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'''Antonio Manciolino''' was a [[century::16th century]] [[nationality::Italian]] [[fencing master]]. Little is known about this master's life; he seems to have been Bolognese by birth and he is thought to have been a student of [[Guido Antonio di Luca]],{{cn}} the master who also taught [[Achille Marozzo]]. His fencing manual is dedicated to Don Luisi de Cordoba, Duke of Sessa, Orator of the Most Serene Emperor to Adrian VI; this dedication may indicate that Manciolino was attached as fencing master to the ducal court.
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'''Antonio Manciolino''' was a [[century::16th century]] [[nationality::Italian]] [[fencing master]]. Little is known about this master's life; he seems to have been Bolognese by birth and he may have been a student of [[Guido Antonio di Luca]],{{cn}} the Bolognese master who taught [[Achille Marozzo]] in the same period. His fencing manual is dedicated to Don Luisi de Cordoba, Duke of Sessa, Orator of the Most Serene Emperor to Adrian VI; this dedication may indicate that Manciolino was attached as fencing master to the ducal court.
  
In 1531, Manciolino published a treatise on swordsmanship called ''[[Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino)|Opera Nova]]'' ("A New Work"),<ref>The full title was ''Di Antonio Manciolino Bolognese opera noua, doue li sono tutti li documenti & uantaggi che si ponno ha uere nel mestier de l’armi d’ogni sorte nouamente corretta & stampata'', which translates to "New Work by Antonio Manciolino, Bolognese, wherein are all the instructions and advantages that are to be had in the practice of arms of every sort; newly corrected and printed".</ref> which is the oldest extant treatise in the [[Filippo di Bartolomeo Dardi|Dardi]] or "Bolognese" school of swordsmanship.<ref>Both Dardi and Luca are thought to have published treatises in the 15th century that have since been lost.</ref> The 1531 edition describes itself as "corrected and revised" and was probably based on an earlier version printed in ca. 1523; this date is based on the fact that Don Luisi de Cordoba was only orator to Adrian VI between September of 1522 and September of 1523.<ref>Leoni, Tommasso. ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531)''. Wheaton, IL: [[Freelance Academy Press]], 2010. pp 11-12.</ref> Despite the breadth and detail of his work, Manciolino's efforts were overshadowed by the release of Marozzo's even more extensive work on Bolognese fencing thirteen years later.
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In 1531, Manciolino published a treatise on fencing called ''[[Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino)|Opera Nova]]'' ("A New Work"),<ref>The full title was ''Di Antonio Manciolino Bolognese opera noua, doue li sono tutti li documenti & uantaggi che si ponno ha uere nel mestier de l’armi d’ogni sorte nouamente corretta & stampata'', which translates to "New Work by Antonio Manciolino, Bolognese, wherein are all the instructions and advantages that are to be had in the practice of arms of every sort; newly corrected and printed".</ref> which is the oldest extant treatise in the [[Filippo di Bartolomeo Dardi|Dardi]] or "Bolognese" school.<ref>Both Dardi and Luca are thought to have published treatises in the 15th century that have since been lost.</ref>  
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The 1531 edition describes itself as "corrected and revised" and was probably based on an earlier version printed in ca. 1523 (based on the fact that Don Luisi de Cordoba was only orator to Adrian VI between September of 1522 and September of 1523).<ref>Leoni, Tom. ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531)''. Wheaton, IL: [[Freelance Academy Press]], 2010. pp 11-12.</ref> Manciolino had signed a contract with a French printer in Rome in 1519 to publish his treatise, but it's unclear if this was the same edition or an even earlier one.<ref>Tassinari, 2021.</ref>
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Despite the breadth and detail of his work, Manciolino's efforts were overshadowed by the release of Marozzo's even more extensive work on Bolognese fencing thirteen years later.
  
 
== Treatise ==
 
== Treatise ==
  
{{hidden begin
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As Craig Pitt-Pladdy has refused our request to host his translations on Wiktenauer, we instead have links to their locations on other sites in the appropriate sections until such time as another translation appears.
| title    = <span style="font-size:130%;">Introduction</span>
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| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
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''Note: This article includes a very early (2003) draft of Jherek Swanger's translation. An extensively-revised version of the translation was released in print in 2021 as ''How to Fight and Defend with Arms of Every Kind, by Antonio Manciolino''. It can be purchased at the following links in [http://www.lulu.com/shop/w-jherek-swanger/how-to-fight-and-defend-with-arms-of-every-kind-by-antonio-manciolino-hardcover/hardcover/product-gp6yjz.html hardcover] and [http://www.lulu.com/shop/w-jherek-swanger/how-to-fight-and-defend-with-arms-of-every-kind-by-antonio-manciolino-paperback/paperback/product-ykpqmd.html softcover].''
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
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''It also includes an Italian transcription by Steven Reich which was also released in print as ''Antonio Manciolino''; it can be purchased in [http://www.lulu.com/shop/steven-reich/antonio-manciolino/paperback/product-1q6veprp.html softcover].''
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{{master begin
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| title = Title and Dedication
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}}
 
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{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
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{| class="master"
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Introduction}}
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! <p>Illustrations</p>
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! <p>{{rating|start}}</p>
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! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
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|-
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| [[file:Manciolino 1.jpg|400x400px|center]]
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| <p>New work BY ANTONIO MANCIOLINO of Bologna, wherein are all the instructions and advantages that are to be had in the practice of arms of every sort; newly corrected and printed.</p>
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<p>1531.</p>
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| {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|11|lbl=1}}
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|-
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| class="noline" |
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| class="noline" | <p>[1] Dedication: To the Most Illustrious Don Luisi de Cordola, Duke of Sessa, Orator of the Most Serene Emperor to Adrian VI.</p>
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| class="noline" | {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|12|lbl=1v}}
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|}
 
|}
{{hidden end}}
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{{master end}}
  
{{hidden begin
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{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">First Book</span>
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| title = Introduction
| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
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| width = 90em
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
 
