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Reading the Ice and Fire books, I keep on coming across the term Hedge Knight (and, also, the apparently pejorative, Hedge Wizard).

What specifically does the prefix Hedge refer to?

Edlothiad
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johnc
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8 Answers8

37

A Hedge Knight is an individual who has been dubbed as a knight, but does not owe his allegiance to any master. I guess Hedge Wizard is about the same.

George R. R. Martin actually uses the term The Hedge Knight for the title of one of his short stories.

Update:

I'm not too up on medieval history, but the idea of a roving knight doesn't crop up too much from what I remember - so I think it is something in-world. I certainly haven't seen Hedge Knight used outside of Martin's works.

HorusKol
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  • Thanks, that does ring true now you mention it. Is it simply an in world concept, or lifted from reality? – johnc Apr 21 '11 at 03:48
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    @HorusKol It does crop up in medieval literature; such roving knights were usually referred to as knights errant. Sir Gawaine appears in some stories as one such. – Uticensis Apr 21 '11 at 07:35
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    Wouldn't this also be equivalent to the Japanese ronin? –  Apr 21 '11 at 09:15
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    @Billare: It's not quite the same as a knight errant. A knight errant is a knight on a mission, trying to prove himself or in search of completing some quest, but they often had a master or lord that they served. Hedge knights served no one but themselves and went about in search of money. They were little better than mercenaries and were often much more like bandits than anything else. Being a knight errant was an honor, while being termed a hedge knight was considered an insult. – BBlake Apr 21 '11 at 12:24
  • Also, remember Don Quixote. – apoorv020 Apr 21 '11 at 12:25
  • @BBlake No, I don't think that's entirely correct. You're right that knights-errant were later romanticized into gallant heroes who went on quests to win fair lasses, in literature, but when the term was first coined, knights-errant were something to be feared indeed. – Uticensis Apr 21 '11 at 12:33
  • @BBlake (cont'd) For example, William Marshal, THE Marshal, who served 4 kings and was lord to many knights himself, earned his a way to the top as a knight-errant jousting at brutal tournaments. Tournaments weren't just light-hearted fun and game either; no, they were hotspots of knight hooliganism that lead the Church and monarchy to repeatedly try ban them till they succeeded in the 14th century. – Uticensis Apr 21 '11 at 12:37
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    @Mark Trapp: A ronin is an outcast. That makes it slightly different from hedge knight and quite different from knight errant. – markus Apr 21 '11 at 12:38
  • Knights are not ordained. Dubbed, elevated, created, but not ordained. – aramis Apr 23 '11 at 16:44
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    @BBlake BTW, do you have a source for this? "Being a knight errant was an honor, while being termed a hedge knight was considered an insult." – Uticensis Apr 28 '11 at 13:20
  • I suspect the author was asked this question a lot, since he actually defines it in (I think) Book 5. – Kaz Dragon Nov 28 '11 at 12:11
  • I can't source it readily (I was part of a Medieval Group for years, don't remember where I know this from), but the term Hedge Knight comes from most knights being 'Sir Blank of SOMEWHERE'; SOMEWHERE being their home/source of support/funding/etc. Hedge Knights had no such; their home was wherever they lay down for the knight -- often under a hedge for shelter. It was sometimes used derisively; 'Sir Gallant, of the Hedge up on the Hill overlooking the lake.' And not all were banditish; some felt it a duty much like a priest taking a vow of poverty, often if their home had been destroyed. – K-H-W Sep 19 '13 at 00:43
  • Really have to ask @KHW, "lay down for the knight" was that intentional? :-) – Mac Cooper Mar 05 '14 at 22:58
  • @MacCooper - Nope; it was an accidental pun, that I didn't notice until it was too late to edit :) – K-H-W Mar 06 '14 at 00:26
  • @user366 - markus has it quite right. Samurai are duty-bound to kill themselves when their masters are killed, so a master-less samurai, a ronin, would be considered to be someone quite without honor. – PoloHoleSet Apr 12 '17 at 20:29
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It's a real term that Martin is using for his world. "Hedge" refers to knights with no masters sleeping outdoors under hedgerows, because they can't afford anything else.

