Wiktenauer logo.png

Difference between revisions of "Man yt Wol (MS Harley 3542)"

From Wiktenauer
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 148: Line 148:
 
| {{treatise begin
 
| {{treatise begin
 
   | title = Anonymous treatise on the [[two-handed sword]]
 
   | title = Anonymous treatise on the [[two-handed sword]]
   | width = 59em
+
   | width = 63em
 
}}
 
}}
 
{| class="floated treatisecontent"
 
{| class="floated treatisecontent"
Line 156: Line 156:
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| '''The Use of the Two-handed Sword'''
+
| style="width:33em;" | '''The Use of the Two-handed Sword'''
 
The first playing and beginning of the substance of the two-handed sword / the first ground begins with an hauke bearing in with the foot with a double round with 3 feet outward and as many homeward making end of the play with a quarter cross smitten with an hauke snatch setting down by the foot.  
 
The first playing and beginning of the substance of the two-handed sword / the first ground begins with an hauke bearing in with the foot with a double round with 3 feet outward and as many homeward making end of the play with a quarter cross smitten with an hauke snatch setting down by the foot.  
 
| '''The Use of the Two-hand Sworde'''
 
| '''The Use of the Two-hand Sworde'''
Line 273: Line 273:
 
| {{treatise begin
 
| {{treatise begin
 
   | title = Anonymous poem on the two-handed sword
 
   | title = Anonymous poem on the two-handed sword
   | width = 59em
+
   | width = 63em
 
}}
 
}}
 
{| class="floated treatisecontent"
 
{| class="floated treatisecontent"
 
|-  
 
|-  
 +
! style="width:3em;" |
 
! <p>{{rating|B|Completed Modernization}}<br/>by [[Terry Brown]]</p>
 
! <p>{{rating|B|Completed Modernization}}<br/>by [[Terry Brown]]</p>
 
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Terry Brown]]</p>
 
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Terry Brown]]</p>
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
|
+
| <poem><small>[1]</small>
{| cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" border="0"
 
|- valign="top"
 
| width="40px" | <poem><small>[1]</small>
 
 
 
  
  
Line 332: Line 329:
 
| <poem>man that will to the two hand sword learn both close & clear,
 
| <poem>man that will to the two hand sword learn both close & clear,
 
:he must have a good eye both far & near.
 
:he must have a good eye both far & near.
& an in step & an out step
+
& an in step & an out step & a quarter strike
& a quarter strike
 
 
:A cantel/cautel, a double, an half for his companions.
 
:A cantel/cautel, a double, an half for his companions.
 
Two rounds and an half with a good cheer
 
Two rounds and an half with a good cheer
Line 377: Line 373:
 
These are the strokes of your whole ground
 
These are the strokes of your whole ground
 
:For hurt, or for blow, or else for death's wound</poem>
 
:For hurt, or for blow, or else for death's wound</poem>
|}
 
 
| <poem>man þ<sup>t</sup> wol to þ<sup>e</sup> tohond swerd lern boþ<sup>e</sup> close & cler/
 
| <poem>man þ<sup>t</sup> wol to þ<sup>e</sup> tohond swerd lern boþ<sup>e</sup> close & cler/
 
 
he most have a goede eye boþ<sup>e</sup> fer & ner//
 
he most have a goede eye boþ<sup>e</sup> fer & ner//
& an in stop • & an owte stop •
+
& an in stop • & an owte stop • & an hauke q<sup>ū</sup>rter ∪
& an hauke q<sup>ū</sup>rter ∪
 
 
A cantel • a doblet . an half for hys fer//
 
A cantel • a doblet . an half for hys fer//
 
Too rowndys • & an halfe w<sup>t</sup> a goode chere
 
Too rowndys • & an halfe w<sup>t</sup> a goode chere

Revision as of 19:57, 25 August 2017

Man yt Wol
MS Harley 3542, British Library
London, United Kingdom
Noscans.png
(No scans available)
HagedornLeng
WierschinHils
Type Commonplace book
Date ca. 1440
Place of origin British Empire
Language(s)
Author(s)
  • Unknown (fencing manual)
  • Roger de Baron
Material Paper, with a British Library
binding
Size 118 folia
External data Library catalog entry
Other translations
Edition.jpg