 
}}
 
}}
{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
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{| class="master"
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|-
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! <p>Illustrations</p>
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! <p>{{rating|B}}<br/>by [[W. Jherek Swanger]]</p>
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! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
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|-
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| [[file:Manciolino 2.jpg|400x400px|center]]
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| <p>'''New work for learning to combat and fence with every sort of weapon, composed by Antonio Manciolino of Bologna.'''</p>
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<p>[1] It is the wont of the majority of the commonest maestri of the art of the rational blows of fencing to affix in the highest and most solemn corner of their school a long array of paper, wherein they claim their chapters are written. And in truth, whosoever reads them does find them to be chapters, but rather those that wine vendors place on barrels, a thing more monstrous than human. And how can he be human, if the greed and rapacity of the maestro is openly displayed? But how human of a thing is it to help others, and to bear witness by oneself that some are not born thus rapacious and hardhearted of instinct? And in my opinion things are placed into the school only for their profit, and not that of others. Hundreds are their chapters, for in them is contained nothing other than the putting of a price on the masterful play of this art, as the virtue of arms has fallen to such baseness that it is wished by them to find her holy members sold at a price through the schools, boasting, without consideration that the dull and the subtle wits can not equally bear this yoke upon their shoulders, and that the art is not a harlot to suffer itself to be sold. And I wish to hold to a more useful path, noting that the school should be devoted to offering some instruction of the art. It is of more worth to me to be useful to my scholars with this work than, through the putting of a price to the play, to provide myself alone with great benefit. Accordingly, it will suffice me to have from scholars three things: namely reverence, faith, and reward; reverence as maestro, and likewise faith, because it behooves the student to believe according to the saying of the philosopher, that scholars are held to be the proper reward of their maestro; because without that (it is the sentiment of Cicero) the arts would perish. If, therefore, I call myself satisfied by the three aforesaid things, what loss of time in some other profit of mine could be of aid with this, my work?</p>
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{{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|13|lbl=2|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|14|lbl=2v|p=1}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[3] '''Here begin some principal rules, or instructions, regarding the valorous art of fencing.'''</p>
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<p>One wishing to play must always attach himself to the most valorous of deed and reputation. Because as the glory of the victor depends on the valor of the vanquished, thus the loss is not censurable if the reputation of the victor embellishes it.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/15|1|lbl=3r}}
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|
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| <p>[4] The delight of playing with varied and diverse players makes a man cunning, perceptive, and nimble of hand, because from the variety of such practiced wits stems the shrewd and learned mother-experience of things.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/15|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[5] When one in playing has doubt of the other, he must never fix himself in a single guard, but change immediately from one into another. The reason being that the enemy will not be able to form some opinion.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/15|3|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[6] Against those players who make their blows with great impetus, so that they often engender fear in their partner, there are two things that can be done: either to let his blow go in vain and to thrust immediately, shrewdly feigning to ward it; or to throw yourself forward to ward before the blow has come to force. One could also strike him in the hand, the reason being that it would interfere with his forceful throwing.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/15|4|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[7] The wounding of the hand, not of the enemy, is registered in the account of blows in play. Because the hand is the chief in exposing itself, thus in combat for earnest it is the most singular wound, because that member of the enemy must be offended which offends more than others, and this is the hand.</p>
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{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/15|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|1|lbl=3v|p=1}}
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| <p>[8] The most genteel of blows is the mandritto, because that one is the most genteel and noble which is done with more difficulty and danger; but to strike with the mandritto is done with more danger than the riverso, since it makes a man go entirely uncovered in that tempo; therefore the mandritto is more genteel.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[9] One must always keep one’s eyes on the sword hand of the enemy more than on his face, because there is to be seen all that he wishes to do.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|3|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[10] The genteel warding of a blow is of no little profit nor small beauty, rather it is of equal or perhaps greater loveliness than to make a beautiful blow since many know how to throw a beautiful blow, but few have the knowledge of warding them, so that they are not offended. And such guardians rest satisfied.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|4|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[11] It is a necessary thing to know the tempos, without which the play is imperfect; accordingly be aware that when the enemy’s blow has passed your body, that the period there is a tempo to follow it with a response, more convenient than a parry.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|5|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[12] All players that look short are also to place in their hands short weapons, because their puissance would not extend to long ones.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|6|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[13] To whomsoever as well in playing, the short weapon, or the short sword, is of greater virtue. Because it forces the players to approach, from whence they are made ideal at warding and of good eye.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|7|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[14] In every respect it is an optimal thing to train both hands in every play with every weapon, and to know as well with one as with the other how to strike and to ward.</p>
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{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/16|8|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/17|1|lbl=4r|p=1}}
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| <p>[15] Thus do the high guards relate to the low wards: that the principles of the high guards is striking, and naturally the warding subsequently; and of the low guards contrarily is warding the principle, and then striking subsequently; but in these low ones alone is the giving of the thrust the natural strike.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/17|2|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[16] As strikes without shieldings are not done sensibly, so shieldings without a following of a strike should not be made, waiting for the tempos nonetheless. Therefore if one always wards without responding with a blow, he would give his enemy a manifest sign of his timidity; unless with such warding one drives the enemy back, the enemy would proceed with great courage; and in truth warding should be done going forward and not back, being thus more apt to reach the enemy, as well as to weaken the enemy’s blow, if he comes against you; because striking you at close quarters he cannot harm you with that part of the sword which is from the middle back toward the hilt; but it would be far worse from the middle forward.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/17|3|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[17] The good player, when he plays with one who flees him, (which removes much grace from his valor, because seeing that one flee, he cannot do a perfect thing) must also himself feign to flee, because it will give spirit to the first who fled to come forward, and thus gracefully redress the miscarriage of his play.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/17|4|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[18] The players who make many blows without tempo or measure, although these may connect their enemies, are nonetheless censurable, and sooner are said to be children of luck than of art, but those are called grave and well-positioned players who seek to strike their adversary with tempo and grace.</p>
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{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/17|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|1|lbl=4v|p=1}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[19] If one finds himself close to the enemy, he must never throw a full blow, because the sword must not distance itself from the presence for the safety of him who holds it, and this throwing of an imperfect blow is called “mezzo tempo”.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[20] Two players finding each other to be of equal knowledge of the art, is the reason why one will not know how to give a blow to his companion with safety; and by my counsel, in one of two ways can he put himself, with luck, in hope of victory: namely, to have an eye toward throwing in that very same tempo that the enemy will have taken; or he can give to him whence it seems better for him to approach, and immediately throw himself upon him, embracing him, which having done, any will esteem that one the victor.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|3|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[21] If someone wants to cause the enemy to throw a blow that he will parry in order to reach him in that tempo, it behooves him to make such a blow three or four times one after the other almost in the manner of an invitation, and because the custom of players is to ape, the adversary will be compelled to make a semblance, by which you will make him throw the blow that you wished.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|4|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[22] If you would wound the enemy in his upper body it will be necessary to begin the quarrel at his lower body; and similarly, wanting to reach him at the lower body; for that you will make a blow above, because defending himself in those portions with beats, it is necessary that the others will be uncovered.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|5|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[23] Because no blow can be thrown against which arguably there is some guard in which there is no risk, it follows that in the rising and falling from guards is shown the virtue of the players; on the great field the victory is seen to go to him, who assaults his enemy from the outset before he settles his weapons in guard, because standing caught in thought, he can be struck more easily.</p>
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{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/18|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|1|lbl=5r|p=1}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[24] In defending his person, a man must always hold his arms well extended, not only so that he will come to drive the blows of the enemy to the outside at a distance from his body, but it also makes him stronger and swifter in striking.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[25] The employment of heavy weapons and the delight in throwing with length and extension nourishes good energy and ideal strength, so that then coming to blows with a light weapon, a man becomes more agile.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|3|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[26] In the art of the spada da filo, one is not to depart from the low guards, because they are safer than the high ones, and the reason is, that lying in high guard, you can be reached by a thrust or a cut to the leg, and in the low ones there is not this danger.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|4|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[27] Those who will take delight in shielding against given blows with the false of the sword will turn out to be valiant players, because there cannot be parries better and stronger for them than these, since they are able to ward and to strike almost in one tempo.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|5|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| <p>[28] Neither combating nor playing must one permit winning by an overabundance of blows, nor of presumption, because one would entirely deprive oneself of spirit, and give it to the enemy.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|6|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[29] The delight in the unaccompanied sword is more useful than that in other weapons, inasmuch as others less often accompany the human body; one has neither a rotella always, nor a buckler always, but one can always have the unaccompanied sword.</p>
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{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/19|7|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|1|lbl=5v|p=1}}
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| <p>[30] During combat with a left-handed person, stepping continuously against his sword is the optimal protection; and when he throws a riverso, throwing a mandritto to his sword hand, or when he throws a mandritto, throwing a riverso to his hand or to his sword arm, it is not to be doubted that victory is assured.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|2|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[31] It is an entirely genteel and profitable thing in playing to step equally with one or the other foot according to the tempo and the need; nonetheless it seems to me that stepping with even feet is of great utility, because thus one can both advance forward and retreat back without inconvenience of the body, adding this as well: that a man plays more strongly thereby than by other means. And when I say “with even feet” I mean that the feet are no more distanced than something beyond a half a braccio, accompanying always the hand with the foot, and the foot with the hand.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|3|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[32] One may not be called perfect in this art, as it is likewise in others, if he does not know how to teach somebody else. Because as the philosopher says in the Ethics: that the sign of knowledge is to know how to teach.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|4|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[33] Playing with the two handed sword in the giuoco largo, you will always keep an eye on the distal half of the sword toward the point. But having come to the straits of the half sword, you will keep an eye on the left hand, given that the enemy cannot execute a presa other than with that one.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|5|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[34] The art of the half sword is quite necessary to the knowledge of whomever wishes to be a good player, insofar as that if he knew only how to play at wide measure, and were at close quarters, he would have to flee backwards in shame and danger, and would often place the victory into the hands of his enemy, or at least reveal to observers his ignorance of such art.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/20|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|1|lbl=6r|p=1}}
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| <p>[35] If one finds himself to be at blows with one more powerful and stronger than him, he must not in any way be reduced to presas, because in such case the weaker would be compelled to lie fallen.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|2|lbl=-}}
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| <p>[36] Granting the choice of arms to the stronger, he must armor the weak weightily; the reason being that in the press he will be more victorious, because reason entirely requires that the less strong have light armor.</p>
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| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|3|lbl=-}}
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|
 +
| <p>[37] One of large stature combating with a short one, and the choice of arms going to the large, he must by every means armor them on the lower body, and not the upper, for he will have to be more apt to strike the upper body through his height. But if the choice goes to the little one, it will behoove him to make the upper body armored and leave the lower unarmored.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[38] Combatants of equal valor, strength, and size can choose armor without a difference.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[39] When the weapons are too short, they are said to be as much more dangerous, because that which offends at closer distance is of greater peril, since such blows, through arriving immediately, cannot easily be awarded; from whence it follows that the partisan carries more danger than the lance, and the dagger moreso than the sword.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[40] Of two playing together, he who strikes in response is more praiseworthy than the one who strikes the first blow, because he reveals himself sooner to become enraged than to lose vigor after the received hit.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/21|7|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|1|lbl=6v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[41] It is not licit after the received blow to make more than one response stepping forward with a crossing step; the reason being that one must do well with all of one’s wit, since with that one can recover honor.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[42] The blow to the head, considering the excellence of that member, counts for three; and the blow to the foot is taken for two, having regard for the difficulty of making it so low.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[43] A valorous player is he who redoubles his blows.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[44] The longer weapons are opposed to the shorter ones, and therefore the lance is sooner chosen than the spiedo, holding it against the spiedo not by the base owing to the peril of its length, but in the middle with such advantage. And similarly the partisan is taken sooner than the two handed sword.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/First Book}}
+
|  
 +
| <p>[45] The enemy is made fearful by throwing blows at him from the middle upwards, rather than from the middle downwards, because the eyes and consequently the heart of them do not remain very brave from glimpsing vanquishment.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[46] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|7|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" | <p>[47] One must never reveal to the other any of his intentions regarding blows, but understand well those of the adversary. Because quarreling with a plain mind one must make good the other’s plans; but coming to play where honor is at stake, there it is a laudable thing to show the opposite of one’s intent.</p>
 +
| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/22|8|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 
|}
 
