The Sealed Knot (reenactment)
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The Sealed Knot is a British historical association dedicated to costumed reenactment of battles and events surrounding the English Civil War. It takes its name from the original Sealed Knot, a secret association aimed at the restoration of the monarchy, although the modern incarnation states that it has none of the political affiliations of its namesake. Apart from reenactment, it is also involved in research into the history of the Civil War, and education (at the school or college level) about the same.
The Sealed Knot is a registered charity, and has its own coat-of-arms. It is the largest re-enactment society in Europe and was formed by the late Brigadier Peter Young, a respected military historian and World War II veteran, and a small group of friends on 28 February 1968 following the publication of "Edgehill 1642 - the Campaign and the Battle". Within a few months it had 200 members and today has a membership of several thousand.
With its large membership and high profile the Sealed Knot is the largest, most well known of all the many re-enactment and historical groups and societies in the UK.[1] The battles it stages are on a scale that cannot be matched by any other organisation.