reenactor.Net's Online Living History Forums
News: The r.net calendar is live and ready for your events! Why not use it to promote your event? Let everyone know about it -- hey, you might even get some new blood into your time period as our Forum covers all time periods. Hey, give it a try!
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Reenactor Website Development

 
Visit our Friends at
Vist Smoke and Fire News
Smoke and Fire
Newspaper

-- the "première"
reenacting
publication!

Ancient Warfare Magazine bttn (perm)

 
 

This Site was built and
is mananged by
Marsh Wise
(another pages here)

-=GCS=-
(The former Graef Combat System)

A system of rules and points that allows a reenactment to be more realistic through goals and objectives. Yes, it sounds complicated, but in practice, it is NOT! Give it a try!


This site is Gunny Approved

Visit Sparks Autobody!
Hey, the above button is a link for my brother Jim's business -- he does excellent work!
Why am I putting his link here? Well, he DOES have an antique car -- a 1924 Studebaker -- all original! Too cool!
Click the thumbnails below

Jim's 1924 Studebaker!

And my baby brother's new toy... he sure likes Studebakers!

Jim's 1950 Studebaker Champion
Intro Article

Okay Happy Kinder, read this:

Hey you!

What you're seeing here is the beginnings of our new portal system. Eventually, we hope, all of reenactor.Net will be running with this system. Now, before you go and get your knickers all twisted... the Forums are still there. Just click on the nifty little Forum button above (or the bigger, older banner in the article below) and away you'll go.

Do log in and let us know how we're doing, just don't get too spastic until it's all done. Of course, regular, old-fashioned reenactor.Net will still be here, at least until we get the changeover transitioned in. And yes, we will have google ads :-0 Ack! Sorry... at least they will be targeted on our fine reenacting content (as soon as we add the keywords), not some mortgage bandit or dating site.

This whole thing is for you, the reenactors and we know that without YOU it'll all be for naught. So please, visit, read, share your reenacting and living history photos with all of us.

Remember, our hobby is one of participation!

Welcome to reenactor.Net - Online Home of Reenacting

link to the reenactor.Net Forums! THE place for talk about reenacting and Living History.

Roma invicta! A Roman soldier of Legio IX Hispana, a Roman living history groupYou've found reenactor.Net -- the world-wide, on-line home of historical reenacting!

Historical reenacting is a great hobby!! And here on reenactor.Net, you will find information about historical reenacting all around the world. Now, you're probably thinking "You mean like the Civil War stuff?" Well, sort of... ANY time period you can think of is reenacted today and we cover them all! So look through the site and maybe you'll find something that interests you enough to get into it. The links are broken down into what we call "Time/Areas" or simply "T/A's." Each of the T/A's are run by an Assistant Webmaster who is active in that period and holds a great love for it.

Not only will you find links to individual unit websites, but also those of overall "parent" organizations. Eventually, each T/A will include a reading list and overall links to other sites which pertain to that period of time.

Through the kind help of our friends, reenactor .Net has stayed up and will be able to continue the stuff we do ;-) To all who have helped out, THANK YOU!!! If you'd like to donate to reenactor.Net, we appreciate your help!.

Last, please, visit the reenactor.Net honor wall... this is a page that lists those who have donated money to help keep "the lights on" here on r.Net. If you would like to help out and donate, please use this button:

Google
Web www.reenactor.net

What is "Reenacting?"

Napoleonic life"Reenacting" or "living history" is a hobby where the participants try to portray people of the past. Some people just have a hard time conceiving of this, they ask "DO they pay you?" NO! "How do you know who wins or who dies?" Some battles are scripted out as to the end, some are called "tacticals" and may have judges or rules as to what happens. Some events are just "living history" (as they are so called), these usually being set up for the public. Many reenactments aren't even done for the public, but instead for us, the reenactors. WWI and WWII events are usually of this type.

"I still don't get it!" Probably the best explanation I have ever heard was this: Imagine your most favourite movie. Imagine being able to "step into" that movie – that's a lot like reenacting. And no, we don't have a script, or anything like that. Our actions are usually just us trying to live in that time period.

If you like history, you'll probably like reenacting – one thing to remember though, you WILL feel what it was like. This is not like sitting in an arm chair and reading or watching a movie. In reenacting, you will feel the dirt, the sweat, the wool clothing :-0 (yep, wool – surprisingly comfortable!). You'll learn what period shoes felt like. How the gear was carried; what was comfortable and what wasn't. Often you'll get to try period recipes for foods you've never even thought of. The Romans for example, loved to combine tastes that to us, in the modern world would be (and are) considered weird – pancakes with pepper come to mind. However, when you try these foods, you'll find they aren't bad, just different. Often different in a good way (WWI turnip jam was NOT in a good way though ).

