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To those who have gone before us...
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In Loving Memory
Dean Hallford
Talanque, Baron Calafia
May 4, 1940 - January 17, 2003

Talanque was the founding baron of Calafia and sat the
throne for 22 years,
the longest reign in Caid.
Talanque
AZ, a horned demon's head erased Or

Grant of Arms January 1, 1972 from the Kingdom of the
West
Leaf of Merit June, 1974 from the kingdom of the West
Former Landed Baron May 1. 1971 from the kingdom of the West
{Founding Baron, Calafia - May 1, 1971 through May 29 1993
Court Baron May 5, 1993 {Founding Baron, Calafia}
Dolphin September 4. 1993
Golden Trident November 6, 1993
[Calafian service award]
....and now another star in the Heavens.
Let's go look for it tonight.
Sheridan

Talanque Entertained - 1982
submitted by
Lord Daveed of Granada
Serpent's Father
Rest well and easy oh Serpent's Father,
For you shall be remembered always.
With words and songs your life shall be honoured,
With poem and music, we mourn your passing.
You were a guide to honour and courtesy,
And led by example we your children.
You taught us to respect and chivalry,
And in each of us, you kindled that spark.
You founded a legacy, one that has grown,
And that we the serpent's children has kept.
And the teaching light that shone in your eyes,
Shines now in our hearts and souls.
So rest well and easy, oh Serpent's Father,
Though our hearts ache with your loss.
Greet your friends that have went before,
And be remembered in our words and songs.
For Baron Talanque.
For whom, there shall be remembrance.
1/17/03, (Jan. 17th, AS 36)
- Lord Padraig o Connell
Reflections from Baron Talanque
By Dean Hallford, ©1995
Calafia’s beginnings were a direct result of a young gentleman’s
quest for the Truth of the Universe as embodied in the pursuit of physics
at San Diego State University. A certain young would-be physicist named
Jeff Rogers had come to SDSU to study physics. Before he came to San Diego,
he was involved with the seminal events of the formation of the Society
for Creative Anachronism in the San Francisco Bay area. Almost immediately
upon his arrival in San Diego, Rogers began to seek out fellow medievalists.
In the first few weeks he ran into David Samson, a fellow student, and
they immediately realized a common interest in medieval recreations and
studies.
A fast friendship formed between them and they had a strong
desire to share their new-found mutual interest, medievalism. Rogers,
also known as “Geoffrey of the Broken Blade,” and Samson,
who first took the name “David Farwanderer” and later came
to be known as “David du Lac,” began constructing costumes
and making armor. Then, wearing them about campus they began encouraging
interest in their new, unusual pursuit, the SCA. Many asked questions
and a few went further. Little did they know that for most of them it
would end up to be a life-long pursuit that would monopolize no small
part of their non-professional lives and (in some cases) their professional
lives as well.
During this initial campaign to enlist new recruits, Rogers attended a
class being taught by myself in fast neutron activation analysis. During
the lecture I repeatedly noticed a student working with a set of pliers
and some odd-looking rings. As the lecture went on I saw that he was literally
knitting a fabric of rings in a pattern that I immediately recognized
as mail.
As I tried to keep to my lecture I kept noticing his progressing
work. I was in part irritated with the lack of attention he was giving
my well-prepared presentation. After all, it was a work of love and consummate
skill that I had prepared and he couldn’t even do me the courtesy
of taking notes. I later found that Rogers did this a lot because he had
a near-photographic memory and rarely took notes!
At the end of the class, while I was packing away my notes and slides
I looked up to see Rogers packing up his mail-knitting gear and again
was fascinated with his patch of mail he had managed to make during my
lecture. I finally was overcome with a mixture of curiosity and pique
and was damned well going to have my say on both subjects.
I leaned over and asked him what he was doing. He looked up in his usual
laconic manner and said, “I’m making mail.”
As I packed away the rest of my notes and his words slowly soaked into
my conscious awareness, I blurted out, “Making mail for what?”
He quickly answered, “To fight in.” He immediately saw the
glint of impending mutual madness in my eye and whipped out some copies
of Tournaments Illuminated (now ancient relics) printed on low-grade by
mimeograph. I thumbed through them, all the while firing a series of questions
and being rewarded, sometimes I now think damned, by answers that delighted
and tickled the less-sane part of my personality. I realized at once that
all of the Errol Flynn movies had had their subliminal effect. I was hooked!
In the next few weeks I was introduced to Samson and spent many delightful
hours with the two sharing mutual madness and delightful fantasies about
a world we would never really know, but could surely rebuild in all of
its splendor, honor and gusto for a life of nobility and grace that seemed
so distant from that of today. Rogers informed us, as well as a few others,
that the incipient Barony of Angels was holding its first tournament in
the Los Angeles area and we all should go. Besides, Lady Diana Listmaker
would be there and she could tell us all about what was needed for forming
a group in San Diego.
On a bright and sunny Southern California day a few hardy and brave souls,
including Rogers, Samson, a friend named Bonnie and I, attended the Barony
of Angels’ inaugural tourney. It was truly delightful. There were
pavilions, costumed ladies and gentlemen of all types, combat and a great
feast after the day’s activities. Furthermore, I was introduced
to Diana Listmaker, and she was most gracious and helpful. As serendipity
would have it, she had brought a package of material for another group
that wished to get started in the SCA. They had failed to show. Lady Diana
handed me the packet at the end of the day and said, “Here, this
is what you need to get started.”
Little did I suspect that this would be the beginning of the finest Barony
in the Known World: Calafia. Little did I suspect that this Barony and
its people would become a large part of my life for many years to come
— a large and good part that has been rewarding and enjoyable in
more ways that I can possibly ever express.
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