|}
{{hidden end}}
+
{{master end}}
  
{{hidden begin
+
{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">Second Book</span>
+
| title = First Book (Sword and Buckler)
| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
+
| width = 90em
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
 
 
}}
 
}}
{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
+
{| class="master"
 +
|-
 +
! <p>Illustrations</p>
 +
! <p>{{rating|B}}<br/>by [[W. Jherek Swanger]]</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| [[file:Manciolino 3.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Of the Fashion of Combating and Fencing with All Sorts of Arms, Divided into Six Books.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>'''First Book.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[1] Because the valorous art of arms carries with it continuously for its safety the protective guards, of which there are 10 famous ones, and it has twenty different names, I have judged it useful to tell of those in the first place; as the spacious and easy field appears prior to the hay, so will they rather give greater light to the remainder of the work. Therefore with the divine aid we will turn to the first.</p>
 +
| {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|23|lbl=7r}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[2] '''Of the high guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The first guard will be called “alta”, because meeting in combat we must gracefully hold the sword over the body, and gripped with the arm elevated as much as it can be, in such a fashion that the sword comes to rest to the rear, and the arm with the buckler must extend well forward toward the enemy as much as it can, and the right foot must stretch out about four fingers ahead of the left, with the heel a little raised, and both knees being straight and not bent.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/24|1|lbl=7v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[3] One can also do this guard in two other ways, namely either with the right foot making a large pace forward, or with the left, also with the same large pace, holding the sword and the buckler in the way as above, and always the sword is found gripped with the arm extended into the air, the feet being in the way that comfort requires; always it is called “guardia alta” because of the designation, not of the feet, but of the settlement that is taken by the sword.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/24|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[4] '''Of the head guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The second is called “guardia di testa” which is made with equal and even extension of both arms toward the enemy in this fashion: that when you will have extended your fists, they will be found between and at the height of the shoulders, differing only in this, that the sword hand must lie somewhat lower than that of the buckler. But coming to the feet, I say that they can be found in two ways, either with the right or with the left forward in large pace, and nonetheless it will be the same guard, for the aforesaid reason.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/24|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] '''Of the face guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The third is called “guardia di faccia” which agrees with the previous one in two things, and differs in only one; namely, that is that it agrees not only in that the disposition of the feet can be with the right foot as well as with the left facing, but also in the height of the arms. But in this alone is the difference, that the aforesaid was having the sword on the diagonal, and this one holds it straight with the point toward the enemy’s face, and the hand armed with the buckler above the hand appointed to the sword.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/25|1|lbl=8r}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[6] '''Of the over the arm guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The fourth is called “guardia di sopra il braccio” because the hand that grips the sword comes to lie in the manner of a cross in the middle of the left arm, holding the point to the rear, and in consequence the buckler arm is very extended toward the enemy.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/25|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[7] Regarding the feet, I say that in this first manner the right must be only so far forward of the left as not to touch it. One could furthermore do this same guard when the right foot makes the pace large, bending itself inward somewhat with the height of grace. And thus arranged in this guard, although the sword hand does not move from the place where it was above, that is, from the middle of the arm (because otherwise it would change the name for the reason said in the first guard) nonetheless the arms would come to elongate themselves somewhat, which previously were tucked in, so that the right shoulder comes to face opposite the enemy in the manner of delivering a blow to him wherever it seems best to you.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/25|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[8] '''Of the under the arm guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The fifth is called “guardia di sotto il braccio”, because the sword hand must lie under the buckler arm, that is, holding the sword under the armpit, so that the point faces toward the rear, but the buckler arm will be well extended toward the enemy; but of the feet, I say that the right must adopt the manner described above here, that is, forward of the left, either a little or in large pace. But if you will hold it in large pace, it behooves you to arrange your right shoulder toward the enemy in the appointed fashion described in the fourth guard.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/26|1|lbl=8v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[9] '''Of the narrow iron gate guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The sixth guard is called “porta di ferro stretta”. In which the body must be arranged diagonally in such fashion that the right shoulder (as is said above) faces the enemy, but both the arms must be stretched out to encounter the enemy, so that the sword arm is extended straight down in the defense of the right knee, and so that the sword fist be near and centered on the aforesaid knee. But that of the buckler must be extended and straight indeed toward the enemy, neither higher nor lower than in guardia di testa. Regarding the feet, the right must be settled in large pace with the knee similarly opposite from the enemy, thereby defended by the guard, and somewhat bent, and the left on the diagonal, also with its knee somewhat bent. And this is therefore called “narrow iron door” through being the most secure among all the others, and exceedingly strong like iron, and that unlike the wide (of which will be treated immediately below), the sword draws nigh to the enemy, restraining itself equally in defense of the knee.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/26|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/27|1|lbl=9r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[10] '''Of the wide iron gate guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The seventh guard is called “porta di ferro larga”, and this originates from the previously described, because neither the feet nor the body are moved from the appearance of the above. Only that the sword hand is moved from the knee and hangs with the point toward the ground going to the inside of the right knee, making the body more uncovered than does the preceding guard.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/27|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[11] '''Of the wild boar iron gate guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The eighth guard is called “cingiara porta di ferro”, in which the left foot is settled diagonally, bending the knee a little, but the right leg must remain straight. And as for the hands, that of the sword must rest with the fist in front of the left knee as you did in that of porta di ferro,<ref>I.e., as it was in front of the right knee in porta di ferro stretta.</ref> whence also it derived a large part of its name, but the left will be extended in defense of the head, with the buckler forward as was said a little while ago; and therefore it is called “wild boar” after the animal that has such a name, which while it approaches attacking, arranges itself with its head and tusks diagonally in the aforesaid manner of striking.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/27|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[12] '''Of the high long tail guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The ninth guard is called “coda lunga alta”, with the left foot forward, the knee bent a little, and the foot must be straight toward the enemy in large pace, the right arm well extended toward the enemy with the sword well gripped diagonally, so that the point is aimed well at the enemy, the buckler arm well extended also toward the enemy’s face; and not only this guard but also the following have their origins from a guard called “coda lunga alta” in which the feet are arranged in the aforesaid fashion, but the arm is held with the sword extended straight back, which gave it its name through metaphor, as is said in the common proverb, that one must not meddle with great masters because they have the long tail, that is, they can harm you through their numerous followers; thus, such guard gives the same name to this ninth, and to the tenth. Because of being very apt for reaching and harming your companion, it therefore holds the name of “coda lunga alta”.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/27|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/28|1|lbl=9v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[13] '''Of the narrow long tail guard.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The tenth guard is called “coda lunga stretta”, with the right foot forward in large pace, in a way nonetheless that the knee is a little bent somewhat diagonally, and both arms must lie as was said above, except that the sword arm reposes somewhat lower. And the aforesaid ten guards will be sufficient for our work.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/28|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[14] '''Second Chapter. Of the blows.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>It is to be known that all of this spirited art is divided into two virtues. The first is to protect oneself first; therefore the chapter above on guards was done. The second is knowing how to strike your enemy in tempo, so that you cannot be equally harmed by him, because you would report no victory if you were stricken while striking, making yourself victor and vanquished at once. It is not to be wished then to make the enemy a participant in your victory, nor you in his shame.