Suppose that a witch is a female wizard, an Amazon is a female fighter, a nun is a female monk and a bandrui is a female druid.
What would be a female barbarian, bard, cleric, paladin, ranger or rogue?
Suppose that a witch is a female wizard, an Amazon is a female fighter, a nun is a female monk and a bandrui is a female druid.
What would be a female barbarian, bard, cleric, paladin, ranger or rogue?
shieldmaiden, dancer, priestess, valkyrie, guide, wench
A dancer is not a female bard, it's a different profession.
It's entertainment and it makes use of womanly charm. It fits.
Female rogue coming for ya semen then?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but female bards didn't exist. Dancer has, naturally, always been a unisex profession.
Female bards historically existing or not existing is completely beside the point. Dancer, in most western cultures, is a traditionally female role.
>barbarian
An amazon, a female fighter is a shield-maiden.
>bard
Dancer.
>cleric
Sister.
>paladin
Lady-Knight.
>ranger
Tomboy.
>rogue
bawd.
Agree with this anon except
>Bard
would be a Courtesan. They were trained in all the same skills as a male bard, singing, poetry, dancing, charming, entertainment and sex.
>Ranger
Woodwife
>Rogue
Femme fatale in modern parlance, hard to think of one in a medieval context except Prostitute, since street trollops were trained in thieving, skulking, robbery and other rogue skills with the exception of wall-climbing. Maybe Assassin?
Oh yes, courtesan is great.
>Woodwife
Tfw no woodwife
Trollop is a great name for a class.
Now I want a party consisting of witch, valkyrie, lady-knight, bandrui, priestess, amazon and a bawd. It could be like magnificent seven, except with female cast.
Can I dual-class tomboy/bawd?
>rogue
>bawd.
Why? Wouldn't rouge be a gender neutral class? Since it's pretty much a thief or assassin or criminal.
everyone knows a female rogue is known as a rouge
Boring.
Female barbarian is Barbie.
Considering her notorious multi-classing, Barbie clearly is a Gish.
Barbie as she was shown in the movie is a bard. Inspiring is what she does.
And Ken was a geological formation.
>a bandrui is a female druid
Tell us more.
I don't know what to tell you, man, bandrui is a word for female druids (translates literally as "priest wife"). Druid was a unisex profession, but the word itself is strictly male.
>The word Druid is strictly male
Can I get a source on that?
have a nice day bumpgay
>2 minutes before that post and the one before
>"bumpgay"
Meds.
technically a witch would be a female warlock as Witches gained their power from the Devil.
t. catholic priest
The official stance of the Church was that witchcraft did not exist, and that those who professed to wield it were heretics and frauds, but not sorcerers. Charlemange himself codified this into law after the Council of Paderborn in the late 700s.
And yet people were still condemned to death for the crime of witchcraft until the end of the 18th century.
Curious
It was prots for the most part
You’re wrong. The Catholic South German witch trials which spanned about half a century from the late 16th to early 17th accounts for 1/4 of all European executions for witchcraft. The Calvinist King Frederick William I was the first monarch to disavow witchcraft as an executable offense.
By protestants and puritans. Catholic inquisitorial courts executed heretics, not witches.
>Catholic inquisitorial courts executed heretics, not witches.
The Inquisition could not exectue anybody. The death penalty was completely in the hands of lay courts. Even in Spain, where the inquisition became the king's tool, they still had to hand people off to lay courts to get them convicted and executed.
Heretics accused of sorcery and witchcraft
Is that supposed to be an insult,anon?
Keep in mind that exactly the same accusations were levelled against the wizards.
You people need to touch grass if you think "trollop" or "wench" are acceptable names for a class outside of FATAL.
The proper denomination is Temptress
I'm now hijacking this thread. What's a good term for a soldier or tactician that sounds good as a class name, but isn't a word people are likely to want to use outside of a class description.
To clarify, a soldier is anyone who is employed to fight in army, so it gets awkward if there's also a character class by the same name, that doesn't require you to be employed as an actual soldier.
Operator
Man-at-arms
Veteran, Marshall, Merc or Mercenary, Hero
>barbarian
Shieldmaiden
>bard
Geisha
>cleric
Pythia
>paladin
Valkyrie
>ranger
Jungle girl
>rogue
Moll