarely carries the Banner-Perilous personally, but defers this to one of his serjeants, the Grand Serjeant of the Banner.
The Grand Serjeant of the Seal
The Knight-Electors
The four paladins or clerics appointed by the four grand priors to vote the will of the grand priors they represent, and to otherwise serve as emissaries to the Council-Perilous, and required to assist with the coordination of the Order's operations in those quarters.
Knight-Electors are not themselves Grand Officers of the Order, but are treated as such when in execution of their office. Grand Priors may appear to vote personally at any time.
The Lord-Draconarius
Selected solely by the Grand Master of the Order, the Lord-Draconarius is chosen from among the chief cavalier-companions of the Order. He is the highest ranking honorary member of the Order, and is afforded the privilege of a binding vote on the Council-Perilous. As such, he is the link between the landed hereditary knights and to the Order proper. He is entrusted with the Red Dragon Standard, the symbol of a united Dwarden as it was under the great kings of old, and the standard of the Grand Master himself.
The Grand Chancellery
Meeting at wherever the headquarters of the Order is currently located, the High Chancellery sees to the internal administration of the Order, and the everyday bureaucracy. It is chaired by the Grand Chancellor, who answers to the Grand Seneschal.
The Grand Chamberlain
The High Captain of the Grand Master's Guard
Serving under the administration of the Grand Chamberlain, this is typically a paladin of high repute and extreme bravery. He leads at the head of eight other paladin honor guards who protect the Grand Master in warfare and combat, plus a core banner of elite men-at-arms, led by the High Serjeant of the Honor Guard and his deputy serjeants.
Additionally, a full battle of non-paladin guards is maintained as the Grand Master's personal standing army, existing as the Order's elite reserve force should the Grand Master choose to march it against Dwarden's foes. The Battle of the Guard is well-equipped and well-manned, possessing a Master War Mage, an inferior War Mage, with apprentices for each, as well as a Master White Necromancer, and inferior White Necromancer, and apprentices for each. The Battle of the Guard will also possess a Cleric-Surgeon and his apprentice, a special paladin-medician and his serjeant-surgeons, a Master Chaplain and his assistant chaplain in addition to the High Captain's personal chaplain, a Master Serjeant-at-Arms, his subordinate serjeants, as well as a battery of battle-ready artillery, engineer serjeants, and well-trained men-at-arms and mature infantrymen. The Battle of the Guard also possesses its own marshal, who leads a squadron of secular men of the equestrian class who enjoy the bounteous table of the High Captain in return for military service.
The Grand Serjeant of the Fisc
The Grand Serjeant of the Armories, Metalworks and Mines
The Grand Serjeant of the Forests and Fields
The Grand Serjeant of the March
The Knight-Admiral
Special High Offices of the Order
A category of high offices of the Order directly serve the Council-Perilous, but do not formally comprise its numbers. Many of them often attend meetings of the Council-Perilous, and may speak at Roundtable, but cast no vote in the Council's affairs.
The Inquisitor-General
The Master-General of the Sacred Order of St. Kalmantane the Redeemer answers to the Grand Seneschal directly, and typically is not invited to come before the Council-Perilous.
The Grand High White Necromancer
The Order long ago decreed that the most powerful wizard of the land must be at residence and in service to the Council-Perilous. Selected by the Grand Sentinel, this mighty wizard may be invited to sit at the Council-Perilous from time to time, but casts no binding vote there. He is however retained for his magical services, and is provided vast sums of money and resources to further his magical studies. He is provided his own chaplain from the Sacred Order of St. Kalmantane the Redeemer, who is suited to learn of pertinent magical lore from him, and also to watch he and his apprentices for the pursuit of evil magicks.
The Grand Sentinel
A special office, reserved solely for the senior-most paladin-inquisitor of the Order, appointed at the sole discretion of the Grand Master. The Grand Sentinel is commissioned to destroy the black necromancers and liches of the Order, wizardly, priestly, or otherwise. He is given legal authority to inspect the soul of any white necromancer serving the Order, or to prosecute any other wizard of Dwarden besides. He may command any officer of the Order to support his mandate, including Grand Priors and even the Grand Officers of the Order. The Grand Master alone has authority over this High Officer of State. The Grand Sentinel may appoint other Sentinels of the Order as he sees fit, who are similarly empowered.