The MS Harley 3542 is a compilation manuscript containing a fencing manual, created in England in the early to mid 15th century.[1] It currently rests in the holdings of the British Library in London, United Kingdom.[2] The manuscript seems to be three separate works bound together, including two alchemical compendia (ff 1-16, 17-94) and a medical compendium (ff 95-118). The fencing treatise, known as Man yt Wol ("The Man that Will"), comprises ff 82-85 of the larger manuscript. Along with the Cotton Titus manuscript and the Ledall manuscript, this is one of only three extant treatises on Medieval English martial arts.[2]

Provenance

The known provenance of the MS Harley 3542 is:[2]

  • 1500s - owned and annotated by Thomas Byard, vicar of Bockerill [Devon].
  • 1600s - owned by Samuel Knott (d. 1687), rector of Combe Raleigh and priest of Broad Hembury, co. Devon.
  • 1600s-early 1700s - owned by Robert Burscough (1650/51-1709), prebendary of Exeter in 1701, archdeacon of Barnstaple in 1703, rector of Cheriton Bishop in 1705.
  • 17 May 1715 - acquired by Robert Harley (1661-1724), 1st earl of Oxford and Mortimer, politician.
  • 1724-1741 - owned by Edward Harley (1689-1741), 2nd earl of Oxford and Mortimer.
  • 1741-1753 - owned by his widow, Henrietta née Cavendish Holles (1694-1755) and her daughter Margaret Cavendish Bentinck (1715-1785), duchess of Portland.
  • 1753 - sold for a fraction of their value to the British Museum (at the time of its founding).
  • 1973 - moved to the British Library (at the time of its founding).

Contents

This is the official table of contents provided by the museum.[2] As the manuscript has not been digitized for study, its accuracy cannot be guaranteed beyond that fact.

1r - 14r Treatise on alchemy (The Mirror of Lights)
14r - 15v Four alchemical recipes
16rv Three Alchemical recipes (Modus Maurandi)
17r - 25v Alchemical text (Semita recta Alkymie Alberti)
25v - 28r Alchemical text on the transmutation of metals ('Per artificium vero fit & transmutacio me/tallorum)
28v - 35v Alchemical text attributed to Ramon Llull (Verbum albrematum verissimum & approbatum de occultis)
40r - 41v Alchemical text (Compo[si]cionis / lapidum philosophorum .4. modis)
41v - 44r Alchemical recipes
44v - 55v Epistola boni viri, possibly Guillelmus Sedacerius, De alchimie perfectum
55v - 57v Alchemical text and recipes (Casus magnorum lapsus gravis anteriorum / Sunt afflictorum solamina philosophorum)
57v - 59v Breviloquium lapis philosophorum by Johannes Pauper
59v - 60v Alchemical recipe (Opus mirabile)
60v - 64v Alchemical treatise by John Dastin
64v - 67v Alchemical text
68v - 80v De occulta philosophia by John Sawtry
80v - 81r Alchemical verses
81r - 82r Alchemical verses
82r - 85r
85v
85r - 94v Recipes for medical and alchemical processes
95r Collection of texts on pulse in Middle English, followed by verse on pulse and humors in Latin
95v - 97r Gualterius, De pulsibus
97v - 100v Text on women's medicine (De ornatu mulierum)
101r - 102r Treatise on medical herbs (Materia medica)
103r - 110r Astronomical-medical treatise by Ralph Hoby
110r Eight-line poem on pulses
110v - 111r Notes on urine (De urinis tractatus)
111rv Notes on urine (Omnis urina est colamentum sanguinis)
111v - 112r Text on phlebotomy
112r Three paragraphs on astrological reckoning for bloodletting
112v Pen drawing of bloodletting man, with text on veins, but veins not marked
113r - 115v, 116v Excerpts of Rogerina minor by Roger de Baron
115v - 116v Excerpts from Summa parva (?) by Roger Frugard
116v Tables on latitudes of seven climates, all with Greek names
117r - 118v Pseudo-Nennius, De mirabilibus Britannie maioris
118v De mensuris

Gallery

Additional Resources

References

Copyright and License Summary

For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the discussion page.

Work Author(s) Source License
Modernization (82r - 84r) Jon Pellett MEGALOPHIAS His Page
CCBYNCSA30.png
Modernization (84v - 85v) Terry Brown American Academy of English Martial Arts
Copyrighted.png
Transcription (82r - 84r) Alfred Hutton Index:Man yt Wol (MS Harley 3542)
Public Domain.png
Transcription (84v - 85v) Terry Brown Index:Man yt Wol (MS Harley 3542)
Copyrighted.png