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Running at the ring

Running at the ring, riding at the ring or tilting at the ring is an equestrian tournament activity originally practiced at European royal courts and likely derived from other lance games like quintain. It gained new popularity at Natural Chimneys near Mount Solon, Virginia, possibly as early as the 1820s,[1] and since 1962, has been the state sport of Maryland.[2] A similar contest, the corrida de sortija, is held in Argentina where it is considered a gaucho sport derived from the Spanish tradition of medieval tournaments.

Description edit

 
Running or tilting at the ring, an illustration derived from L'Instruction du Roy en l'exercise de monter a cheval by Antoine de Pluvinel

Participants rode at full speed to thrust the point of the lance through a ring or to hook a ring and carry it off. A performer was allowed three attempts.[3] The French author and riding master Antoine de Pluvinel published descriptions and the rules.[4] The lance was shorter than those used for jousting, and had no protective vamplate.[5]

Costumed court festival edit

This version of a lance game or quintain could be played in teams, and the riders sometimes dressed in exotic fancy costume as a spectacle at weddings or other court festivals. Costumes for a 1570 tournament in Prague were designed by Giuseppe Arcimboldo.[6] At Munich in February 1568, at a match held at the wedding of Renata of Lorraine and William V, Duke of Bavaria, the spectators were entertained by the costumed aristocratic riders and professional Italian comedians.[7] There are many records of running at the ring at the Scottish and Tudor courts. At court, the prize was often a diamond ring presented by a lady.[8]

Present day sport edit

A tournament of tilting at the ring continues to be held in Denmark at Sønderborg annually in July and the Ringridermuseet is dedicated to the sport. It is also a tradition to have variations of this game at summer get-togethers in small Danish villages. Here they will often use anything but a horse, such as bike, lawnmower, tractor or even other people.[9] Modern ring tilting tournaments have also been held in Croatian Istria since at least the 1970s.[10]

Running at the ring, usually referred to as a ring tournament, ring jousting, or simply as jousting, has been practiced in parts of the American South since at least the 1840s. Ring tournaments are still held in Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, but most frequently in Maryland,[11] which made this form of jousting its state sport in 1962.[12]

Tudor tournaments edit

Costume fabrics for Henry VIII of England to run at the ring at Greenwich Palace in January and February 1516 included velvets, damasks, satins, and sarcenets.[13] He performed at Richmond Palace for the Venetian ambassador in May 1517.[14]

In February 1547, English soldiers at Boulogne held a tournament to celebrate the coronation of Edward VI. Instead of tilting, they held courses of running at the ring. One team of six were dressed "like Turks".[15] John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland wagered and lost a valuable velvet cap to Jakes Granado, running at the ring at Westminster Palace on 6 June 1550.[16] Jacques Granado and his brother Bernardine were Squires of the Stable to Edward VI.[17]

Edward VI took part in April and May 1551, riding against Edward Seymour, the King's team wore black and white, the challengers wore yellow. Edward VI rode again at Greenwich in 1552. Roger Ascham wrote that to "run fair at the tilt or ring" was one of the necessary skills "for a courtier to use".[18]

When the French ambassador, Gilles de Noailles, came to see Elizabeth I at Horsley in Surrey in August 1559, they watched Robert Dudley, Master of the Horse,[19] and other courtiers running at the ring from a window: Noailles wrote:

d'alla asseoir prés d'une fenestre, au devant de laquelle son Grand Escuyer, et dix ou onze autres Gentilshommes se tenoient prestz pour luy donner du plaisir à voir courre la Bague

We sat near a window, below which, nearby, her Great Squire [Dudley], and ten or twelve other courtiers ran at the ring for her pleasure.[20]

In 1655 Edward Somerset, 2nd Marquess of Worcester, included an artificial "ring horse" for running at the ring in his Century of Inventions.[21]

Scottish records edit

Mary, Queen of Scots edit

In December 1561, René II de Lorraine, Marquis d'Elbeuf, with John Stewart, Commendator of Coldingham, Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney,[22] and others, performed in a tournament on the sands of Leith, probably to celebrate the birthday of Mary, Queen of Scots.[23][24] There was running at the ring, with two teams of six men including the French diplomat Paul de Foix, one team dressed as women, the other as exotic foreigners in strange masquing garments.[25] The event, attended by the diplomats Thomas Randolph, and the Count of Moretta,[26] was perhaps the first ring tournament as equestrian masque in Scotland.[27] Randolph wrote of his conversation with Paul de Foix about the event:

we sett in talke of the pastymes that was Sunday before, where he, Lord Robert, Lord John and others rane at the ringe, 6 against 6, dysguised and appareled th'one half lyke women, and th'other lyke strayngers, in straynge maskinge garmentes. The Marquis that day did verie well, but the women whose part the Lord Roberte dyd sustayne wane the rynge. The Queen herself behylde it and as many others as lyste.[28]

Thomas Randolph saw Mary, Queen of Scots, watching running at the ring at the sands of Leith again in March 1565.[29][30] The contestants included Lord Darnley and Lord Robert.[31] An entertainment written by George Buchanan for the wedding of Mary, Queen of Scots, and Henry, Lord Darnley, the Pompae Equestres, involved the arrival of teams of exotic knights, and may have provided themes for a tournament.[32] Mary offered a diamond ring as a prize to runners in March 1566.[33]

James VI edit

In October 1579, James VI of Scotland took up residence at Holyroodhouse. Sand was brought to lay out a course for running at the ring, under the direction of William MacDowall who had supervised works in the palace garden for three decades.[34] The rings were suspended from a "potence".[35] The lances used may have been hollow and lighter than those used for combat.