The Chaplain-Sentinel Superior to the Grand Sentinel
The Chaplain-Superior to the Grand Sentinel is nominated by the Chaplain-General of the Order, but confirmed by the Grand Sentinel himself. He is often chosen from the choir-monks of the Order, usually an abbot or ex-abbot of the Brothers-Militant of the Shield-Perilous. The Chaplain-Sentinel Superior serves as the spiritual advisor to the Grand Sentinel. Among his duties, the Chaplain-Sentinel Superior serves as the internal inquisitor for the inquisitors of Dwarden, or the Order of St. Kalmantane the Redeemer, and as such is necessarily chosen from outside that religious order. Upon confirmation, he is laid-on-hands by the Chaplain-General and instilled with all the specialty powers of their order (after receiving a quest spell lay-on-hands from the Chaplain-General he effectively becomes a specialty-priest of the Order of St. Kalmantane the Redeemer at his current level, in addition to any other specialty priest powers he has, but without requiring the XPs necessary, and maintains such powers as long as he retains the special religious office).
The Chaplain-Sentinel Superior may appoint deputies and subordinate Chaplains-Sentinel if he is powerful enough to do so (quest spell capability).
The Captain-General of the Order
An irregular Grand Officer of the Council-Perilous, there has been from time to time created a Captain-General of the Order to command the host of Dwarden should it ever be called. Although this should be the place of the Grand Master, sometimes this is not practical or wise, especially if the Grand Master is very old, or if he is otherwise unavailable. If created, the Captain-General of the Order is subordinate to only the Grand Master and the Grand Seneschal, with the Grand Marshal subordinate to himself. Although usually reserved for a paladin, this grand office has been held before by a crusader of the Order.
The Grand Under-Marshal
Serving under the Grand Marshal, the Grand Under-Marshal is the chief logistician of the Order, and is always selected on the basis of his proven administrative abilities. He oversees the availability of horses, secondary equipment, military food stores, and even roads, wells and other requirements.
The Grand Serjeant-at-Arms
The chief of enforcer of the law and the will of the Grand Master is the Grand Serjeant-at-Arms. He is typically chosen from among the finest fighters of serjeant rank in the land, and is one of the chief advisors to the Grand Master in all matters of combat and warfare
The Grand Armorer of the Order
The Proto-Deacon
Men-at-Arms of the Order
Men-at-Arms
Men-at-Arms of the Order of the Beleaguered Shield are the professional warriors of the Order. An honored and highly respected position, to be a Man-at-Arms of the Order is to sit at a knight's table, enjoying his bounty and protection, and guarding his lands and carrying out his commands as members of the Order themselves. Most boys in Dwarden dream of becoming men-at-arms, although few ever pass through the Course of Honors and are offered a seat at the Lord Commander's table. Upon taking the Service Oath as given to them by their Knight Commander, they are bestowed with the gray cloak of the Order, and are for the duration of their service considered a member of the Order, and in practice, this is most often a lifetime position. Men-at-Arms are not offered the Kargal Oath, as this is reserved for the serjeantry. The Service Oath binds the men-at-arms who take it to the knight commander who gave it, and although rarely they may serve outside their commanderies, on the whole their authority is normally limited to their native lands, for without the knight that sponsored them, they have no ready place in Dwarden society. they do swear oaths of loyalty and obedience to the Order and to their Knight Commander.