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/28|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/29|1|lbl=10r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[15] But before we teach you to strike, it is necessary that the names of the blows not be secret to you. Of which five are principal, and two are not. The first is the mandritto. The second riverso. The third fendente. The fourth stoccata, or punta. The fifth falso. And because the sword has two edges, that which faces the enemy is called the true edge, and that which stays toward you is called false. If, then, you will naturally throw a blow at your enemy traveling beginning at his left ear and continuing toward his right knee, or to whatever part you want, provided that the blow was thrown at the left side of the enemy, it is called “mandritto”. But if you were to throw that contrarily, that is, to his right side, either low or high as you wish, it will be called “riverso”. And if dropping the sword between the middle of the division of the two aforesaid blows, that is, straight down through the head, it will be called “fendente”. But any blow that you would deliver from the ground upwards toward the face of the enemy, if you wish either from the right or the left side, it will be called “falso”. And if you will push the point into the enemy, it is known by all to be called “stoccata”, either with the right foot or with the left forward, either over or under hand.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/29|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[16] Beyond these five there are two which are not principal because they only occur in the play of sword and buckler. The first is called “tramazzone”, which is done with the wrist of the hand that has the sword, with that winding from below upwards toward your left side in the manner of a fendente; the other is called “montante”, because it is thrown from below upwards in the fashion of a falso which ascends to finish in guardia alta.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/29|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[17] '''Third Chapter, of the offenses that arise from guardia alta.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Having already treated of the guards and of the names of the blows, and how they are done, we now begin to teach to strike, and following the strikes, to parry. And because ideal players always settle themselves in their guards for their safety, we will instruct you of the marring and wounding of an enemy reposed in any of the ten said guards, and then how he must defend himself; and first we present the offenses that can be done in guardia alta.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/30|1|lbl=10v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[18] Accordingly, posing the case that you and your enemy are in guardia alta, and that you are the attacker, you can throw a mandritto at his sword hand which will go over your arm, and then turn a riverso also to that hand. Then ascend with a montante to return to guardia alta; if you will do these three blows, your enemy will be unable to throw anything toward you that could offend you, because he would always come to collide his hand into your sword. But if it does not please you to throw the three aforesaid blows, you can turn a riverso to his thigh. And if the enemy throws to your head, meet his sword hand with a falso crossed over your arm.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Or you can make a show of raising a montante, and in that tempo step forward into large pace with your left foot, and go with your sword into guardia di testa, there awaiting the enemy’s blow upon your sword. Which done, then you will immediately be able to step your right foot toward his left side, giving to him in that tempo a mandritto upon his head, so that your left foot follows behind your right, and going with your sword into guardia di testa for your shelter.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Alternately you also could pretend to drop a riverso to his thigh, keeping an eye well on the enemy’s hand, and when he throws to your face, you would immediately have to throw a mandritto under your arm to his sword hand, making your buckler be the good preserver of your head, and retreating back to the rear with your right foot for your safety.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Moreover, you could have cut a tramazzone falling into porta di ferro, thereby leaving yourself entirely uncovered, so that he would have cause to throw some blow at you; immediately going with your sword into guardia di testa and advancing forward somewhat with your right foot, whereby you will defend yourself, throwing thereafter a mandritto, either to the face or the thigh, warding your head equally with the buckler, you will then retreat back to the rear with your right foot for your protection.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You will also be able, making a passing step with your left foot, to throw a tramazzone to his right side, and then you will lead him to believe that you will strike him with a riverso, but in spite of all that you will throw a mandritto at him. Alternately, making a show of attacking him with a tramazzone, you will strike him with a mandritto. And if that is not to your liking, you can throw an overhand thrust, following it with a tramazzone or two.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/30|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/31|1|lbl=11r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[19] Or, striking him with a fendente, give a following tramazzone. And hereby are finished the various ways by one of which you can offend someone who lies opposite you in the aforesaid guard; but if you were the offended, here are the counters, or responses, to the aforesaid offenses, briefly, below.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/31|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[20] '''Chapter Four: Of the counters that can be done by one who was attacked in guardia alta.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The enemy makes some blow that pleases him, in order to offend you, who are in guardia alta. You must beat the rim of your buckler up and down, that is, [in response to] the fendente or the falso of his sword [respectively], doing which, you will come to render yourself safe from any offensive blow.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/32|1|lbl=11v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[21] You can also attack against each one, drawing your right foot behind your left into large pace, extending a thrust in the gesture of a montante, which goes into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/32|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[22] '''Chapter 5, of the offenses that can be given against one who was in guardia di testa.'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Both of you lying in guardia di testa, you wanting to offend the enemy, then throw a mandritto<sup>1</sup> to his face, or flanks, or if you wish, to his leg.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/32|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[23] Or extend a thrust<sup>2</sup> to his face and throw a tramazzone. Or pretend to attack with a mandrittom,<sup>3</sup> but throw a riverso. Or if you prefer, do two mandritti.<sup>4</sup> As well, pretend instead to throw a tramazzone<sup>5</sup> and nonetheless strike him with a mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/32|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[24] '''Chapter 6: Of the counters that should be done against one attacking another in guardia di testa.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The counters that you can make against the aforesaid attacks are these: namely against the mandritto<sup>1</sup> to the flank, leg, or face, you can withdraw your right foot behind your left into large pace, and in this tempo you will avoid the mandritto however it may be done.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/32|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/33|1|lbl=12r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[25] And finding yourself in coda lunga alta, thereafter you will extend a thrust to his face, and in this extension you will step forward with your right foot into large pace, giving him in this tempo a mandritto to the face. But if the enemy turns a thrust<sup>2</sup> with a tramazzone you will protect against such a thrust with the sword. And when he turns tramazzoni at you, you will put your sword hand under your buckler, directing the point of your sword toward the enemy’s hand. If, however, he throws a mandritto,<sup>3</sup> you will go with your sword into guardia di faccia.
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he turns a riverso at you, either high or low, you will ward it with your sword, immediately turning a mandritto at him in whatever way seems best to you. But against the two mandritti<sup>4</sup> you will be able to hinder them by cutting the enemy’s sword hand with a mezzo mandritto inside the rim of your buckler, subsequently adapting your sword into porta di ferro stretta, and however he throws the other mandritto, you will ward it with a falso, throwing a mandritto downwards toward his face, and stepping forward with the right foot in that same tempo in order to have a better way to strike him.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he pretends to throw a tramazzone<sup>5</sup> in order to give you a mandritto, you will hinder that pretense with a turning of a mandritto, reposing your sword into porta di ferro stretta, and when the enemy will then throw the mandritto to give it to you, you will hit it immediately with a falso, giving him a riverso to the thigh.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/33|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[26] '''Chapter 7, of the offenses that can be done against one settled in guardia di faccia.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Both being in guard, and you wanting to offend your enemy, you can extend a thrust<sup>1</sup> into his face. Or provoke him with a strong mandritto<sup>2</sup> or with a tramazzone;<sup>3</sup> and if you prefer, with the false edge of your sword you will hit<sup>4</sup> that of your enemy, striking him in the face. Or making a show of throwing a riverso<sup>5</sup> upwards from beneath, you will be able to give him a mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/34|1|lbl=12v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[27] '''Chapter 8, of the counters in response to aforesaid offenses in guardia di faccia.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You will be careful that when the enemy extends some thrust,<sup>1</sup> you will pass with your left foot toward his right, and in this passing you will make a half turn with the fist that holds your sword, in such a way that the enemy will rest on the outside, and then following this you will strike his face. But if he throws a mandritto,<sup>2</sup> in the raising that is done of the fist that holds his sword, you will immediately offer to that the point of yours in order that he will lie in fear of lowering it.