 
The 1594 tournament at Stirling Castle was held in The Valley to the south of the castle, since 1857 a part of the Old Town Cemetery

Elizabeth Stewart married James Stewart, 2nd Earl of Moray in January 1581. The wedding was celebrated in Fife with a tournament of "running at the ring" and James VI took part. Two day after the party came to Leith, where a water pageant culminated with an assault on a pasteboard Papal Castel Sant'Angelo, built on boats on the water of Leith.[36] White satin and taffeta outfits, "play claithis", were bought for James VI, his master stabler, and a page.[37] In February 1581 a payment was made for painted spears supplied to James VI and sand delivered to Holyrood to build a course or track called a "carear" or career.[38]

Jousting at the court of James VI was celebrated by the poet Alexander Montgomerie in A Cartell of Thrie Ventrous Knights, which seems to be a pageant prologue for an actual tournament:[39]

To prove thy knights. We dout not bot they dare,
In play or ernest, be bold to brek a tre. (tree = lance)
And so I trou, dare ony of yon thrie:
Bot they are not come heir for sik a thing;
Bot rather, for thair Ladyes sake, to se
Quha fairest runis, and oftest taks the ring.
Go to than, schirs, and let us streik a sting.
Cast crosse or pyle, wha sall begin the play;
And let the luifsume Ladyis and the King
Decerne, as judges, wha dois best, this day.[40]

The Earl of Leicester sent James VI a pied horse, and Roger Aston wrote to him that James rode "right bravely" for a golden ring on 10 June 1580, when six riders challenged all comers during a royal progress at Dundee.[41]

At the baptism of Prince Henry in August 1594 at Stirling Castle, there were three teams of riders. One team was dressed as the Christian Knights of Malta, one in Turkish fashion, and three men dressed as Amazons. A fourth team, to be dressed as Africans called "Moors" did not show up. The event was held in the valley by the castle, and watched by the queen, Anne of Denmark, with her ladies-in-waiting, and the ambassadors. The audience was swelled by a large crowd of young men from Edinburgh armed with muskets.[42]

The "Christian Knights" were James VI; the Earl of Mar; and Thomas Erskine of Gogar. The "Turks" were the Duke of Lennox; Lord Home; and Sir Robert Kerr of Cessford. The "Amazons" were the Lord Lindores as Penthesilea; the Laird of Buccleuch; and the Abbot of Holyroodhouse. These all bore devices or imprese pertaining to the themes of the festival.[43] Anne of Denmark gave diamond rings to the victors.[44]

The rules of the Stirling tournament were:

  1. That all the persons of this pastime compere masked, and in such Order as they come into the Field, so to run out all their courses.
  2. That None use any other Ring but that which is put up: and use no other Lance but that which they have brought for themselves
  3. He that twice touches the Ring, or stirs it, winneth as muche as if he carried away the ring
  4. He that lets his lance fall out of his hand is deprived of all the rest of his courses
  5. That every one run with loose reins, and with as much speed as his horse hath
  6. That none after his Race, in up-taking of his Horse, lay his Lance upon his shoulder, under the pain of losse of that which he hath done in his course
  7. He that carrieth not his Lance under his arme, loseth his course
  8. That none, until his three courses be ended, change his horse, if he be not hurt, or upon some other consideration moved to change him.[45]

Some people were not pleased at the idea of the king and his companions dressed as the Catholic "Knights of the Holy Spirit".[46] The intended interpretation was perhaps that the knights would be seen as Protestants overcoming "Turks" who represented the Catholic church.[47]

Spears were bought for James VI to run at the ring and "run at the glove" at Perth in August 1601.[48]

Carpet knights edit

After the Union of the Crowns, in January 1604, a "standing" was built for Anne of Denmark to watch running at the ring at Hampton Court.[49] The courtier Roger Wilbraham wrote a summary of his impressions of the entertainments at court in January 1604, including the masque of The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses and ruuning at the ring; "King James was at his court at Hampton, where the French, Spanish, and Polonian ambassadors were severallie solemplie feasted, many plaies & daunces with swordes, one mask by English & Scottish lords, another by the Queen's Maiestie & eleven more ladies of her chamber presenting giftes as goddesses. These maskes, especially the laste, costes £2000 or £3000, the aparells, rare musick, fine songes, and in jewels most riche £20,000, the least to my judgment, & [jewels for] her Majestie £100,000, after Christmas was running at the ring by the King & 8 or 9 lords for the honour of those goddesses & then they all feasted together privatelie."[50]

James VI and I competed with his brother-in-law Christian IV of Denmark at running at the ring at Theobalds in August 1606.[51] Prince Henry competed at running at the ring with foreign visitors and diplomats including Louis Frederick, Duke of Württemberg-Montbéliard in April and May 1610.[52] On Monday 15 February 1613, after the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Frederick V of the Palatinate there was a tournament of tilting and running at the ring at Whitehall.[53] Anne of Denmark, Elizabeth, and aristocratic women watched from the Banqueting House. King James rode first. Prince Charles did particularly well. The performances of expert riders were appreciated for taking the ring with "much strangeness".[54]

There was running at the ring at the creation of the future Charles I as Prince of Wales in November 1616 at Whitehall Palace. Lady Anne Clifford wrote that there "was not half so great pomp as there was at the creation of Prince Henry" in 1610.[55]

Philip Massinger in his play The Maid of Honour wrote of "carpet knights" who "thought to charge, through dust and blood, an armed foe, Was but like graceful running at the ring".[56] William Cavendish, 1st Duke of Newcastle built a magnificent riding school and stable at Bolsover Castle. As a young man he had frequently taken part in equestrian sports and running at the ring at the royal court.[57]