As opposed to the militia duties of the common folk of Dwarden, men-at-arms of the Order are selected by the Order, almost always from a young age (around 12), to be entered into the Knight's Company as cadets, serving successively under the banners of the cadets scouts, peltasts, shield-bearers and infantry, and otherwise trained as professional warriors of the Order. Trained in an intimate religious and military environment (generally their local commandery), they are molded throughout their teenage years to become capable fighters. Although they have other menial duties in their early teens, as they age they increasingly focus upon their skills at arms, and learn other useful skills such as blacksmithing, masonry, carpentry, armory, weaponsmithing and repair, and even engineering skills. Eventually, usually by the age of 21, after various trials of skill and experience at campaign, they are evaluated by senior men-at-arms, the serjeants, and lastly by the knights and the knight commander himself, and it is decided whether or not they will be offered a permanent seat at the knight commander's hall. If he is offered a seat, he will be maintained and even paid an allowance as a man-at-arms of the commandery (or higher). The terms of Service to the Knight Commander are typically given in three, six and nine year increments, with the longer terms typically reserved for more senior men-at-arms. In practice, a seat at the knight commander's table is usually granted for perpetuity, as it is very rare, and usually only for grave reasons, for a man-at-arms to be dismissed from service.
Men-at-Arms serve in practice as religiously oriented mercenaries in service to a knight commander. Over time, their pay increases with their experience, but generally such stipends are quite modest. Often enough they are also given lands to administer, or special businesses or duties to manage, to support them. In addition to serving the commandery as fighters, almost all men-at-arms have other responsibilities that match their training as boys, such as wall building, maintenance and repair, blacksmithing, carpentry tasks, etc. In practice, such duties often take of the majority of their time, with their martial duties falling into a secondary status. Yet certainly all men-at-arms are required to maintain themselves and their arms at all times for the service of their knight commander.
Men-at-Arms typically refer to each other as brothers. Although they have no rank structure after the Pompiersian model, they do maintain an order of precedence, usually dictated by age, experience, and position. Such positions vary considerably from keep to keep, but common ones are Brother of the Watch, Brother of the Guard or Brother of the Armory, with all such positions indicating they have been placed in charge of such duties, and that there is no serjeant placed in that roll instead. Men-at-Arms of the Order are also given precedence by the color of their tabards, with those of three year oaths being recognized by tan tabards, six year oaths by brown tabards, and nine year or Kargal Oaths by black tabards.
Men-at-Arms are generally recognized as leaders of their commandery and community, and are normally given leadership roles over portions of the militia, such as band or banner leaders.
Before they gain a seat in the commander's hall and thus become fully recognized men-at-arms, the younger men maintain themselves in their own barracks, and are referred to as the "infantry", a term introduced by the Thousiersians. It is from the younger boys of the infantry that, on rare occasion, knights select squires, who thereby rise in status above the men-at-arms, and have the potential to be offered the chance to become a knight.
Men-at-Arms of the Order are typically led by serjeants, and at the commandery level these are in turn led by a serjeant-at-arms, who is, if there is no other knight beside the commander, the second in the chain of command at the commandery.
Men-at-Arms may become serjeants, as discussed below.
Serjeantry
Since the Thousiersian invasion, the institution of serjeantry has become a major element in the Order. Effectively of the yeomanry, this Thousiersian social class quickly became an important part of the Dwarden social order, filling in the void of the ever decreasing size of the knights. Before serjeantry, men-at-arms served the Order of the Beleaguered Shield, serving knights of the Order. Unfortunately for the Order, knights and the knightly class from which they came were becoming rarer with the passing years, and an institution was needed to help fill the gap. By Cecil's time, serjeantry is a respected social class, with serjeants filling numerous important posts. Legal advocates, important vassals, fortress commanders, supply managers and many other important positions are all filled by serjeants. Most serjeants are however but other warriors, junior to knights, who serve individual knights or knightly commands. Dwarden serjeants should not be confused with the military sergeants of Pompiersian armies. Serjeants are not simply noncommissioned officers, and many are more military than administrative. Those of knightly wealth and position, but not able to achieve knighthood through paladinship, are more likely to earn serjeantry than men-at-arms without such social status. It should be noted that many serjeants are the non-paladin sons of powerful Order knights, whom without the paladinship are unable to achieve knighthood. Thus barred, they may pursue ever more increasingly important and powerful positions of serjeantry.