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/34|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[28] If however he throws a tramazzone<sup>3</sup> you will defend with a falso, that is you will turn that well toward his left side in order that it will not only come to ward that tramazzone, but also you will give him the edge in the face, and if he hits your sword<sup>4</sup> in order to give you a blow in the face, you will immediately make a half turn with the fist that holds your sword and thus you will remain secure.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/34|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[29] But if he pretends to make a riverso<sup>5</sup> upwards from beneath in order to give you a mandritto, you in that pretense will join together your sword hand with that of your buckler, and as he makes the mandritto, withdrawing your right foot to large pace behind your left you will press your true edge into his sword hand.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/34|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/35|1|lbl=13r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[30] '''Chapter 9, of the offenses that can be done against one in guardia sopra braccio.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can throw a riverso, or make a show of throwing two riversi,<sup>1</sup> nonetheless offending him with a mandritto,<sup>2</sup> and such offenses are understood to be done with both lying in that same guard, and such may be said once for all.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/35|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[31] Continuing then, you can also throw a riverso<sup>3</sup> inside the edge of the buckler, or feint to give a riverso<sup>4</sup> and strike him with a mandritto, or pass with your left foot toward his right side, and feinting to give him a riverso,<sup>5</sup> pass with your right foot toward his left side and give him a fendente upon his head, so that your left leg follows behind your right.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/35|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[32] You can also pretend to extend a punta riversa<sup>6</sup> over your arm, nonetheless throwing a tramazzone, or you can do together a riverso,<sup>7</sup> a fendente, and a tramazzone. Or you can step forward with your left foot and extend a thrust<sup>8</sup> over your buckler, and then pass with your right foot, and then you will be able to throw a mandritto or tramazzone as you wish. You could, moreover, step toward his right side with your left foot throwing out a riverso,<sup>9</sup> or undoing him with a mandritto.<sup>10</sup></p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/35|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[33] '''Chapter 10, of the counters to the previously named offenses of guardia sopra braccio.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>When the enemy throws the aforesaid two riversi,<sup>1</sup> you will parry the first with the sword, and as he will wish to do the second, immediately recoiling your right foot near to your left, you will pass forward with the said left giving him in this tempo a riverso driven out into his face; and if he pretends to do two riversi in order to give a mandritto,<sup>2</sup> you will throw your right foot behind your left, going with your sword into cingiara porta di ferro, and as he will want to strike with the mandritto, immediately returning your right foot forward and hitting that<ref>I.e. his mandritto.</ref> together with the false edge of your sword, you will strike him with a riverso. But if he hits with a riverso<sup>3</sup> inside the rim of the buckler, you will turn a mandritto to his face. But if he makes a show of a riverso<sup>4</sup> in order to give you a mandritto, to such a show you will go into guardia di faccia; and as he throws in order to give you the aforesaid mandritto, you will make your sword a little lower, parrying that, and you will immediately pass your left foot toward his right side extending to him a riverso into his right temple, so that your right leg follows behind your left. But if he passes with the left foot in order to feint to give you a riverso,<sup>5</sup> you will immediately settle yourself with your sword into guardia di faccia, and as he passes toward your left side in order to give you a fendente, you will immediately strike his right temple diagonally with a riverso.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he extends a punta riversa,<sup>6</sup> you will ward it with the sword; and he throwing two tramazzoni* at you, you will immediately go with your sword into guardia di testa and then you will ward those, striking him with a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he throws a riverso,<sup>7</sup> you will turn him a thrust to the hand in the company of the buckler, and if he throws a fendente, you will parry that by going with your sword into guardia di testa.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he turns the tramazzone, immediately stepping forward with your left foot into large pace, you will ward that with the buckler, giving him a stoccata to the flank, and removing yourself with a leap to the rear.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he passes forward with his left foot and extends a thrust<sup>8</sup> over his arm toward your face, you will parry that with your sword.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And as he passes with his right foot in order to give you a mandritto, while that blow has not yet reached you, in that moment you will give him a riverso in his right thigh.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he throws two tramazzoni<ref>Note that these “two tramazzoni” were, in both cases, singular in Ch. 9</ref> at you, you will ward them with your right foot forward and with your sword in guardia di testa, throwing a thrust to his face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he passes with his left foot toward your right side in order to give you a riverso<sup>9</sup> extended to your face, you will immediately turn a falso to his right temple, so that your buckler is a good defender of your head.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he looses a mandritto,<sup>10</sup> you will immediately draw your right foot near your left, lifting together your sword arm into the air, blocking that, and then you will cast your right foot forward striking him with an answering mandritto to the head.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/35|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|36|lbl=13v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/37|1|lbl=14r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[34] '''Chapter 11, of the offenses that can be made against one who was in guardia di sotto braccio.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can throw a riverso to the face,<sup>1</sup> or raise a falso,<sup>2</sup> throwing nonetheless a mandritto to the face. You could also throw a riverso<sup>3</sup> retreating backward with the left foot. Or extend a thrust<sup>4</sup> to the enemy’s hand. Or with the left foot forward raise a falso<sup>5</sup> into the air, and in this tempo extend a thrust in the gesture of a montante passing forward soon with your right foot and turning a tramazzone which falls into porta di ferro stretta.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/37|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/38|1|lbl=14v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[35] '''Chapter 12, of the counters to the said offenses in guardia di sotto braccio.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>As the enemy throws a riverso<sup>1</sup> to your face, you will pass forward with your left foot toward his right side throwing in that tempo a riverso at him toward his right temple.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he makes a falso<sup>2</sup> with a following mandritto, you will raise the false edge of your sword against him, and during his throwing of the mandritto, casting your right foot behind your left in large pace you will give a mezzo mandritto to his sword, placing it<ref>I.e. yours.</ref> into cingiara porta di ferro, and then with your right foot you will immediately pass forward into large pace, pushing a thrust into the enemy’s face, and throwing thereafter a mandritto into the shins of his legs.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he throws a riverso<sup>3</sup> while retreating backwards, you will step forward with your left foot, therewith throwing a riverso to his face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he extends a thrust<sup>4</sup> toward your sword hand, promptly casting your right foot behind your left in large pace you will go with your sword into coda lunga alta, and if perchance he throws a falso<sup>5</sup> going into guardia alta, you will immediately go into the same guard, and while he wishes to stick a thrust in the gesture of a montante, withdrawing your right foot behind your left, you will go into cingiara porta di ferro, and if he throws a tramazzone, returning forward with your right foot into large pace, you will parry that with a falso, giving him a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/38|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/39|1|lbl=15r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[36] '''Chapter 13, of the offenses that can be made against the guardia di porta di ferro stretta.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can turn a tramazzone,<sup>1</sup> or step forward with your left foot extending a thrust<sup>2</sup> to the face, and then pass forward with your right foot, turning two tramazzoni. You can also pretend to throw a tramazzone,<sup>3</sup> yet give him a riverso to his thigh.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You could moreover extend a thrust<sup>4</sup> to his face, and passing forward with your left foot pretend to give him a riverso to the head, and give him thereby a mandritto to the head or to the leg as you wish.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Or extend a thrust<sup>5</sup> with your left leg forward, and then stepping forward with your right foot into large pace, throw a riverso from low to high to his arms, and immediately thereafter you will turn a mandritto to his head or leg, and for your protection you will do a riverso to his sword hand, casting your right foot behind your left in large pace; and this is the parry of the last two blows.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/39|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[37] '''Chapter 14, of the counters that can be made in the preceding porta di ferro stretta.'''
 +
 