Spanish Match edit

The Spanish word for running at the ring was sortija.[58] There were tournaments including running at ring in Madrid in 1623 when Prince Charles visited in pursuit of his Spanish Match. News from Spain was brought to the English court at Theobalds by Richard Graham, Master of Horse. After his Royal Entry to Madrid, Charles and the Marquess of Buckingham were invited to view the course from a high window with Philip III of Spain and his sister. When they went down to take part themselves, Charles saw the Infanta Maria Anna of Spain for the second time, watching his run from the same window. He "took away" the ring, and was the only successful rider that day.[59] The early biographer of James VI and I, Arthur Wilson, includes a brief version of the same story.[60]

American tradition edit

The American adoption of the ring tournament is not well documented. One of the few known instances of colonial-era jousting was organized by John André as part of the 1778 Mischianza held in Philadelphia to honor the British Commander-in-Chief William Howe.[61][62] By the mid-19th century, however, jousting was well known in the South with New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley quipping in 1870 that, "the tournament is a natural institution of the South as much as base-ball is of the North or cricket of England".[63] This popularity of jousting in the South is sometimes connected to the popularity of Walter Scott's novel Ivanhoe,[64] which was widely read in the American South.[65]

The first recorded tournament in American happened in 1840, 20 years after Ivanhoe's publication, at the Fauquier White Sulphur Springs resort. The inspiration for this tournament, which advertised tilting at the rings as part of the year's new entertainment, was the 1839 Eglinton Tournament, which in turn was inspired by Ivanhoe.[66] The Fauquier tournament was held annually until 1860 and similar jousts spread across the South during that time.[67][68]

The enthusiasm has been described as a "mania for spearing rings" which "spread rapidly across the antebellum South". Mark Twain wrote of a "Sir Walter disease". After the American Civil War, ring tournaments continued to find favour, including among freedmen.[69]

