An undated paper from the archives of Strasburg contains a set of rules approved by fencing masters for a fencing tournament. The dating of this document is uncertain but could be established around 1470-71. A complete and unpublished transcription will be supplied and completed with a detailed study of the final set of rules but also the subset which received some modifications. Even if some key points remains obscure, it’s possible to find some comparison between this text and the contemporary knightly tournaments or the German Fechtschulen
Erhardus Henning’s work on Hieb-Fechten is one of only a few 17th century German fencing treatises d...
The Liber de Arte Dimicatoria (Leeds, Royal Armouries FECHT 1, previously and better known as MS I.3...
The manuscript of Joachim Meyer dated 1561 kept in the Bavarian National Museum in Munich, was ignor...
An undated paper from the archives of Strasburg contains a set of rules approved by fencing masters ...
During the nineteenth century, many sources were published about the regulation of fencing in Renais...
This paper aims to trace potential links between the military reform undertaken by King Maximilian ...
Fencing lessons and competitions are an urban phenomenon, documented as early as from the fifteenth ...
This article presents recent research into military fencing in Switzerland, with a focus on manuals ...
In this contribution, we will discuss two German fencing manuscripts - Mscr.Dresd.C.13 (SLUB Dresden...
The Kölner Fechtbuch is a fascinating, unique treatise from the 16th century. Although it is temptin...
Multiple manuscripts of Hans Talhoffer’s fifteenth-century Fechtbuch depict duels between combatants...
Claus Frederik Sørensen: A Late Middle Age German fencing master’s manuscript in the Royal Library. ...
This article offers a partial overview on fencing, as recognized through archive records, as well as...
The reproductions of the Fencing Books in the library of the Helikon Palace are made available for r...
Intellectual historians have rarely attended to the genre of fighting manuals, but these provide a n...
Erhardus Henning’s work on Hieb-Fechten is one of only a few 17th century German fencing treatises d...
The Liber de Arte Dimicatoria (Leeds, Royal Armouries FECHT 1, previously and better known as MS I.3...
The manuscript of Joachim Meyer dated 1561 kept in the Bavarian National Museum in Munich, was ignor...
An undated paper from the archives of Strasburg contains a set of rules approved by fencing masters ...
During the nineteenth century, many sources were published about the regulation of fencing in Renais...
This paper aims to trace potential links between the military reform undertaken by King Maximilian ...
Fencing lessons and competitions are an urban phenomenon, documented as early as from the fifteenth ...
This article presents recent research into military fencing in Switzerland, with a focus on manuals ...
In this contribution, we will discuss two German fencing manuscripts - Mscr.Dresd.C.13 (SLUB Dresden...
The Kölner Fechtbuch is a fascinating, unique treatise from the 16th century. Although it is temptin...
Multiple manuscripts of Hans Talhoffer’s fifteenth-century Fechtbuch depict duels between combatants...
Claus Frederik Sørensen: A Late Middle Age German fencing master’s manuscript in the Royal Library. ...
This article offers a partial overview on fencing, as recognized through archive records, as well as...
The reproductions of the Fencing Books in the library of the Helikon Palace are made available for r...
Intellectual historians have rarely attended to the genre of fighting manuals, but these provide a n...
Erhardus Henning’s work on Hieb-Fechten is one of only a few 17th century German fencing treatises d...
The Liber de Arte Dimicatoria (Leeds, Royal Armouries FECHT 1, previously and better known as MS I.3...
The manuscript of Joachim Meyer dated 1561 kept in the Bavarian National Museum in Munich, was ignor...