Difference between revisions of "Stranggore"

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(Personality - Regal )
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[[Category:Stranggore]]
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Stranggore is a very old covenant that has sunk into stagnation and decay. It has a proud and regal heritage and was once one of the pre-eminent covenants of the [[Stonehenge Tribunal]], but has now fallen into the senility and decrepitude of Winter.
  
= Barrestow Keep (888- present) =
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It has [[Stranggore History|roots]] that go back to ancient times, before the Order of Hermes arrived in the British Isles. In the early days it was sworn to the service of a royal court. The covenant still has symbols and customs that acknowledge that heritage. Some of these are subtle -- for example, the head wizard of the covenant is called the Chancellor -- and others are overt, like the grogs' green-on-gold livery or the carved wooden throne that stands empty in the council chamber, a reminder of its ancient (and, officially, forsaken) royal allegiance.
  
The current location of the covenant is Barrestow Keep (now spelled "Barstow" by mundanes). It is an ancient hill fort located in the real-world location of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maesbury_Castle Maesbury Castle].
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The official name of the covenant is "the Wizards' Council of Stranggore."
  
Within the keep, there is a compound made up of a central tower surrounded by four smaller buildings in varying states of disrepair. The tower itself was created through ''Conjuring the Mystic Tower'' two decades after the Wizards' Council's arrival in the area by (TBD).
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The covenant has a certain nostalgia for the ancient Britons, though by now the Britons in England are only a legend, even among wizards. (The remaining descendants of the ancient Britons in 1220 are the Welsh.) Certainly the covenant pays no homage to the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Plantagenet#Rise_of_Henry_II_and_his_sons heirs] of that upstart Norman usurper [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_the_Conqueror William the Bastard].
  
Tower appearance:
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== Location and Surroundings ==
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Stranggore is located in Somerset, England on the historical site of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maesbury_Castle Maesbury Castle], along the ancient Roman road known as the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fosse_Way Fosse Way]. It is near several interesting magical sites, including [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glastonbury_tor Glastonbury Tor] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wookey_Hole_Caves Wookey Hole Caves].
  
As per the spell, Stranggore's main tower is a monolithic structure carved out of solid rock.  It is 80 feet high, 30 feet wide, and its foundation reaches 20 feet into the ground.
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Our [http://goo.gl/maps/IXIz Google map] shows the location of the covenant, sites of mystical interest, and the other covenants of the [[Stonehenge Tribunal]]. Andrew G also found a [http://alcuinofyork.files.wordpress.com/2012/03/medieval-england-map.jpg National Geographic map of Medieval England] online (almost certainly in violation of copyright laws) that shows towns and roads from a later period.
  
=== Sub-Basement ===
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As far as I can tell (from a cursory browsing of Wikipedia), Somerset is divided into about 700 fiefs, not under control of a single noble. Presumably they are a mix of royal fiefs, ecclesiastical fiefs (controlled by the [[Bishop of Salisbury]] and/or the [[Bishop of Wells]]), and local barons. Some of these fiefs no doubt are held by great nobles of the realm. The royal fiefs are each maintained by a constable; manors would be maintained by a bailiff.
The sub-basement contains the vis stores of the Covenant. It is accessible through an enchanted trap door in the basement floor; only magi who are members of Stranggore can enter.
 
  
=== Basement ===
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=== Neighbors ===
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The [http://domesdaymap.co.uk/ Domesday Book online] maps the villages of medieval England. The nearest settlement to Stranggore is the fictional hamlet of [[Barstow]]. The nearest historical settlements are [[Shepton Mallet]], Charlton, and Doulting. The nearest city is Wells.
  
Wine cellar and larder.
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* Village of [[Barstow]]
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* [[Mericas]] the hedge wizard
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* The covenant of [[Aquae Sulis]]
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* The [[Bishop of Wells]]
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* [[Godwyn's Chase]]
  
=== Level 1 ===
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== Road ==
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Stranggore has is about a quarter mile northwest of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fosse_Way Fosse Way], so travelers occasionally mistake its towers for those of an abbey and stop by.
  