References edit

  1. ^ Andrew Jenner, 'The Fading Glory of America’s (Allegedly) Oldest Sporting Event', Modern Farmer, 9 October 2014
  2. ^ Robert Shosteck, Weekend Getaways Around Washington (Pelican, 2004), p. 440: James Chambers, Holidays Around the World: Sith Edition (Infobase, 2018), no. 1537: Helmut Nickel, 'Hunting, Gaming, and Sports', The Secular Spirit: Life and Art at the End of the Middle Ages (New York: Dutton, 1975), pp. 207-208:
  3. ^ Alan Young, Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments (London, 1987), 28–29.
  4. ^ Strutt, Joseph (1876). The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England. London: Chatto and Windus. pp. 195–197.
  5. ^ Robert Clephan, Medieval Tournament (London, 1919), 7.
  6. ^ Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann, Arcimboldo: Visual Jokes, Natural History, and Still-Life Painting (University of Chicago, 2009), p. 66.
  7. ^ M. A. Katritzky, The Art of Commedia: A Study in the Commedia Dell'Arte 1560–1620 (Rodopi, 2006), pp. 46–48, 101.
  8. ^ Clare McManus, Women on the Renaissance Stage: Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590–1618 (Manchester, 2002), p. 85: David Bergeron, 'Are we turned Turks? English Pageants and the Stuart Court', Comparative Drama, 44: 3 (Fall 2010), pp. 259-260: The Plays of Philip Massinger, 1 (New York, 1831), p. 109 fn.
  9. ^ Tilting at the Ring: Visit Sønderjylland
  10. ^ "President Milanović attends "Tilting at the Ring" Tournament and warns: a complex autumn lies ahead". President of the Republic of Croatia. 2021-08-21. Retrieved 2023-07-22.
  11. ^ Orians, G. Harrison (September 1941). "The Origin of the Ring Tournament in the United States" (PDF). Maryland Historical Magazine. 36 (3): 263–277. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  12. ^ "Maryland Is First to Adopt Official Sport". The Salisbury Times. Vol. 39, no. 100. Salisbury, Maryland. 1962-03-30. p. 4. Retrieved 2023-07-21 – via Newspapers.com.
  13. ^ J. S. Brewer, 'The King's Book of Payments, 1516', Letters and Papers, Foreign and Domestic, Henry VIII, 1515-1516, volume 2 (London, 1864), p. 1469.
  14. ^ Rawdon Brown, Calendar of State Papers Venice, vol. 2 (London, 1867), p. 395 no. 911.
  15. ^ William B. Turnbull, Calendar of State Papers, Foreign Edward VI (London, 1861), pp. 308-310 no. 47.
  16. ^ Henry Thomas Riley, 'Inventory of John, Viscount Lisle', HMC 2nd Report (London, 1870), p. 102.
  17. ^ Craven Ord, 'Edward Waldegrave's Account of the Burial of Edward VI', Archaeologia, vol. 12 (London, 1796), p. 382.
  18. ^ Sydney Anglo, Spectacle Pageantry, and Early Tudor Policy (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1969), p. 299: John Gough Williams, Literary Remains of King Edward the Sixth, 1 (London, 1857), pp. lxi, xlix, ccxx, ccxviii: Journal of King Edward's Reign (Clarendon Historical Society, 1884), p. 34.
  19. ^ Susan Doran, Elizabeth I and Her Circle (Oxford, 2015), p. 119.
  20. ^ Estelle Paranque, Elizabeth I of England through Valois Eyes (Palgrave Macmillan, 2019), pp. 42–43.
  21. ^ Harleian Miscellany, vol. 4 (London, 1745), p. 499 no. 91.
  22. ^ Peter Anderson, Robert Stewart, Earl of Orkney Lord of Shetland (Edinburgh, 1982), p. 43.
  23. ^ John Guy, My Heart is My Own: Mary, Queen of Scots (London, 2004), p. 154.
  24. ^ John Parker Lawson, History of Scotland by Robert Keith, 2 (Edinburgh, 1845), pp. 123, 125
  25. ^ Michael Bath, Emblems in Scotland: Motifs and Meanings (Brill, 2018), pp. 94, 96: Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 576, 579: Clare McManus, Women on the Renaissance stage: Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court, 1590-1619 (Manchester, 2002), p. 83.
  26. ^ John Parker Lawson, History of Scotland by Robert Keith, 2 (Edinburgh, 1845), pp. 125–6
  27. ^ John Guy, Mary Queen of Scots: My Heart is My Own (Fourth Estate, 2009), p. 154.
  28. ^ Joseph Bain, Calendar State Papers Scotland, vol. 1 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 576, 579: British Library Cotton Caligula, B. X. fol. 201r.
  29. ^ Morgan Ring, So High A Blood: The Life of Margaret Douglas, Countess of Lennox (Bloomsbury, 2017), p. 193.
  30. ^ Puttick & Simpson, Catalogue of a Very Important Collection of Royal Letters (London, 1859) pp. 12–13 no. 38.
  31. ^ Katharine P. Frescoln, 'A Letter from Thomas Randolph to the Earl of Leicester', Huntington Library Quarterly, 37:1 (November 1973), pp. 83-88 at 87 from National Library of Scotland MS 3657. doi:10.2307/3816901
  32. ^ Joseph Robertson, Inventaires de la Royne Descosse (Edinburgh, 1863), pp. lxxxiv–lxxxv.
  33. ^ M. S. Giuseppi, HMC Salisbury Hatfield, vol. 16 (London, 1933), p. 18.