 +
<p>When the enemy wants to hit you with a tramazzone,<sup>1</sup> in the turning that he makes of his fist, you will turn a falso toward his left side, thereby shielding yourself from that, and throwing at him with the true edge in his face; but if he passes forward with his left foot to give you a thrust<sup>2</sup> in the face, you will hit such a thrust so as to end in guardia di faccia; and while he turns the tramazzone, lowering your sword a little you will go into guardia di faccia, thereby shielding yourself from that with the true edge, and you will immediately pass into large pace toward his right side with your left foot, striking him in the right temple with a riverso in such a manner that your right leg follows behind your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he pretends to give you a tramazzone,<sup>3</sup> you will go with your sword into guardia di faccia and as he throws the riverso to your thigh, immediately casting your right foot behind your left you will throw a riverso to his sword arm.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But as he extends the thrust<sup>4</sup> with his left foot forward in order to strike you in the face, you will ward it with a falso; and if he pretends to do a riverso, against him you will make a half turn of your fist, and as the enemy turns a mandritto, you will, in opposition, throw a mezzo mandritto to the said fist; and when he extends a thrust<sup>5</sup> with his left foot in order to give it to you in the face, casting your right foot behind your left, and diagonally, you will go into cingiara porta di ferro.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if the enemy steps with his right foot making a riverso in order to strike you in the head with a mandritto, parrying his mandritto with a falso you will pass forward with your right foot, throwing an answering mandritto to his face.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/39|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/40|1|lbl=15v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[38] '''Chapter 15, of the offenses against porta di ferro larga.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can do a falso<sup>1</sup> and a riverso. Or raise a falso<sup>2</sup> and throw a mandritto to the face so that your left foot drives your foot forward.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can also throw two thrusts;<sup>3</sup> the one, passing with your left foot toward his right side, straight into his face; the other, passing thereafter toward his left side with your right foot, and withdrawing your hand back, you will extend the thrust into his flank, and so that you can more freely perform such a thrust, when you wish to perform it you will block his sword with your buckler, and in such a way that your left foot follows your right, and having done so, you will hit him in the head with a fendente.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/40|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/41|1|lbl=16r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[39] You can also step forward with your right foot, and throw a riverso<sup>4</sup> to his head, or you can raise a falso<sup>5</sup> until in guardia di faccia, thereafter turning a tramazzone. You will also have the power to throw a falso<sup>6</sup> at him, into guardia alta. Or throw a penetrating thrust<sup>7</sup> at him, following it with a tramazzone.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/41|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[40] '''Chapter 16, of the counters to the aforesaid offenses in guardia di porta di ferro larga.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>When the enemy throws a falso<sup>1</sup> or riverso, the falso you will hit simultaneously with a falso, and in defense of the riverso, you will turn a mandritto to his left temple.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he raises a falso,<sup>2</sup> throwing a mandritto, immediately pretending similarly to reach him with a falso you will draw your sword to yourself with your fist and extend a thrust to his face in that tempo in which the enemy will throw the mandritto, and then with all speed you will step toward his right side with your left foot, throwing a riverso to his head.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he throws two thrusts,<sup>3</sup> as he extends the first, you will immediately ward it with the false edge of your sword, and during the stepping that he will make with his right foot in order to give you the second, you will parry that with the true edge.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he turns the fendente to your head, you will ward that in guardia di faccia, throwing a riverso to his thigh, and when<ref>This counter has no antecedent in Ch. 15.</ref> he passes toward his right side with his left foot to give you a falso in the face, you will ward that with a falso. But as he passes with his right foot to give you a riverso,<sup>4</sup> you will immediately go into guardia di testa, parrying that, and throwing thereafter a mandritto to his face or leg as you wish, and if he throws a falso<sup>5</sup> in order to strike you in the face, you will go with your sword into guardia di faccia, warding that. But if he turns the tramazzoni, you will go with your sword into guardia di faccia, and thereby will be safe. And when he throws a falso<sup>6</sup> that goes into guardia alta, avoiding that you will allow it to go into empty space, and when he throws the stoccata,<sup>7</sup> you will ward it with a falso, but if he throws the tramazzone, stepping with your left foot toward his right side you will throw a tramazzone to his sword arm so that your right leg follows your left.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/41|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/42|1|lbl=16v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[41] '''Chapter 17, of the offenses that can be done against cingiara porta di ferro.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Being in cingiara porta di ferro, you can extend a thrust<sup>1</sup> to the face with your right foot [stepping] forward, and thereafter a mandrittoa against your enemy who was also in such a guard, or after you have extended the thrust, you will throw a riversob to his leg.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Or, also having done the said thrust, you will be able to pass toward his right side with your left foot, and putting your buckler under his sword hand, you will throw a mandrittoc to his leg so that your right foot follows your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You could also extend two thrusts,<sup>2</sup> one with the right foot forward, promptly passing toward his right side with your left foot, and thereafter you will have withdrawn your fist somewhat toward yourself, and you will extend the other thrust into his face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can moreover raise a falso<sup>3</sup> into guardia di faccia, passing forward with your right foot, and strike him with a mandritto. Or extend a thrust<sup>4</sup> followed by a tramazzone,<sup>a</sup> also with the right foot forward. Or, after you will have made the thrust, pretending to give him a riverso,<sup>b</sup> you will strike him with a mandritto. Or follow the said thrust with another penetrating thrust,<sup>c</sup> drawing your fist back in the making thereof.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/42|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/43|1|lbl=17r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[42] '''Chapter 18, of the counters to the offenses of the aforesaid guardia cingiara porta di ferro.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>As the enemy extends a thrust<sup>1</sup> with the right foot, you will parry that with a falso, and when he wants to strike you with a mandritto,<sup>a</sup> casting your left foot behind your right, you will give him a mezzo mandritto to his sword arm. But if he is extending you will ward that with the false edge, and as you see the riverso<sup>b</sup> approaching your face, passing forward with your right foot into guardia di testa you will protect yourself, striking him thereafter with a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he extends the thrust with his right foot forward, passing also forward similarly with your right foot you will ward that with the false edge. But during the passing forward that he will make with his left foot in order to strike you in the leg in the traverse with a mandritto,<sup>c</sup> immediately casting your right foot behind your left you will strike him in the sword hand with a mezzo mandritto, and if he extends the two thrusts,<sup>2</sup> you will hit the first with the false edge, passing forward with your right foot, and the second with the true edge, stepping forward thereafter with your left foot, and striking him with a falso to the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he raises the falso<sup>3</sup> in order to give you a mandritto, having his right foot forward, casting your left foot behind your right and going into porta di ferro larga, as he lets the mandritto fall toward your head, you will ward that with the false edge, giving him a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he extends a thrust4 with his right foot forward followed by a tramazzone, you will similarly shield yourself from that with the false edge, and when he turns the tramazzone,<sup>a</sup> you will recover yourself into guardia di faccia. And when he will wish to extend a thrust with his right leg forward, you will hit it with the false edge without stepping.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/43|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/44|1|lbl=17v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[43] And when he wishes to pretend to throw a riverso,<sup>b</sup> passing forward with your right foot you will turn your true edge against such pretense.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And he wishing to throw a mandritto to your head, you will go into guardia di testa defending yourself from that, and giving him a similar blow to the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he extends a thrust to your face with his right foot forward, without moving your feet you will turn a tramazzone over that.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/44|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[] And if he extends the penetrating thrust,<sup>c</sup> passing forward into large pace with your right foot you will ward that with the false edge, extending to him a good one to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/44|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[44] '''Chapter 19, of the offenses that would have to be done in coda lunga alta with the left foot forward.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can step forward with your right foot and do a falso,<sup>1</sup> and a mandritto. Or passing also with the same foot do a falso<sup>2</sup> and pretend to do a mandritto, but rather throw a riverso at him. You can also, after you will have passed with the aforesaid foot, extend a thrust<sup>3</sup> and throw a mandritto. Or passing also with the same foot, throw a thrust<sup>4</sup> followed by a riverso.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/44|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/45|1|lbl=18r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[45] As well, drawing your left foot near to your right, and next passing forward with your right, you can strike him with a fendente.<sup>5</sup> Or with your right foot [stepping] forward you can extend a thrust<sup>6</sup> followed by a tramazzone.<sup>a</sup></p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Or throwing such a thrust into his face with the aforesaid foot forward, you will be able to pass toward his right side with your left foot, and putting your buckler under his sword you will throw a mandritto<sup>b</sup> to this leg in such a manner that your left foot follows behind your right.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/45|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[46] '''Chapter 20, of the counters that can be done to the aforesaid offenses of coda lunga alta.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>When the enemy, passing forward with his right foot, will do a falso<sup>1</sup> and a mandritto, without stepping you will assume cingiara porta di ferro, and when he will throw the mandritto, you will pass forward with your right foot, hitting that with the false edge, and immediately throw a mandritto to his face or leg as you wish. But when he does a falso<sup>2</sup> and pretends to do a mandritto, passing forward with your right foot you will go into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/45|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[47] And in the turning of a riverso that he makes to your right thigh, passing forward with your left foot, and turning your point toward the ground you will protect yourself, extending immediately thereafter a thrust to his face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if he extends a thrust<sup>3</sup> with his right leg forward in order to give you a mandritto, as he extends the thrust you will pass forward with your right foot warding that with the true edge. And when he will wish to strike you with a mandritto, you will push a thrust into his face without moving your feet.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But when he passes with the same right foot in order to extend a thrust<sup>4</sup> and turn a riverso, during the extension of the thrust that he makes, passing similarly with your right foot you will ward yourself from that with your true edge.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he wants to throw a riverso to your leg, you will cast your right foot back to the right, striking him in his sword arm with a riverso.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And when he makes a change of foot in order to give you a fendente,<sup>5</sup> you will immediately recover yourself into porta di ferro.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/45|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/46|1|lbl=18v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[48] And as he passes with his right foot in order to strike you with a fendente, you will arrange yourself into guardia di testa, warding that and throwing a mandritto to his face or thigh as you wish. But if, with the same foot, he extends a thrust<sup>6</sup> in order to give you a tramazzone,<sup>a</sup> you will hit that with the false edge, and passing toward his left side with your right foot you will throw a mandritto to his head, so that your left foot must follow behind your right. But if he extends a thrust with the same foot forward, passing thereafter with his left foot in order to give you a mandritto to the leg, as he extends the thrust, you will hit it with the false edge of your sword. And when he wishes to pass in order to strike you with a mandritto,<sup>b</sup> casting your left foot to the rear you will hit him in his sword hand with a mezzo mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/46|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[49] '''Chapter 21, of the offenses that can be done in coda lunga stretta, finding oneself with the right foot forward.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>With the left foot [stepping] forward you will be able to extend a thrust,<sup>1</sup> and then passing with your right foot give him a mandritto.<sup>a</sup> Or, also making the aforesaid thrust, you can step forward with your right foot and turn a tramazzone.<sup>b</sup></p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Or, after you will have extended the said thrust, passing forward with your right foot, you will pretend to give him a mandritto,<sup>c</sup> striking him nonetheless with a riverso to the face or the leg. You will also be able, after the said thrust is extended, to pass forward with your right foot, throwing a fendented to his head.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/46|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/47|1|lbl=19r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[50] '''Chapter 22, of the counters that can be done in coda lunga stretta, with the right foot forward.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>As he extends the thrust<sup>1</sup> with his left foot forward for the reason of striking you with a mandritto, you will hit it with the false edge. And wanting to offend you with the mandritto,<sup>a</sup> you will strike his sword hand with a mezzo mandritto without stepping.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/47|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" | <p>[51] But if after he has extended the aforesaid thrust he wants to give you a tramazzone,<sup>b</sup> you will block that with your true edge, and thereafter in order to be safe from the tramazzone you will settle yourself into guardia di faccia without moving your foot.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if after the previously named thrust he pretends to throw a mandritto,<sup>c</sup> but throws a riverso instead, for defense from the thrust, in the manner of your enemy you will extend a similar one, so that both swords encounter each other by their true edges, and for the warding of the mandritto, without any movement you will assume the guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And in the riverso that he makes to your face, making a half turn of your hand you will hit that, throwing a mandritto to his leg or face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if the aforesaid riverso comes to your leg, immediately going forward toward his right side with your left foot you will extend a thrust to his face, letting your right foot go behind to the left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if, after the thrust, he wants to strike you in the head with a fendente,<sup>d</sup> in order to ward yourself from the thrust you will hit his sword hand with a mezzo mandritto, and for defense from the fendente you will immediately go into guardia di testa, and thus protected, in response you will give him a mandritto to the face or legs as you wish.
 +
| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/47|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|}
 +
{{master end}}
 +
 