Council chamber.
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== Residents ==
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Several of the grogs live in the nearby village of [[Barstow]]. This section includes only characters who live at the covenant. See [[:Category:Stranggore Grogs]] and [[:Category:Stranggore Covenfolk]] for a full list of the guards and servants, respectively.
  
=== Level 2 ===
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{|class="wikitable"
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!Magi!!Companions!!Grogs!!Covenfolk
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|-
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|[[Argus]]<br/>[[Caballus]]<br/>[[Godwyn]]<br/>[[Hywel Mawr]]<br/>[[Sandre Paen]]<br/>[[Merewen]]
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||[[Agnes]]<br/>[[Paul]]<br/>[[Randolph]]<br/>[[William Robert]]
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||[[Bloody Bill]]<br/>[[George the Bastard]]<br/>[[Joan of Barstow]]<br/>[[Joseph]]<br/>[[Junior]]<br/>[[Rhys]]
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||[[Bertha]] the cook<br/>[[Brian the Mad]]<br/>[[Catherine]] the chambermaid<br/>the [[Ghosts of Stranggore]]<br/>[[Marie LaMont]], Sandre's wife<br/>[[Valera]] the scholar
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|}
  
The council chamber is two stories high, with a mezzanine at the second-story level. At one point the mezzanine widens into a railed platform where musicians or additional guards can be placed, depending on the occasion.
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== Physical Structure ==
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The covenant stands in the ruin of an ancient ring fort, of which only the ditch and rampart remain. The gateway into the ring fort has been improved with a wooden gate.
  
=== Level 3 ===
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Within the rampart is a large, open yard. At one end stands a two-story stone manor house with four square, three-story towers. Although the covenant stands on a hilltop, the towers extend high enough above the rampart to be clearly visible. The upper tower windows have a grand view of the countryside.
  
Library and scriptorium.
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[[File:Stranggore_Exterior.png|400px]]
  
=== Level 4 ===
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Also inside the compound are a number of outbuildings:
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* A stable with attached kennel
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* [[Junior]]'s cottage
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* [[George the Bastard]]'s cottage
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* [[Bloody Bill]]'s cottage
  
Formerly an unoccupied sanctum, now a cluttered storeroom full of disused furniture, rusted coats of mail, moth-eaten cushions and tapestries, and the like.
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See [[Stranggore manor]] for floorplans and details of the manor house.
  
=== Level 5 ===
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== Covenant Resources ==
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The covenant is designed with 1250 points of resources, which puts it at the high end of the "medium" power scale. Our objective is to give the player magi enough resources that they can develop and pursue their own agendas, but not so many that they can get everything they need without leaving the covenant walls.
  
Sanctum, owned by [[Ozerk]].
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=== Magical Resources ===
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The covenant owns a number of [[Stranggore Enchantments|enchanted items]] including some [[Armament of Stranggore|arms and armor]].
  
=== Level 6 ===
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The covenant's [[Stranggore Vis Sources|vis sources]] are but a remnant of what it once claimed.
  
Sanctum, currently occupied by [[Merewen]] and her apprentice.
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The [[Stranggore Library|library]] and collection of [[Stranggore Grimoire|lab texts]] are pretty good, though quite a few valuable books and lab text were lost when the library was allowed to decay in the early twelfth century.
  
=== Level 7 ===
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=== Lands and Chattels ===
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{{Main|Stranggore Mundane Resources}}
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The covenant is the feudal lord of the village of [[Barstow]] and owns the serfs of that village. It owns some of the surrounding lands, including the stretch of forest now known as [[Godwyn's Chase]], but its mundane holdings have been greatly eroded by the covenant's decades of failure to resist encroachment by its mundane neighbors.
  
Sanctum, currently occupied by [[Argus]].
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Stranggore now does own some livestock: several horses fit for riding in battle, some hunting dogs, and a flock of sheep.
  