  34. ^ Accounts of the Treasurer, vol. 13 (Edinburgh, 1978), p. 292.
  35. ^ Sarah Carpenter, Records of Early English Drama: The Royal Court of Scotland, 1581-1582, NRS TA E21/62 f.126r April 1581
  36. ^ Calendar State Papers Scotland, 1574-1581, vol. 5 (Edinburgh, 1907), p. 611.
  37. ^ Michael Pearce, 'Maskerye Claythis for James VI and Anna of Denmark', Medieval English Theatre 43 (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2022), pp. 112-3: Steven J. Reid, The Early Life of James VI, A Long Apprenticeship (Edinburgh: John Donald, 2023), p. 174.
  38. ^ Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland, Addenda, vol. 14 (Edinburgh, 1898), pp. 358.
  39. ^ Sarah Carpenter, 'Researching Court Performance', Pamela King, Routledge Research Companion to Early Drama and Performance (Routledge, 2017), pp. 148-9: Michael Lynch, 'Reasssertion of Princely Power in Scotland', Martin Gosman, Alasdair A. MacDonald, Arjo Vanderjagt, Princes and Princely Culture: 1450-1650 (Brill, 2003), p. 232: Rod J. Lyall, Alexander Montgomerie: Poetry, Politics, and Cultural Change in Jacobean Scotland (Arizona, 2005), p. 75.
  40. ^ James Cranstoun, Poems of Alexander Montgomerie (Edinburgh, 1887), p. 213.
  41. ^ Edward Ives, The Bonny Earl of Murray: The Man, the Murder, the Ballad (Tuckwell, 1997), p. 87: Calendar State Papers SDcotland, 1574-81, vol. 5 (Edinburgh, 1907), p. 447 no. 518: British Library, Cotton Caligula C/III f.612, 10 June 1580.
  42. ^ William Fowler, A True Reportarie (Edinburgh, 1594), text Early English Books Online.
  43. ^ Michael Bath, Emblems in Scotland: Motifs and Meanings (Brill, Leiden, 2018), pp. 97–101.
  44. ^ Clare McManus, Women on the Renaissance Stage: Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590–1618 (Manchester, 2002), p. 85.
  45. ^ Samuel Pegge, Curialia (London, 1791), pp. 37-8, from Fowler's True Reportary.
  46. ^ Thomas Thomson, History of the Kirk of Scotland by Mr David Calderwood, vol. 5 (Edinburgh, 1844), p. 346.
  47. ^ Andrea Thomas, Glory and Honour: The Renaissance in Scotland (Edinburgh, 2013), p. 196.
  48. ^ Letters to King James the Sixth from the Queen, Prince Henry (Edinburgh, 1835), p. lxxix
  49. ^ Alan Young, Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments (London, 1987), 205.
  50. ^ Harold Spencer Scott, 'Journal of Roger Wilbraham', Camden Miscellany (London, 1902), p. 66
  51. ^ Maurice Lee, Dudley Carleton to John Chamberlain, 1603-1624 (Rutgers UP, 1972), p. 87.
  52. ^ William Brenchley Rye, England as Seen by Foreigners in the Days of Elizabeth & James the First (London, 1865), pp. 59, 62.
  53. ^ Clare McManus, Women on the Renaissance stage: Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court, 1590-1619 (Manchester, 2002), p. 142.
  54. ^ John Nichols, Progresses of James the First, 2 (London, 1828), pp. 549–50.
  55. ^ Jessica L. Malay, Anne Clifford's Autobiographical Writing, 1590-1676 (Manchester, 2018), p. 43.
  56. ^ William Gifford, The Plays of Philip Massinger (London, 1845), p. 235, voiced by Gonzaga in Scene 5.
  57. ^ Lucy Worsley & Tom Addyman, 'Riding Houses and Horses: William Cavendish's Architecture for the Art of Horsemanship', Architectural History, 45 (2002), p. 218
  58. ^ Gabriel Guarino, Spanish Celebrations in Seventeenth-Century Naples, 'The Sixteenth Century Journal, 37:1 (Spring 2006), p. 37.
  59. ^ Henry Paton, HMC Mar & Kellie supplement (London, 1930), p. 160.
  60. ^ Arthur Wilson, History of Great Britain: Being the Life and Reign of King James (London, 1653), pp. 228-9.
  61. ^ "The Tournaments of Colonial Times". National Jousting Association. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  62. ^ Orians 1941, p. 265.
  63. ^ quoted in Hanson, Lauren S.; Harris, Carmen (2021). "Tilting Toward Freedom: African American Ring Tournaments in a Postbellum South". University of South Carolina Upstate Student Research Journal. 14. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  64. ^ Orians 1941, pp. 266–267.
  65. ^ Eckenrode, Hamilton James (1917). "Sir Walter Scott and the South". The North American Review. 206 (743): 595–603. JSTOR 25121661.
  66. ^ Orians 1941, pp. 268–272.
  67. ^ Orians 1941, pp. 272–274.
  68. ^ "The Romantic Revival". National Jousting Association. Retrieved 2023-07-21.
  69. ^ Leeson, Whitney A. M. (2022). "A Tournament of Black Knights — Alexandria, Virginia, 1865 — Emancipationist Mobilize the Medieval". In Fugelso, Karl (ed.). Studies in Medievalism XXXI: Politics and Medievalism (Studies) III. Cambridge, England: D. S. Brewer. pp. 108–190, 114–116. ISBN 978-1-84384-625-3 – via Google Books.

