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Difference between revisions of "Octavio Ferrara"
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− | '''Octavio Ferrara''' was a [[century::17th century]] [[nationality::Spanish]] [[fencing master]]. He seems to have been a resident of Zaragoza, Spain, and in ca. 1624 he was active in Madrid as Master at Arms.<ref>Archivo General de Palacio. Personal. Caja 778/5</ref> The dedication of his treatise suggests that he might have been attached at some point to the court of Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg. In 1625, he wrote an illustrated fencing manual entitled ''[[Compendio y Philosophia y Dztreza de las Armas (MS R4-B274)|Compendio y Philosophia y Dztreza de las Armas]]'' ("Compendium of the Philosophy and Skill at Arms"). The original manuscript was long thought to have been lost and the only remnant a 20th century tracing, but it recently resurfaced at auction and was purchased by [[ | + | '''Octavio Ferrara''' was a [[century::17th century]] [[nationality::Spanish]] [[fencing master]]. He seems to have been a resident of Zaragoza, Spain, and in ca. 1624 he was active in Madrid as Master at Arms.<ref>Archivo General de Palacio. Personal. Caja 778/5</ref> The dedication of his treatise suggests that he might have been attached at some point to the court of Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg. In 1625, he wrote an illustrated fencing manual entitled ''[[Compendio y Philosophia y Dztreza de las Armas (MS R4-B274)|Compendio y Philosophia y Dztreza de las Armas]]'' ("Compendium of the Philosophy and Skill at Arms"). The original manuscript was long thought to have been lost and the only remnant a 20th century tracing, but it recently resurfaced at auction and was purchased by the [[Museo dell'Arte Marziale]]. |
== Treatise == | == Treatise == | ||
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| Compendium of the Philosophy and Skill at Arms, reduced to its simplicity and directed to Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg, by his fencing master Octavio Ferrara, born in the city of Zaragoza, resident in the court of the Catholic Monarch of Spain, in August of 1625 A.D. | | Compendium of the Philosophy and Skill at Arms, reduced to its simplicity and directed to Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg, by his fencing master Octavio Ferrara, born in the city of Zaragoza, resident in the court of the Catholic Monarch of Spain, in August of 1625 A.D. | ||
| '''[II]''' Compendio y Philosophia y destreza de las Armas Reducido a su Simplicidad dirigido a Don Juan Ferdinando Baron de Gruenburg por su maestro Octavio Ferrara, natural de la ciudad de Çaragoça residente en la Corte de el Rey catholico de España N[uestro] Sr. Año de 1625. | | '''[II]''' Compendio y Philosophia y destreza de las Armas Reducido a su Simplicidad dirigido a Don Juan Ferdinando Baron de Gruenburg por su maestro Octavio Ferrara, natural de la ciudad de Çaragoça residente en la Corte de el Rey catholico de España N[uestro] Sr. Año de 1625. | ||
− | :(Transcription by [[Manuel Jesús Valle Ortiz]]) | + | :(Transcription by [[transcriber::Manuel Jesús Valle Ortiz]]) |
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== Additional Resources == | == Additional Resources == | ||
− | + | {{bibliography}} | |
== References == | == References == |
Latest revision as of 16:30, 25 March 2024
Octavio Ferrara | |
---|---|
Born | date of birth unknown Zaragoza, Spain |
Died | after 1625 |
Occupation | Fencing master |
Nationality | Spanish |
Patron | Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg |
Movement | La Verdadera Destreza |
Genres | Fencing manual |
Language | Spanish |
Notable work(s) | Compendio y Philosophia y Deztreza de las Armas |
Manuscript(s) | MS R4-B274 (1900s) |
Concordance by | Michael Chidester |
Octavio Ferrara was a 17th century Spanish fencing master. He seems to have been a resident of Zaragoza, Spain, and in ca. 1624 he was active in Madrid as Master at Arms.[1] The dedication of his treatise suggests that he might have been attached at some point to the court of Don Juan Ferdinando, Baron of Grünburg. In 1625, he wrote an illustrated fencing manual entitled Compendio y Philosophia y Dztreza de las Armas ("Compendium of the Philosophy and Skill at Arms"). The original manuscript was long thought to have been lost and the only remnant a 20th century tracing, but it recently resurfaced at auction and was purchased by the Museo dell'Arte Marziale.
Contents
Treatise
Rapier
Copyright and License Summary
Additional Resources
The following is a list of publications containing scans, transcriptions, and translations relevant to this article, as well as published peer-reviewed research.
- None.
References
- ↑ Archivo General de Palacio. Personal. Caja 778/5
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