 +
{{master begin
 +
| title = Second Book (Sword and Buckler)
 +
| width = 90em
 +
}}
 +
{| class="master"
 +
|-
 +
! <p>Illustrations</p>
 +
! <p>{{rating|B}}<br/>by [[W. Jherek Swanger]]</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| [[file:Manciolino 4.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Second Book.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[1] The ten famous guards and the offenses that can originate from them being sufficiently treated of in the above book, in this following one it appears to me that you would diligently wish for speech offering instruction in the sword and small buckler, in three masterful plays, or assaults; and as much as the students should be grateful, so should the body, legs, and hands gaily and freely render thanks; nor is it to be marveled at a bit, why I say "the legs", for one who will not take delight in stepping in tempo and in the way of which we will teach, and have taught, will never be able to report of grace nor victory from the play; indeed not, because of such ornament as are rich clothes to the charming and beautiful Nymphs that cavort on Mt. Menalo or in the Lyceum, such is the grace imparted to the blows of the glittering sword, to which, when deprived of laudable footsteps, such disgrace is brought, that it were as if serene night were widowed of the twinkling stars; and how can the candidate be victorious, where genteel grace is lacking? Accordingly neither will we reasonably hold one to have won if he triumphs through luck, and if a crude peasant has thrown unruly blows at him, neither will he have lost who has done his duty; it is a thing more praiseworthy, according to men of understanding, to lose graciously than to win through luck, devoid of any grace, as in vile disgrace sometimes fortunate luck does hold the place; thus always in overbearing grace does the longed for victory reside, because one concludes that the gracious man can never lose, although through misfortune he were struck.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But before we begin to speak of the proposition, we will teach how to come to the play, not only so that good players are made apt in attacking and defending, but moreover to give good form to their blows, interposed with smooth motions of their bodies.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|48|lbl=19v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/49|1|lbl=20r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[2] '''The First Assault'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Firstly, opposite your enemy, you will place yourself at one end of the hall or of some other spacious field, arranging your body over your legs, and your sword and buckler in your hands, in such a manner that each movement, each act, each gesture is full of grace. And wanting to come towards your enemy, you will pass diagonally toward your right side with your right foot, and in such passage you will give a blow with your false edge to the dome of your buckler, putting your sword into guardia alta, and your buckler must lie toward your face in the manner of a mirror, and passing forward thereafter with your left foot, you will touch your buckler again, arranging your sword into guardia di testa, the buckler falling along your left thigh, and then you will step forward with your right foot, lifting your sword into guardia alta, and then passing with your left foot you will do a montante followed by an over-arm mandritto.<ref>I.e. a mandritto that goes over your own left arm.</ref> Then you will go with your sword into guardia di testa, and stepping forward with your right foot you will touch the dome of your buckler with the false edge, and you will do a montante that rises into guardia alta, and after that you will embellish the play, which is done by sending forth first your right foot, then your left, and cutting the edge of your buckler with a fendente so that having done this the sword must fall and immediately re-ascend to the rear into guardia alta. And drawing your left foot near your right, you will subsequently retouch your buckler and then you will step forward with your left foot into large pace, replacing your sword into guardia di testa.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, passing forward similarly with your right, you will hit the dome with a falso, and do a montante into guardia alta, throwing your right foot alongside your left, so that the buckler guards your head well, and thus far to this point is contained the fashion whereby you must come to find your enemy. And do not forget, reader, such embellishment of play, because in more places in the present assault we will refer to it without redescribing it.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But when you will be already near your enemy the blows will no more be committed to the wind. You will pass forward with your right foot into large pace, throwing a mandritto to his head that goes over-arm, and return a riverso making your sword fall into coda lunga stretta. Then you will make your buckler a good defender of your head, immediately returning a montante that goes into guardia alta, where it will behoove you to throw your right foot along your left. our right foot along your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And then, passing with your right foot, you will throw a fendente that ends in guardia di faccia, and you will thereafter pass with your left foot toward your right side, in which tempo you will throw a tramazzone falling into cingiara porta di ferro. And you will oppose your buckler to your head. Then passing with your right foot into large pace, you will make a falso traversale to your enemy’s face, so that your sword subsequently rises into guardia alta, throwing an overarm mandritto to the head or face, and retiring your right foot near your left; and then you will pass again with your right foot into large pace, casting your sword fist high and throwing a mandritto to the face, which goes under-arm. Then redraw your right foot even with your left, making your buckler good.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And then, stepping forward similarly with your right you will do a falso that ends in guardia di faccia, followed by two tramazzoni, so that the last will have its finish in porta di ferro stretta.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And from here, throwing your right foot to the left, you will do a montante into guardia alta, and thus done, embellish the play as has been instructed above.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then passing forward with your right, you will throw an over-arm mandritto, and the right foot near the left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will return forward with the same right, making two riversi, one to the face, and the other to the thigh, and letting go an overhand stoccata that goes over-arm, you will withdraw your right foot near your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will step with your left foot, extending a punta riversa into your enemy’s face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then with your right foot forward in large pace you will throw a riverso from low to high, and you will immediately turn a falso to the left temple, and thrust thereafter a riverso stuck in the right side of the face.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And you will immediately cast your right foot in large pace behind your left, and you will throw a mandritto to end in guardia di faccia. Then you will make a half turn of your hand so that your sword lies in coda lunga alta, making your buckler a good defender of your head.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will draw your left foot near your right, and pass forward thereafter with your right, extending a thrust to his face, followed by a riverso to the thigh, and this done, your sword must fall into coda lunga stretta. Then you will pass forward with the left foot, extending a thrust to the face, and crossing forward afterwards with your right foot, you will therewith turn a tramazzone to the head that falls into porta di ferro stretta, defending your head well with your buckler; afterwards you will do a montante, reducing your sword into guardia alta and throwing your right foot alongside your left, and here you will embellish the play in the already described fashion.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And then you will throw an over-arm mandritto with your right foot forward, and having done the blow, you will retire it even with your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will pass forward with the same right, throwing a stoccata riversa to the face, and immediately stepping toward his right side with your left foot, you will turn a tramazzone to the face, and then crossing forward with your right foot, you will turn another tramazzone, also to the face, and thereafter a thrust, accompanied with your buckler into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will turn the third tramazzone to the head, which falls into porta di ferro stretta, and you will do a montante into guardia alta, drawing your right foot near your left, and (here as above) you will embellish the play. Which done, you will make a close to the half sword, that is, you will step forward with your right foot into large pace, throwing a mandritto below your arm, and then reducing your right foot even with your left, and thereafter you will return to large pace with the right foot forward, making a traversed falso to finish in guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then passing similarly with your left, you will make a half turn of your fist followed by a thrust, which you must thrust into the face, and then you will cross toward his left side with your right foot, therewith pretending to give him a mandritto to his left side, in which tempo your right leg must return to the rear, extending a riverso to the right temple and then similarly retiring the left you will strike the enemy with a mezzo mandritto which goes into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Following which, you will put your right foot alongside your left, settling yourself into guardia alta, from whence you will render the play beautiful as is described above.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And having thus furnished the play, you will make a withdrawal back no less beautiful than the coming to play which was done in the first part of the present assault, which you will do by returning your right foot to the rear in such a way that it goes behind the left, and in that tempo you will throw an under-arm mandritto; then similarly returning your left to the rear you will execute a montante from your left side so that your sword rises into guardia alta, then you will execute another montante, from your right side, returning your sword into guardia alta and drawing your right foot likewise near your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will throw an under-arm mandritto, retiring back with your right foot, and then you will make a half turn of your body toward your right side, and in this turning your sword must go out from under your arm, turning it once about the upper part of your head so that the sword will lie in the guardia di Alicorno,<ref>Unicorn.</ref> that is, with the fist high and the point aimed at the ground. Then you will cast your left foot back into large pace, extending a thrust from low to high, risen into guardia alta, and drawing your right foot even with your left, and thus will you be returned whence you began.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/49|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|50|lbl=20v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|51|lbl=21r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|52|lbl=21v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|53|lbl=22r|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/54|1|lbl=22v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[3] '''The Second Assault'''
 +
 