External links edit

  • Lauren S. Hanson & Carmen Harris, 'Tilting Toward Freedom: African American Ring Tournaments in a Postbellum South Postbellum South', USCUSRJ, 14 (2021), pp. 9-20

running, ring, riding, ring, tilting, ring, equestrian, tournament, activity, originally, practiced, european, royal, courts, likely, derived, from, other, lance, games, like, quintain, gained, popularity, natural, chimneys, near, mount, solon, virginia, possi. Running at the ring riding at the ring or tilting at the ring is an equestrian tournament activity originally practiced at European royal courts and likely derived from other lance games like quintain It gained new popularity at Natural Chimneys near Mount Solon Virginia possibly as early as the 1820s 1 and since 1962 has been the state sport of Maryland 2 A similar contest the corrida de sortija is held in Argentina where it is considered a gaucho sport derived from the Spanish tradition of medieval tournaments Contents 1 Description 1 1 Costumed court festival 1 2 Present day sport 2 Tudor tournaments 3 Scottish records 3 1 Mary Queen of Scots 3 2 James VI 4 Carpet knights 5 Spanish Match 6 American tradition 7 References 8 External linksDescription edit nbsp Running or tilting at the ring an illustration derived from L Instruction du Roy en l exercise de monter a cheval by Antoine de Pluvinel Participants rode at full speed to thrust the point of the lance through a ring or to hook a ring and carry it off A performer was allowed three attempts 3 The French author and riding master Antoine de Pluvinel published descriptions and the rules 4 The lance was shorter than those used for jousting and had no protective vamplate 5 Costumed court festival edit This version of a lance game or quintain could be played in teams and the riders sometimes dressed in exotic fancy costume as a spectacle at weddings or other court festivals Costumes for a 1570 tournament in Prague were designed by Giuseppe Arcimboldo 6 At Munich in February 1568 at a match held at the wedding of Renata of Lorraine and William V Duke of Bavaria the spectators were entertained by the costumed aristocratic riders and professional Italian comedians 7 There are many records of running at the ring at the Scottish and Tudor courts At court the prize was often a diamond ring presented by a lady 8 Present day sport edit A tournament of tilting at the ring continues to be held in Denmark at Sonderborg annually in July and the Ringridermuseet is dedicated to the sport It is also a tradition to have variations of this game at summer get togethers in small Danish villages Here they will often use anything but a horse such as bike lawnmower tractor or even other people 9 Modern ring tilting tournaments have also been held in Croatian Istria since at least the 1970s 10 Running at the ring usually referred to as a ring tournament ring jousting or simply as jousting has been practiced in parts of the American South since at least the 1840s Ring tournaments are still held in Virginia West Virginia North Carolina and South Carolina but most frequently in Maryland 11 which made this form of jousting its state sport in 1962 12 Tudor tournaments editCostume fabrics for Henry VIII of England to run at the ring at Greenwich Palace in January and February 1516 included velvets damasks satins and sarcenets 13 He performed at Richmond Palace for the Venetian ambassador in May 1517 14 In February 1547 English soldiers at Boulogne held a tournament to celebrate the coronation of Edward VI Instead of tilting they held courses of running at the ring One team of six were dressed like Turks 15 John Dudley 1st Duke of Northumberland wagered and lost a valuable velvet cap to Jakes Granado running at the ring at Westminster Palace on 6 June 1550 16 Jacques Granado and his brother Bernardine were Squires of the Stable to Edward VI 17 Edward VI took part in April and May 1551 riding against Edward Seymour the King s team wore black and white the challengers wore yellow Edward VI rode again at Greenwich in 1552 Roger Ascham wrote that to run fair at the tilt or ring was one of the necessary skills for a courtier to use 18 When the French ambassador Gilles de Noailles came to see Elizabeth I at Horsley in Surrey in August 1559 they watched Robert Dudley Master of the Horse 19 and other courtiers running at the ring from a window Noailles wrote d alla asseoir pres d une fenestre au devant de laquelle son Grand Escuyer et dix ou onze autres Gentilshommes se tenoient prestz pour luy donner du plaisir a voir courre la BagueWe sat near a window below which nearby her Great Squire Dudley and ten or twelve other courtiers ran at the ring for her pleasure 20 In 1655 Edward Somerset 2nd Marquess of Worcester included an artificial ring horse for running at the ring in his Century of Inventions 21 Scottish records editMary Queen of Scots editIn December 1561 Rene II de Lorraine Marquis d Elbeuf with John Stewart Commendator of Coldingham Robert Stewart 1st Earl of Orkney 22 and others performed in a tournament on the sands of Leith probably to celebrate the birthday of Mary Queen of Scots 23 24 There was running at the ring with two teams of six men including the French diplomat Paul de Foix one team dressed as women the other as exotic foreigners in strange masquing garments 25 The event attended by the diplomats Thomas Randolph and the Count of Moretta 26 was perhaps the first ring tournament as equestrian masque in Scotland 27 Randolph wrote of his conversation with Paul de Foix about the event we sett in talke of the pastymes that was Sunday before where he Lord Robert Lord John and others rane at the ringe 6 against 6 dysguised and appareled th one half lyke women and th other lyke strayngers in straynge maskinge garmentes The Marquis that day did verie well but the women whose part the Lord Roberte dyd sustayne wane the rynge The Queen herself behylde it and as many others as lyste 28 Thomas Randolph saw Mary Queen of Scots watching running at the ring at the sands of Leith again in March 1565 29 30 The contestants included Lord Darnley and Lord Robert 31 An entertainment written by George Buchanan for the wedding of Mary Queen of Scots and Henry Lord Darnley the Pompae Equestres involved the arrival of teams of exotic knights and may have provided themes for a tournament 32 Mary offered a diamond ring as a prize to runners in March 1566 33 James VI edit In October 1579 James VI of Scotland took up residence at Holyroodhouse Sand was brought to lay out a course for running at the ring under the direction of William MacDowall who had supervised works in the palace garden for three decades 34 The rings were suspended from a potence 35 The lances used may have been hollow and lighter than those used for combat nbsp The 1594 tournament at Stirling Castle was held in The Valley to the south of the castle since 1857 a part of the Old Town Cemetery Elizabeth Stewart married James Stewart 2nd Earl of Moray in January 1581 The wedding was celebrated in Fife with a tournament of running at the ring and James VI took part Two day after the party came to Leith where a water pageant culminated with an assault on a pasteboard Papal Castel Sant Angelo built on boats on the water of Leith 36 White satin and taffeta outfits play claithis were bought for James VI his master stabler and a page 37 In February 1581 a payment was made for painted spears supplied to James VI and sand delivered to Holyrood to build a course or track called a carear or career 38 Jousting at the court of James VI was celebrated by the poet Alexander Montgomerie in A Cartell of Thrie Ventrous Knights which seems to be a pageant prologue for an actual tournament 39 To prove thy