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Difference between revisions of "Peloquin"

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== Treatise ==
 
== Treatise ==
  
{{hidden begin
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{{master begin
  | title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">[[Rapier]] and [[Dagger]]</span>
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  | title = [[Rapier]] and [[Dagger]]
  | titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
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  | width = 76em
| bodystyle = display:block; width:76em;
 
 
}}
 
}}
 
{| class="wikitable floated master"
 
{| class="wikitable floated master"
 
|-  
 
|-  
! id="thin" | Images
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! id="thin" | <p>Images<br/>from the [[Cabinet d'escrime de l'espee et poingnardt (MS KB.73.J.39)|Hague Version]]</p>
from the [[Cabinet d'escrime de l'espee et poingnardt (MS KB.73.J.39)|Hague Version]]
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! <p>{{rating|c}}<by/>by [[Reinier van Noort]]</p>
! {{rating|c}}
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! <p>[[Cabinet d'escrime de l'espee et poingnardt (MS KB.73.J.39)|Hague Version]] (titles only)<br/>by [[Matt Galas]]</p>
 
 
! [[Cabinet d'escrime de l'espee et poingnardt (MS KB.73.J.39)|Hague Version]] (titles only)
 
by [[Matt Galas]]
 
  
 
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|  
 
|  
 
| '''[28v] Double cavassy en garde quarte.'''
 
| '''[28v] Double cavassy en garde quarte.'''
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[The text of the technique simply ends; there is no text denoting the end of the work.]
 
[The text of the technique simply ends; there is no text denoting the end of the work.]
  

Revision as of 01:30, 26 November 2014

Captain Peloquin
Born 16th Century
Died 17th Century (?)
Occupation Fencing master
Nationality French
Patron Henri IV of France
Genres Fencing manual
Language French
Notable work(s) Cabinet d’Escrime de l’espee
et poingnardt
Archetype(s) Currently lost (ca. 1585)
Manuscript(s) MS KB.73.J.39 (1600s)
Translations Traduction française

Captain Peloquin was a 16th century French soldier and fencing master. He is described as "one of the four leading fencing masters of France", and his treatise notes that he trained King Henri IV of France in fencing. This likely occurred in the 1570s, giving us an approximate time frame for Peloquin's career.

Toward the end of the 16th century, Peloquin authored a fencing treatise titled Cabinet d'escrime de l'espee et poingnardt ("Showcase of Fencing with the Sword and Dagger").[1] The only extant copy, current MS KB.73.J.39, was made by J. de La Haye, a friend of Peloquin's, between 1600 and 1609. Peloquin's treatise is distinctive for its abstract diagrams consisting of floating weapons and feet with lines connecting them to disembodied hearts and faces.

Treatise