Mike Scott
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12

In general, "Hedge Wizard" refers to either a peasant wizard or a dispossessed apprentice of a wizard who has come to function on his own. In many fantasy settings, it refers to a wizard who is neither a member of the wizard's guild, nor possessed of a license to practice.

A hedge knight is a person, who having been dubbed a knight (elevated to knighthood), but not then sworn to the knighting lord, nor to any of his vassals. The term is reputed to refer to sleeping in the hedges, but as often as not, those hedges marked the boundaries of particular fields or orchards, and could just as easily apply to one camped just beyond, or even living in the peasant villages who worked those fields.

In either case, the term is derogatory in most contexts, as the implication of living in/under the hedges puts one as poorer than a peasant, as even the poorest peasants had a place to build a hut.

aramis
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7

What is a Hedge Knight?

A Hedge Knight is a Knight who does not have service with any Lord and does not posses land himself from a Lord.

Why are they called "Hedge Knights"?

In Chapter 71 of ADWD, Daenerys recalls following:

Viserys told her tales of knights so poor that they had to sleep beneath the ancient hedges that grew along the byways of the Seven Kingdoms. Dany would have given much and more for a nice thick hedge. Preferably one without an anthill.

As they have no lands or service with a landed Aristocrat, they do not have any housing facility. Therefore they have to roam the seven Kingdoms in search of service (whether permanent or temporary). Because they have no liege lord to pay them and chances of finding temporary services are not very high, these knights are usually low on money and can't afford to live in inns.

So where do they sleep? Outdoors! Specifically, under hedges. Contrary to the apparent impression, Hedges in Westeros are actually very good places to sleep. The older the hedge is, the better it is.

Is the word "Hedge" pejorative?

In our world, the prefix "Hedge" would roughly translate to Hobo which most certainly is pejorative. It implies that the said person is landless, jobless, homeless and poor.

So what is Hedge Wizard then?

Unlike Knighthood, Wizardry is not an established institute in Westeros. Cynical people would mock men claiming to be wizards as frauds while gullible people would believe their claims. If someone is a Hedge Wizard, that means he is also landless, serviceless, poor and homeless, while maintaining that he is a wizard.

TheLethalCarrot
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Aegon
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6

Martin often makes slight alterations to historic terminology to make his world unique from ours, for example using "Banner" to refer to a Knight Banneret. The historic "hedge knight" was never referred as such, but, rather, as condottiere (Italian) or compagnies grandes (French). Sir Walter Scott eventually gave them the English name "Freelance" in Ivanhoe. It refers to a knight who is not committed to any particular liege, and is thus free to offer (and often sell) his services.

Martin splits them into two categories; those ennobled and those not ennobled. The former is a hedge knight, while the latter is a free rider.

Hedge wizard, as I've always known it, refers to a self-taught wizard, as opposed to one who apprenticed under another wizard.

AJ Dembroski
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5

A good parallel in real life history would be the distinction between a Samurai and a Ronin in Fuedal Japan. One pledges fealty to a feudal lord and the other has no master.

Omar Kooheji
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A knight in Martin's works refers to a person annointed in the 7 oils, stands vigil in a sept, and takes the knight's vows. The baseborn (concieved out of wedlock) cannot become knights. A hedge knight is the lowest rung on the knightly totem pole, so to speak. They differ from landed knights in that they hold no lands and swear fealty to no lord. However, they may become sworn swords if, during some campaign, a lord wishes to increase his numbers and accepts the hedge knight's oath. After serving as a sworn sword, the knight generally adopts the lifestyle of a hedge knight again.

It would be misleading to think of hedge knights as being similar to ronin. There are some superficial similarities (the gentry hold them in ill regard, and they use their martial prowess to make money), but the best way to gain insight into the meaning of "hedge knight" is to learn about knights, not by comparing them to ronin. I won't go into detail, as your question doesn't concern ronin, but a little research into ronin warriors will give you the info you need to make the distinction yourself.

Brian
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Think of it this way: It's similar to a Japanese samurai ronin. A hedge knight is essentially a roaming sellsword (they all love to call themselves "Ser So-and-so"), but in Martin's works the lack of common Rule of Law and the depressing lack of honor make the vast majority of hedge knights seem to be only barely above the level of brigands.

CJM
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