knights We dout not bot they dare In play or ernest be bold to brek a tre tree lance And so I trou dare ony of yon thrie Bot they are not come heir for sik a thing Bot rather for thair Ladyes sake to seQuha fairest runis and oftest taks the ring Go to than schirs and let us streik a sting Cast crosse or pyle wha sall begin the play And let the luifsume Ladyis and the KingDecerne as judges wha dois best this day 40 The Earl of Leicester sent James VI a pied horse and Roger Aston wrote to him that James rode right bravely for a golden ring on 10 June 1580 when six riders challenged all comers during a royal progress at Dundee 41 At the baptism of Prince Henry in August 1594 at Stirling Castle there were three teams of riders One team was dressed as the Christian Knights of Malta one in Turkish fashion and three men dressed as Amazons A fourth team to be dressed as Africans called Moors did not show up The event was held in the valley by the castle and watched by the queen Anne of Denmark with her ladies in waiting and the ambassadors The audience was swelled by a large crowd of young men from Edinburgh armed with muskets 42 The Christian Knights were James VI the Earl of Mar and Thomas Erskine of Gogar The Turks were the Duke of Lennox Lord Home and Sir Robert Kerr of Cessford The Amazons were the Lord Lindores as Penthesilea the Laird of Buccleuch and the Abbot of Holyroodhouse These all bore devices or imprese pertaining to the themes of the festival 43 Anne of Denmark gave diamond rings to the victors 44 The rules of the Stirling tournament were That all the persons of this pastime compere masked and in such Order as they come into the Field so to run out all their courses That None use any other Ring but that which is put up and use no other Lance but that which they have brought for themselves He that twice touches the Ring or stirs it winneth as muche as if he carried away the ring He that lets his lance fall out of his hand is deprived of all the rest of his courses That every one run with loose reins and with as much speed as his horse hath That none after his Race in up taking of his Horse lay his Lance upon his shoulder under the pain of losse of that which he hath done in his course He that carrieth not his Lance under his arme loseth his course That none until his three courses be ended change his horse if he be not hurt or upon some other consideration moved to change him 45 Some people were not pleased at the idea of the king and his companions dressed as the Catholic Knights of the Holy Spirit 46 The intended interpretation was perhaps that the knights would be seen as Protestants overcoming Turks who represented the Catholic church 47 Spears were bought for James VI to run at the ring and run at the glove at Perth in August 1601 48 Carpet knights editAfter the Union of the Crowns in January 1604 a standing was built for Anne of Denmark to watch running at the ring at Hampton Court 49 The courtier Roger Wilbraham wrote a summary of his impressions of the entertainments at court in January 1604 including the masque of The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses and ruuning at the ring King James was at his court at Hampton where the French Spanish and Polonian ambassadors were severallie solemplie feasted many plaies amp daunces with swordes one mask by English amp Scottish lords another by the Queen s Maiestie amp eleven more ladies of her chamber presenting giftes as goddesses These maskes especially the laste costes 2000 or 3000 the aparells rare musick fine songes and in jewels most riche 20 000 the least to my judgment amp jewels for her Majestie 100 000 after Christmas was running at the ring by the King amp 8 or 9 lords for the honour of those goddesses amp then they all feasted together privatelie 50 James VI and I competed with his brother in law Christian IV of Denmark at running at the ring at Theobalds in August 1606 51 Prince Henry competed at running at the ring with foreign visitors and diplomats including Louis Frederick Duke of Wurttemberg Montbeliard in April and May 1610 52 On Monday 15 February 1613 after the wedding of Princess Elizabeth and Frederick V of the Palatinate there was a tournament of tilting and running at the ring at Whitehall 53 Anne of Denmark Elizabeth and aristocratic women watched from the Banqueting House King James rode first Prince Charles did particularly well The performances of expert riders were appreciated for taking the ring with much strangeness 54 There was running at the ring at the creation of the future Charles I as Prince of Wales in November 1616 at Whitehall Palace Lady Anne Clifford wrote that there was not half so great pomp as there was at the creation of Prince Henry in 1610 55 Philip Massinger in his play The Maid of Honour wrote of carpet knights who thought to charge through dust and blood an armed foe Was but like graceful running at the ring 56 William Cavendish 1st Duke of Newcastle built a magnificent riding school and stable at Bolsover Castle As a young man he had frequently taken part in equestrian sports and running at the ring at the royal court 57 Spanish Match editThe Spanish word for running at the ring was sortija 58 There were tournaments including running at ring in Madrid in 1623 when Prince Charles visited in pursuit of his Spanish Match News from Spain was brought to the English court at Theobalds by Richard Graham Master of Horse After his Royal Entry to Madrid Charles and the Marquess of Buckingham were invited to view the course from a high window with Philip III of Spain and his sister When they went down to take part themselves Charles saw the Infanta Maria Anna of Spain for the second time watching his run from the same window He took away the ring and was the only successful rider that day 59 The early biographer of James VI and I Arthur Wilson includes a brief version of the same story 60 American tradition editThe American adoption of the ring tournament is not well documented One of the few known instances of colonial era jousting was organized by John Andre as part of the 1778 Mischianza held in Philadelphia to honor the British Commander in Chief William Howe 61 62 By the mid 19th century however jousting was well known in the South with New York Tribune editor Horace Greeley quipping in 1870 that the tournament is a natural institution of the South as much as base ball is of the North or cricket of England 63 This popularity of jousting in the South is sometimes connected to the popularity of Walter Scott s novel Ivanhoe 64 which was widely read in the American South 65 The first recorded tournament in American happened in 1840 20 years after Ivanhoe s publication at the Fauquier White Sulphur Springs resort The inspiration for this tournament which advertised tilting at the rings as part of the year s new entertainment was the 1839 Eglinton Tournament which in turn was inspired by Ivanhoe 66 The Fauquier tournament was held annually until 1860 and similar jousts spread across the South during that time 67 68 The enthusiasm has been described as a mania for spearing rings which spread rapidly across the antebellum South Mark Twain wrote of a Sir Walter disease After the American Civil War ring tournaments continued to find favour including among freedmen 69 References edit Andrew Jenner The Fading Glory of America s Allegedly Oldest Sporting Event Modern Farmer 9 October 2014 Robert Shosteck Weekend Getaways Around Washington Pelican 2004 p 440 James Chambers Holidays Around the World Sith Edition Infobase 2018 no 1537 Helmut Nickel Hunting Gaming and Sports The Secular Spirit Life and Art at the End of the Middle Ages New York Dutton 1975 pp 207 208 Alan