Examples of Serjeantry:
Serjeant of the Fisc
Serjeant Seneschal
Serjeant of the Armory
Serjeant of the Fair
Serjeant of the Hunt
Surgeon-Sergeant
Grand Sergeant of the Seal of the Order, a position currently held by the Barons of Karthane
Honorary Membership
Cavalier-Companions
Men of the knightly class but who are unsuitable or unwilling to become knights, and who likewise refuse to swear the Kargal Oath of obedience to the Order as serjeants or men-at-arms, may pursue the path of becoming Cavalier-Companions of the Order. To do this, candidates for this position must serve the Order as fully armed and mailed cavalrymen, and receive the embrace of a Knight Commander of the Order or higher upon the conclusion of combat and while still standing upon the field of battle. As long as he takes the subsequent oath of allegiance, he is thereafter entrusted with the shield and gray mantle of the Order, and an epistle of declaration is given to the Cavalier-Companion, with a copy sent to the Grand Seneschal of the Order. This distinction is reserved for those of equestrian rank. The honor is often granted in the moments before death.
For those who receive this honor they are assured the maintenance of the Order for the rest of their lives, and are thus guaranteed sanctuary and sustenance at any commandery of the Order for the remainder of their lives.
Companions-at-Arms
Awarded to the common men of the militia, they are awarded this status much as a cavalier-companion, with the kiss and embrace of a knight of the Order of any rank. They are given the mantle and shield upon taking the oath of allegiance, and they are awarded the rights of a man-at-arms of the Order for life, within their commandery. They may also be invited to become formal men-at-arms of the Order, and take the Kargal Oath.
Companions of the Table
Those of knightly rank may be invited by Knight Commanders to "sit at table" in the hall of his commandery's keep. Such men may even be commanded to do so by the Knight Commander, for when the Order is suspicious of knightly families, they have often demanded their sons to sit at table so that their loyalty may be groomed, or so that they may become de facto hostages.
Companions of the Table are treated as guests of the Knight Commander for as long as it is his pleasure, and although they are not members of the Order nor holding rank in it in any way, they nonetheless are treated with respect.
It is customary for a knight commander to lend the generosity of his table to any traveling man of equestrian class, to a white necromancer, or to any ordained cleric, regular or secular. Such men are considered Companions of the Table. Traditionally, such generosity is extended for a nine-day, but may extend for as long as he desires.
Trusted Knight-Companions are treated as the Knight Commander's elite cavalry. Those who gain special trust may even be employed as the Knight Commander's standard bearer or ensign. Such ensigns have special authority over non-members of the Order within the granting Knight Commander's commandery. While entrusted with such a banner and the powers it entails, an ensign is considered an honorary or legal member of the Order with regards to the actions he carries out in service of the Order.
Some knightly families have become desirous of claiming the title of ensign, especially those who are particularly loyal to the Order. Therefore, when Knight Commanders wish to deputize their Companions at Table as lieutenants who may muster loyal knightly families who themselves are considered ensigns, Knight Commanders may create a "first ensign" who holds authority over inferior ensigns.
Ensigns are entitled to display the banner of the Order, and while doing so are considered to be under a limited form of the Kargal Oath of obedience. While the banner is claimed, the ensign is sworn to obey the commands of the Knights of the Order, but by relinquishing the banner he is free of the Kargal Oath, but is no longer an ensign.
Companions of the Table are often groomed to be commanders of what household warriors and militia their family estates might muster. Once they have been properly trained and their loyalty is ensured, typically the sons of knightly families are released from their seats at their Knight Commander's table and they may return to their homes.
Social Customs, Traditions and Habit of the Order
The Kargal Oath
Named after a founding knight of the Order, the Kargal Vow officially binds a man to the Order. Once taken, it is for life. The oath principally involves temporal affairs, and most importantly declares of those who take the vow that their property is thereafter the property of the Order. In theory, taking this vow puts a man's entire possessions under the control of the Order, but in practice, this is most principally exercised in the Order's control of lands owned by swearing knights and nobles. The Kargal Oath stems from the foundational history of the Order, when just before its creation, the great knights of the land feuded with one another, and no clear and permanent decisions could be made regarding positions of leadership within any unified force these knights attempted to assemble. It was the Knight-Deacon Kargal who conceived of the original concept of an oath of unity to be made practicable by enforcing the shared community of lands, for without controlling their personal lands, the knights were far less capable of battling against one another.