=== Level 8 ===
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== Traditions ==
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Unlike most covenants, Stranggore has no formal charter. All members swear the [[Oath of Stranggore]] and renew that oath each Winter.
  
Observatory. This is currently used by Argus, who seems to consider it a ''de facto'' part of his sanctum.
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== Laws ==
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As the lords of Stranggore manor, the magi have the right to make laws. They cannot mete out penalties of life and limb: that is reserved for royal justice.
  
=== Attic ===
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;Protection of Ravens
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:No man may kill a raven. This is one of Stranggore's most ancient laws. Wizards of Stranggore could shapechange into ravens or kept them as familiars, so they barred the peasants from hunting such birds. The penalty for killing a raven is to be cursed by the wizards.
  
Rookery. There is also a doorway out to the parapet of the tower.
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== Festivals ==
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The grogs have long celebrated St. George's Day (April 23) with a feast and entertainments.
  
= Past Locations =
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Since 1194, [[Hywel]] of Stranggore has hosted an annual [[Imbolc Feast]] each Winter.
  
The covenant of Stranggore has moved twice since it was first formed as an assembly of court wizards.
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== Boons and Hooks ==
  
== Winchester Castle from c. 600-888 ==
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=== Hooks ===
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Hooks are more interesting than Boons, so we list them first.
  
After Stranggore as a kingdom ceased to exist, the wizards migrated (some would say they fled) to the site of what is now (in the late twelfth century) Winchester Castle. They preserved the claim that they were stewards of the Kingdom of Stranggore.
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; Flickering Aura
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: The magi of Stranggore must perform occasional mystical ceremonies in order to maintain the Magical aura. Sometimes these ceremonies require odd ingredients, involve obscure prophecies, or are otherwise interesting.
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; Protector
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: The covenant is the mundane landlord of the village of [[Barstow]] and some surrounding hamlets. This provides income in the form of rent but also creates an obligation to protect the village.
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; Rights and Customs
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: The grogs and covenfolk have traditional rights and customs that go back to ancient days. They expect lots of holidays and two annual feasts. From time to time, this means the grogs may be unavailable for service or the magi may need to perform errands on their servants' behalf!
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; Rival (x2)
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: Stranggore's [[Blackthorn Arc|rivalry with Blackthorn]] is a major theme of the Saga, but Blackthorn does not seem committed to Stranggore's destruction, so the Hook counts as Minor. (Blackthorn was formerly an Unknown Hook that has now been revealed) The [[Crimson Brotherhood]] is also a rival of Stranggore, but weak enough that it also counts as Minor.
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; Road (minor)
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: The covenant is located along the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fosse_Way Fosse Way], one of the mystical ancient roads of Britain. We chose this as a Minor Hook because we don't want it to dominate the Saga. It will definitely create some stories, though.
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; Superiors (minor)
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: The elder magi of the covenant feel entitled to send the junior magi on missions. Technically, the junior magi have the right to decline these requests.
  
When the wizards of the British Isles were offered the opportunity to join the Order of Hermes, the Wizards' Council of Stranggore resisted. They were reluctant to renounce their allegiance to the ancient throne. Eventually they were persuaded to swear the Code of Hermes, but only by threat of violence. As a condition for their acceptance into the Order, the wizards were compelled to relocate. They secretly brought the ancient throne with them when they moved.
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=== Boons ===
 
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; Autocephalous (Major)
== Keepers of the Heirs of Stranggore Lords of Wessex ==
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: The magi's predecessors negotiated the independence of Stranggore with William the Conqueror himself. The royal charter was found in 1200 in the middle of a pile of old receipts for salted herring.
 