Young Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments London 1987 28 29 Strutt Joseph 1876 The Sports and Pastimes of the People of England London Chatto and Windus pp 195 197 Robert Clephan Medieval Tournament London 1919 7 Thomas DaCosta Kaufmann Arcimboldo Visual Jokes Natural History and Still Life Painting University of Chicago 2009 p 66 M A Katritzky The Art of Commedia A Study in the Commedia Dell Arte 1560 1620 Rodopi 2006 pp 46 48 101 Clare McManus Women on the Renaissance Stage Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590 1618 Manchester 2002 p 85 David Bergeron Are we turned Turks English Pageants and the Stuart Court Comparative Drama 44 3 Fall 2010 pp 259 260 The Plays of Philip Massinger 1 New York 1831 p 109 fn Tilting at the Ring Visit Sonderjylland President Milanovic attends Tilting at the Ring Tournament and warns a complex autumn lies ahead President of the Republic of Croatia 2021 08 21 Retrieved 2023 07 22 Orians G Harrison September 1941 The Origin of the Ring Tournament in the United States PDF Maryland Historical Magazine 36 3 263 277 Retrieved 2023 07 21 Maryland Is First to Adopt Official Sport The Salisbury Times Vol 39 no 100 Salisbury Maryland 1962 03 30 p 4 Retrieved 2023 07 21 via Newspapers com J S Brewer The King s Book of Payments 1516 Letters and Papers Foreign and Domestic Henry VIII 1515 1516 volume 2 London 1864 p 1469 Rawdon Brown Calendar of State Papers Venice vol 2 London 1867 p 395 no 911 William B Turnbull Calendar of State Papers Foreign Edward VI London 1861 pp 308 310 no 47 Henry Thomas Riley Inventory of John Viscount Lisle HMC 2nd Report London 1870 p 102 Craven Ord Edward Waldegrave s Account of the Burial of Edward VI Archaeologia vol 12 London 1796 p 382 Sydney Anglo Spectacle Pageantry and Early Tudor Policy Oxford Clarendon Press 1969 p 299 John Gough Williams Literary Remains of King Edward the Sixth 1 London 1857 pp lxi xlix ccxx ccxviii Journal of King Edward s Reign Clarendon Historical Society 1884 p 34 Susan Doran Elizabeth I and Her Circle Oxford 2015 p 119 Estelle Paranque Elizabeth I of England through Valois Eyes Palgrave Macmillan 2019 pp 42 43 Harleian Miscellany vol 4 London 1745 p 499 no 91 Peter Anderson Robert Stewart Earl of Orkney Lord of Shetland Edinburgh 1982 p 43 John Guy My Heart is My Own Mary Queen of Scots London 2004 p 154 John Parker Lawson History of Scotland by Robert Keith 2 Edinburgh 1845 pp 123 125 Michael Bath Emblems in Scotland Motifs and Meanings Brill 2018 pp 94 96 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 576 579 Clare McManus Women on the Renaissance stage Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590 1619 Manchester 2002 p 83 John Parker Lawson History of Scotland by Robert Keith 2 Edinburgh 1845 pp 125 6 John Guy Mary Queen of Scots My Heart is My Own Fourth Estate 2009 p 154 Joseph Bain Calendar State Papers Scotland vol 1 Edinburgh 1898 pp 576 579 British Library Cotton Caligula B X fol 201r Morgan Ring So High A Blood The Life of Margaret Douglas Countess of Lennox Bloomsbury 2017 p 193 Puttick amp Simpson Catalogue of a Very Important Collection of Royal Letters London 1859 pp 12 13 no 38 Katharine P Frescoln A Letter from Thomas Randolph to the Earl of Leicester Huntington Library Quarterly 37 1 November 1973 pp 83 88 at 87 from National Library of Scotland MS 3657 doi 10 2307 3816901 Joseph Robertson Inventaires de la Royne Descosse Edinburgh 1863 pp lxxxiv lxxxv M S Giuseppi HMC Salisbury Hatfield vol 16 London 1933 p 18 Accounts of the Treasurer vol 13 Edinburgh 1978 p 292 Sarah Carpenter Records of Early English Drama The Royal Court of Scotland 1581 1582 NRS TA E21 62 f 126r April 1581 Calendar State Papers Scotland 1574 1581 vol 5 Edinburgh 1907 p 611 Michael Pearce Maskerye Claythis for James VI and Anna of Denmark Medieval English Theatre 43 Cambridge D S Brewer 2022 pp 112 3 Steven J Reid The Early Life of James VI A Long Apprenticeship Edinburgh John Donald 2023 p 174 Register of the Privy Seal of Scotland Addenda vol 14 Edinburgh 1898 pp 358 Sarah Carpenter Researching Court Performance Pamela King Routledge Research Companion to Early Drama and Performance Routledge 2017 pp 148 9 Michael Lynch Reasssertion of Princely Power in Scotland Martin Gosman Alasdair A MacDonald Arjo Vanderjagt Princes and Princely Culture 1450 1650 Brill 2003 p 232 Rod J Lyall Alexander Montgomerie Poetry Politics and Cultural Change in Jacobean Scotland Arizona 2005 p 75 James Cranstoun Poems of Alexander Montgomerie Edinburgh 1887 p 213 Edward Ives The Bonny Earl of Murray The Man the Murder the Ballad Tuckwell 1997 p 87 Calendar State Papers SDcotland 1574 81 vol 5 Edinburgh 1907 p 447 no 518 British Library Cotton Caligula C III f 612 10 June 1580 William Fowler A True Reportarie Edinburgh 1594 text Early English Books Online Michael Bath Emblems in Scotland Motifs and Meanings Brill Leiden 2018 pp 97 101 Clare McManus Women on the Renaissance Stage Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590 1618 Manchester 2002 p 85 Samuel Pegge Curialia London 1791 pp 37 8 from Fowler s True Reportary Thomas Thomson History of the Kirk of Scotland by Mr David Calderwood vol 5 Edinburgh 1844 p 346 Andrea Thomas Glory and Honour The Renaissance in Scotland Edinburgh 2013 p 196 Letters to King James the Sixth from the Queen Prince Henry Edinburgh 1835 p lxxix Alan Young Tudor and Jacobean Tournaments London 1987 205 Harold Spencer Scott Journal of Roger Wilbraham Camden Miscellany London 1902 p 66 Maurice Lee Dudley Carleton to John Chamberlain 1603 1624 Rutgers UP 1972 p 87 William Brenchley Rye England as Seen by Foreigners in the Days of Elizabeth amp James the First London 1865 pp 59 62 Clare McManus Women on the Renaissance stage Anna of Denmark and Female Masquing in the Stuart Court 1590 1619 Manchester 2002 p 142 John Nichols Progresses of James the First 2 London 1828 pp 549 50 Jessica L Malay Anne Clifford s Autobiographical Writing 1590 1676 Manchester 2018 p 43 William Gifford The Plays of Philip Massinger London 1845 p 235 voiced by Gonzaga in Scene 5 Lucy Worsley amp Tom Addyman Riding Houses and Horses William Cavendish s Architecture for the Art of Horsemanship Architectural History 45 2002 p 218 Gabriel Guarino Spanish Celebrations in Seventeenth Century Naples The Sixteenth Century Journal 37 1 Spring 2006 p 37 Henry Paton HMC Mar amp Kellie supplement London 1930 p 160 Arthur Wilson History of Great Britain Being the Life and Reign of King James London 1653 pp 228 9 The Tournaments of Colonial Times National Jousting Association Retrieved 2023 07 21 Orians 1941 p 265 quoted in Hanson Lauren S Harris Carmen 2021 Tilting Toward Freedom African American Ring Tournaments in a Postbellum South University of South Carolina Upstate Student Research Journal 14 Retrieved 2023 07 21 Orians 1941 pp 266 267 Eckenrode Hamilton James 1917 Sir Walter Scott and the South The North American Review 206 743 595 603 JSTOR 25121661 Orians 1941 pp 268 272 Orians 1941 pp 272 274 The Romantic Revival National Jousting Association Retrieved 2023 07 21 Leeson Whitney A M 2022 A Tournament of Black Knights Alexandria Virginia 1865 Emancipationist Mobilize the Medieval In Fugelso Karl ed Studies in Medievalism XXXI Politics and Medievalism Studies III Cambridge England D S Brewer pp 108 190 114 116 ISBN 978 1 84384 625 3 via Google Books External links editLauren S Hanson amp Carmen Harris Tilting Toward Freedom African American Ring Tournaments in a Postbellum South Postbellum South USCUSRJ 14 2021 pp 9 20 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Running at the ring amp oldid 1216333944, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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