In practice, the Kargal Oath does not divest a man in the Order of personal property. Although all wealth, treasures, equipment and any possession at all owned or acquired falls under the control of the Order, this is rarely enforced by any leader. As it was once it was first uttered, the Kargal Oath remains as a principle method for divesting secular knights of lands and castles, and adding them to the domain of the Order.
Tithing
Despite the Kargal Oath which declares that all monies possessed by members of the Order already belong to the Order, in practice, such monies are not readily demanded by the Order. Currently, the rule of the 5th is enacted by the Grand Master of the Order, ordering that 20% of all cash earnings of brothers of the Order will go as proceeds to their commandery or the next highest echelon. Such proceeds are usually collected and managed by the serjeant seneschal of a Commandery.
Marriage in the Order
Brothers-militant are not permitted to marry, but under the societal norms of Dwarden, brothers-militant, upon rising from an initiate to a full brother or above (3rd level) are permitted by omission of a pertinent prohibition within the Rule of St. Karant to "take to woman" and maintain a household. Officially however he has no claim on her as a husband, and he remains bound by the Kargal Oath. By adopting this stance, Dwarden society perpetuates the generation of clerics while also perpetuating the generation of children who will become future supporters of the Order. The children of brothers-militant who are slain or reassigned to another abbey or priory are considered "sons and daughters of the chapel" and are treated honorably, and such mothers are given paying positions or even a pension by the Order.
Friars, being formally released from many of the strictures of the Rule of St. Karant, are permitted to formally marry.
All Choir Brothers-Militant at the level of priest and higher are permitted to neither take wives nor "take to woman". By Dwarden tradition set forth by St. Yathamian, both sub-deacons and deacons may marry, as long as she is a virgin, of legitimate birth, and suitably legitimate. As long as they were previously married, priests and above may keep their wives.
Knights are not allowed to marry until they reach the rank of Knight Commander, although if they were already married before becoming a knight, this is accepted.
Habit of the Order
Knight's Habit
The paladins wear the great gray mantles iconic to the Order, but their surcoats are of a dazzling white.
For a knight commander, the trefoil is surrounded by a copper halo.
For a grand prior, the halos surrounding the trefoil become one large golden halo, usually festooned with intricate patterns and precious stones.
For a knight of the iron halo, the halo surrounding the trefoil is a thick black halo, surrounded by a gold halo.
For a bailiff, the trefoil is surrounded by both copper and silver halos.
For a prior, the trefoil is surrounded by copper, silver and gold halos.
For a knight grand commander, the trefoil is surrounded by a thick silver halo, surrounded by a gold halo.
Serjeant's Habit
Serjeants wear the gray mantle, with deep red or maroon surcoats.
Man-at-Arm's Habit
As affiliates of the Order, Men-at-Arms' wear the gray mantle, but with brown colored surcoats.
The infantry are not granted gray mantles, although their shields and mail may present the Trefoil of the Order.
The Monks-Militant
The Brothers-Militant, upon earning the rank of novice, are awarded the gray mantle, with gray surcoats.
Monks-Militant that take on holy orders are awarded half gray and half black mantles upon becoming sub-deacons, but upon becoming full deacons their mantles are black.
Abbots wear black mantles with a copper halo surrounding their trefoil.
Arch-Deacons wear black mantles, but their trefoils are surrounded in a silver halo.
Monk-Commanders wear trefoils surrounded by a red halo.
Monk-Bailiffs wear trefoils surrounded by copper and silver halos.
Monk-Priors wear trefoils surrounded by copper, silver and gold halos.
A Monk-Grand Prior's halos surrounding the trefoil become one large golden halo, usually festooned with intricate patterns and precious stones.
Monastic Vicar-Generals wear black mantles, but the trefoil on their gray surcoats is surrounded by a purple aura.
Monastic bishops wear black mantles, and a purple surcoat, with his trefoil surrounded by a large gold halo in the manner of a Grand Prior.