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;Aura
Shortly after the fall of Camelot and the dissolution of Arthur's Britain, the Wizards' Council was founded by the newly-independent petty king of Stranggore.  Stranggore was sooner or later absorbed into Wessex.
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: The Magical aura for the covenant and its living area used to be +4, but it flickers.
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; Informants
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: The villagers of [[Barstow]] report interesting happenings to the covenant. [[Merewen]] also has other descendants scattered about the shire who can occasionally feed information, and of course [[Argus]] (or more accurately, his familiar, [[Cedric]]) is a significant source of information in his own right.
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; Loyal Covenfolk
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: Largely because of their rights and customs, the covenfolk and grogs are especially loyal.
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; Hidden Resources
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: There is probably all kinds of useful stuff in the hoard of [[Brian the Mad]], the disused laboratories, and the sancta of the senior magi. We've uncovered about half of them so far.

Latest revision as of 12:15, 12 August 2013

Stranggore is a very old covenant that has sunk into stagnation and decay. It has a proud and regal heritage and was once one of the pre-eminent covenants of the Stonehenge Tribunal, but has now fallen into the senility and decrepitude of Winter.

It has roots that go back to ancient times, before the Order of Hermes arrived in the British Isles. In the early days it was sworn to the service of a royal court. The covenant still has symbols and customs that acknowledge that heritage. Some of these are subtle -- for example, the head wizard of the covenant is called the Chancellor -- and others are overt, like the grogs' green-on-gold livery or the carved wooden throne that stands empty in the council chamber, a reminder of its ancient (and, officially, forsaken) royal allegiance.

The official name of the covenant is "the Wizards' Council of Stranggore."

The covenant has a certain nostalgia for the ancient Britons, though by now the Britons in England are only a legend, even among wizards. (The remaining descendants of the ancient Britons in 1220 are the Welsh.) Certainly the covenant pays no homage to the heirs of that upstart Norman usurper William the Bastard.

Location and Surroundings

Stranggore is located in Somerset, England on the historical site of Maesbury Castle, along the ancient Roman road known as the Fosse Way. It is near several interesting magical sites, including Glastonbury Tor and Wookey Hole Caves.

Our Google map shows the location of the covenant, sites of mystical interest, and the other covenants of the Stonehenge Tribunal. Andrew G also found a National Geographic map of Medieval England online (almost certainly in violation of copyright laws) that shows towns and roads from a later period.

As far as I can tell (from a cursory browsing of Wikipedia), Somerset is divided into about 700 fiefs, not under control of a single noble. Presumably they are a mix of royal fiefs, ecclesiastical fiefs (controlled by the Bishop of Salisbury and/or the Bishop of Wells), and local barons. Some of these fiefs no doubt are held by great nobles of the realm. The royal fiefs are each maintained by a constable; manors would be maintained by a bailiff.

Neighbors

The Domesday Book online maps the villages of medieval England. The nearest settlement to Stranggore is the fictional hamlet of Barstow. The nearest historical settlements are Shepton Mallet, Charlton, and Doulting. The nearest city is Wells.

Road

Stranggore has is about a quarter mile northwest of the Fosse Way, so travelers occasionally mistake its towers for those of an abbey and stop by.

Residents

Several of the grogs live in the nearby village of Barstow. This section includes only characters who live at the covenant. See Category:Stranggore Grogs and Category:Stranggore Covenfolk for a full list of the guards and servants, respectively.

Magi Companions Grogs Covenfolk
Argus
Caballus
Godwyn
Hywel Mawr
Sandre Paen
Merewen
Agnes
Paul
Randolph
William Robert
Bloody Bill
George the Bastard
Joan of Barstow
Joseph
Junior
Rhys
Bertha the cook
Brian the Mad
Catherine the chambermaid
the Ghosts of Stranggore
Marie LaMont, Sandre's wife
Valera the scholar

Physical Structure

The covenant stands in the ruin of an ancient ring fort, of which only the ditch and rampart remain. The gateway into the ring fort has been improved with a wooden gate.

Within the rampart is a large, open yard. At one end stands a two-story stone manor house with four square, three-story towers. Although the covenant stands on a hilltop, the towers extend high enough above the rampart to be clearly visible. The upper tower windows have a grand view of the countryside.