So look around, pick something that interests you and jump on in – the water's fine!

banner for reenactor.Net's online living history forums

reenactor.Net's Online Living History Forums

I've wanted to do Forums for awhile now, but it was either too much coding, or I would have to use someone else's system (i.e. ezboard or somethingmeaning we had no control over how it was run) or just whatever . I am happy to say I've found something that set up well and is expandable. There is very little there yet, but there will be soon. And, if you're signed up for one time period, you're a member in them all. This works well if you do more than one time period or are just interested in what's going on in reenacting. It's anice place on the webnot some place for a flame war.

So anyway, the link for the Forums is right above — click it and
sign up. And yeah, YOU yourself need to post too, for there to be stuff there to readreenacting, it ain't just another arm-chair hobby!
Hope you like it... Marsh

P.S. look for more changes at r.Net coming up to make it easier and better for you, the reenactor.


Skirmish! The Living Hisotry Magazine.


 Reenactorbooks.com, THE PLACE to buy your historical references.


NEW: Check out the NEW additions to the site page. We try to post the additions along with the date so you can figure out what's new. (okay, so sometimes (often) we don't get around to updating this page as much as we need to... hope to work on that in the future...)

Events

To help you find upcoming events, we also have a calendar section which is constantly being updated by our visitors and the event organizers.

Meet Our Staff!

Click HERE to go to our Admin Page and meet the Staff.

Movie Work

If you're interested in using reenactors in a production or you're a reenactor thinking about doing movie/film work, read this!

Do you Want to Start Your Own New Unit or
Living History Group?

Then check out this page we have added, written by Matt Amt of LEGIO XX! This article really details what you need to do and how to make the new unit work out right!


REENACTORSTUFF.COM

Get your reenactor.Net toolbar!
toolbar powered by Conduit
historical barbed wire line

Yep! You too, could have your reenactor/historically-related businesses ad here, on reenactor.Net. We have a variety of different combinations to place your banner and text here on reenactor.Net, from a single ad on up to whole ad campaigns to reach your reenactor customers! Click on the banner to check out our pricing.

Historical barbed wire line

Books!

Visit ReenactorBooks.com!Visit ReenactorBooks.com! If you are looking for books, music CD's or videos about any particular time period, please visit reenactor.Net's on-line store. What does this mean? Do we have a store... Can you come in and yell at us ;-Þ nope, it means we are an "Associate" of Amazon.com! Each of our Time/Areas has (or will have--only a one or two don't have a reading list) a Reading list with links to books at Amazon. This is one of the ways you can help keep reenactor.Net going--the pittance we receive from Amazon when you buy a book through us!

Anyway, soon we'll have this all redone again, Amazon has come up w/ a newer, better way to help us build our web bookstore. Sometimes it's hard to find books in a time period we don't do, so... if we don't have something that YOU beleive we should, TELL US! :-) If you have any questions about our On-Line Store, please view its F.A.Q. page.

reenactor.Net's Featured books:

The first, was written by my wife's great aunt and is a good read.

From the forward of Jeanne Spencer's book
(written by: Brian D. O’Neill, Author of
Half A Wing, Three Engines And A Prayer: B17’s Over Germany).

The Journey is 83 year old, first time author, Jeanne Spencer’s extraordinary chronicle of her 57 year marriage to the late Charles Spencer. They married shortly before America’s entry into World War II, which Spencer fought as an 8th Air Force bombardier. Horribly wounded on a mission against Bremen, Germany on November 26, 1943 Spencer was awarded the Nations second highest award for Military valor the Distinguished Service Cross. After spending 2 years undergoing extensive plastic surgery both in England and at a U.S. Army hospital near Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, Lt. Spencer was discharged from military service in 1946.

The Journey tells all this, together with the couple’s remarkable post war story, as they settled in Jeanne’s native Kansas, raised 2 sons, and served God through Chuck’s Vocation as a Baptist minister and Chaplain of the Kansas State Soldiers Home near Dodge City. After Chuck’s death in 1998, Jeanne has continued to live in Dodge City. Where she still plays the organ at the First Baptist church every Sunday, teaches an adult Sunday school class, and makes clothes for the children, of needy families.

Another good one!

A book by a good friend of ours, Dr. Jenny Thompson! All about reenactors... Jenny has been writing this book for many years and has finally finished it.

I got my copy and read it right through. Fun to try and figure out who is who (Jenny changed the names to protect the foolish) Also, I am amused to see myself quoted a few times ;-)

BUY THIS BOOK!


Skirmish, THE Living History Magazine
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