Manner of Address
- Knight Commander: "Commander"
- Knight Bailiff: "Lord Bailiff"
- Knight Prior: "Lord Prior"
- Knight Grand Prior: "High Lord Prior"
Military Organization of the Order
Land Assessment and the Support of Soldiery
Heavy Thousiersian influence in the realm of feudal administration has significantly professionalized the methods of military-tenure throughout Dwarden. The most common assessment of arable land is by knight-fief, or the smaller serjeantry-fiefs. By the time of the great land settlements in the 700s, the Order normally assessed a knight-fief as the lands required to raise and maintain a mounted, armored and armored knight, his immediate squire and servants, as well as a band of twenty raised armed, trained and equipped militiamen. Serjeantry-fiefs are considerably smaller parcels of land, assessed as an amount of land necessary to maintain ten militiamen.
Scutage (obligatory military service) and socage (cash or other payment in lieu of military service) is mandatory almost without exception in Dwarden. The glebe or secular church land taxes are still assessed and collected by the Church, but the Order ensures their lands are very small. Very few lands are assessed by the Order as "allodial" or owned as real property apart from Dwarden, although there are very rare exceptions where a family or individual truly owns and maintains their lands apart from the Order, and is not required to support the Order in any way.
Knight's Company
A typical commandery as commanded by a typical Knight Commander may muster knight-paladins (2-3), their mounted squires (2-3), visiting warriors-at-table (2-3), their mounted serjeants (3-4), their infantry serjeants (4-5), the professional men-at-arms (10-15), 10 trained infantrymen, 10 junior infantry skirmishers, and perhaps 100 light infantry militiamen. This will usually be supplemented by the abbot, 2-3 choir monks, a resident friar, 3-4 senior brothers, 5-8 junior brothers, and perhaps 10-18 aspirants. The knight-commander will typically also have one white necromancer, and his apprentice, and may even have allies such as a clan of 9-12 sun dwarves, gnomish peltasts (15-20), or even a high bard of Dwarden.
This force will typically be called a Knight's Company, but he will rarely employ it outside the defenses of his commandery's walls.
Bailiff's Battle
The typical field fighting force of the Order is a "battle", largely composed of the soldiery derived from a military levy drawn from outside the resources of the commanderies proper. Lord Bailiffs are able to demand such levies. If a bailiff commands that a battle be summoned, he will so issue his orders to his knight-commanders, who will themselves demand the troops and resources necessary for a campaign. Furthermore, the Lord Bailiff will then command his most experience combat serjeant, the bailiwick's master-at-arms, to coordinate the combined logistic assets of the various commanderies into a uniform whole. Once summoned, battles may levy hundreds of men, often over 500, combined with whatever strength was summoned from the commanderies. Knight-paladins will typically command the van, the left and right wings, and the center, with the rear guard commanded by a senior serjeant. Landed knights or their private serjeants will command their own men organized in bands and banners, but typically senior serjeants of the Order will act as column commanders, keeping the bands and banners in line. Battles also often have enough cavalry to form a squadron of cavalry, where typically the knights and excess knight-paladins may be found, commanded by the next most senior paladin in the battle. Wizards, bards of Dwarden, the resources and clerics of a full monastery, and siege engines almost always reinforce the strength of a battle.
A bailiff typically appoints a master of horse and a master of foot as his second and third in command, and typically these are chosen from among his knight-commanders. His fourth in command is the master-at-arms, who is almost always a highly experienced serjeant-at-arms from the commanderies.
Priory Armies
A prior or grand prior may summon their army if necessary. They follow the same basic procedure as does a bailiff, but instead the constituent bailiwicks provide the enormous support necessary, and the organization is managed by a man of high serjeant rank, holding the position of marshal or grand marshal, the second in command of the force. Armies of Dwarden are often thousands strong, and commanded by the Lord Prior. One of the crusader commanderies almost always joins the support of a regional army, and can typically boast of many powerful heroes and large units. Battles are generally stripped of their cavalry, and composed themselves the van, the left and right wings, etc. The cavalry is once again overall commanded by the second most senior paladin in the army, but he usually divides his force into multiple squadrons, each led by a knight.
Units by Echelon
Band:
Banner:
Column:
Squadron:
Company:
Battle:
Army:
Host of Dwarden:
Subcategories
This category has only the following subcategory.
Pages in category "The Order of the Beleaguered Shield"
The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total.