Stranggore Exterior.png

Also inside the compound are a number of outbuildings:

See Stranggore manor for floorplans and details of the manor house.

Covenant Resources

The covenant is designed with 1250 points of resources, which puts it at the high end of the "medium" power scale. Our objective is to give the player magi enough resources that they can develop and pursue their own agendas, but not so many that they can get everything they need without leaving the covenant walls.

Magical Resources

The covenant owns a number of enchanted items including some arms and armor.

The covenant's vis sources are but a remnant of what it once claimed.

The library and collection of lab texts are pretty good, though quite a few valuable books and lab text were lost when the library was allowed to decay in the early twelfth century.

Lands and Chattels

The covenant is the feudal lord of the village of Barstow and owns the serfs of that village. It owns some of the surrounding lands, including the stretch of forest now known as Godwyn's Chase, but its mundane holdings have been greatly eroded by the covenant's decades of failure to resist encroachment by its mundane neighbors.

Stranggore now does own some livestock: several horses fit for riding in battle, some hunting dogs, and a flock of sheep.

Traditions

Unlike most covenants, Stranggore has no formal charter. All members swear the Oath of Stranggore and renew that oath each Winter.

Laws

As the lords of Stranggore manor, the magi have the right to make laws. They cannot mete out penalties of life and limb: that is reserved for royal justice.

Protection of Ravens
No man may kill a raven. This is one of Stranggore's most ancient laws. Wizards of Stranggore could shapechange into ravens or kept them as familiars, so they barred the peasants from hunting such birds. The penalty for killing a raven is to be cursed by the wizards.

Festivals

The grogs have long celebrated St. George's Day (April 23) with a feast and entertainments.

Since 1194, Hywel of Stranggore has hosted an annual Imbolc Feast each Winter.

Boons and Hooks

Hooks

Hooks are more interesting than Boons, so we list them first.

Flickering Aura
The magi of Stranggore must perform occasional mystical ceremonies in order to maintain the Magical aura. Sometimes these ceremonies require odd ingredients, involve obscure prophecies, or are otherwise interesting.
Protector
The covenant is the mundane landlord of the village of Barstow and some surrounding hamlets. This provides income in the form of rent but also creates an obligation to protect the village.
Rights and Customs
The grogs and covenfolk have traditional rights and customs that go back to ancient days. They expect lots of holidays and two annual feasts. From time to time, this means the grogs may be unavailable for service or the magi may need to perform errands on their servants' behalf!
Rival (x2)
Stranggore's rivalry with Blackthorn is a major theme of the Saga, but Blackthorn does not seem committed to Stranggore's destruction, so the Hook counts as Minor. (Blackthorn was formerly an Unknown Hook that has now been revealed) The Crimson Brotherhood is also a rival of Stranggore, but weak enough that it also counts as Minor.
Road (minor)
The covenant is located along the Fosse Way, one of the mystical ancient roads of Britain. We chose this as a Minor Hook because we don't want it to dominate the Saga. It will definitely create some stories, though.
Superiors (minor)
The elder magi of the covenant feel entitled to send the junior magi on missions. Technically, the junior magi have the right to decline these requests.

Boons

Autocephalous (Major)
The magi's predecessors negotiated the independence of Stranggore with William the Conqueror himself. The royal charter was found in 1200 in the middle of a pile of old receipts for salted herring.
Aura
The Magical aura for the covenant and its living area used to be +4, but it flickers.
Informants
The villagers of Barstow report interesting happenings to the covenant. Merewen also has other descendants scattered about the shire who can occasionally feed information, and of course Argus (or more accurately, his familiar, Cedric) is a significant source of information in his own right.
Loyal Covenfolk
Largely because of their rights and customs, the covenfolk and grogs are especially loyal.
Hidden Resources
There is probably all kinds of useful stuff in the hoard of Brian the Mad, the disused laboratories, and the sancta of the senior magi. We've uncovered about half of them so far.