 +
<p>It must already be plain to the reader of the previously described first assault, that each of them is divided into three parts.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The first has the fashion of coming to the play. The second, of the playing. The third, of returning from the play; and as the second has the offensive blows, thus do the first and the third have the fanciful and the playful.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Beginning, therefore, the second assault at its first part, which is going to the play, I say that similarly you will settle yourself in one corner of the room as you did in your previous graceful arrangement, and you will cross toward your right side with your right foot, striking the dome of your buckler with the false edge, and raising your sword into guardia alta, so that your buckler is turned toward your face in the manner of a mirror, and thence you will pass forward with your left foot into large pace, making a great leap toward your enemy, in which tempo your sword must make a tramazzone into porta di ferro stretta, and thus you will abide with your feet even.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will immediately cross forward with your right foot into large pace, making a montante into guardia alta, and here you will embellish the play, not in the fashion in which you did in the first assault, for each of these three assaults has separated its embellishment, which it pleases us to name thus, and for the entirety of the play in which it is found, from the beginning, it is licit to speak of again.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The embellishing of this second assault will be, accordingly, that cutting with a fendente to the edge of your buckler which falls into cingiara porta di ferro, and throwing the right foot to the rear in the same tempo, you will retreat with your left foot behind your right, and therewith you will strike the dome of your buckler. Then you will do a montante that ends in guardia alta, drawing your right foot even with your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, wanting at last to assault your enemy, you will lead your left foot forward into large pace, throwing a thrust in the gesture of a montante, which goes to end in the face of the enemy, and immediately passing forward with the right foot again into large pace, you will throw a penetrating riverso to the face, redoubling two tramazzoni to the head, so that the last falls into porta di ferro stretta, and you will immediately do a montante into guardia alta, drawing your right foot near your left, and then passing forward with your right foot you will throw an over-arm mandritto, recoiling similarly your right foot near your left.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then stepping forward with your left, you will do a mezzo riverso to end in guardia di faccia. And pretending to do another riverso, you will carry your right foot forward, giving him moreover a show as if to strike him in the head with a mandritto, and during this show, crossing with your left foot you will stick him in the face with a thrust in the gesture of a montante.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, with the right foot forward, you will throw a riverso from low to high, and a mandritto going over your arm, and thereafter casting your right foot behind your left you will deliver a riverso to his sword hand, so that your buckler is a good defender of your head, and that your sword is taken into coda lunga [alta]. Then with your left foot forward you will settle yourself with your sword in guardia di testa, and then passing with your right foot toward his left side, you will throw a fendente to his head, in which tempo your left leg must follow behind your right.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will recover your sword into porta di ferro stretta, going thereafter into guardia di faccia, and from here you will guide your left forward toward his left side, so that your right leg follows behind your left, and having done this you will throw a riverso to his face.</p>
 +
 
 +
Then you will extend a stoccata, lifting yourself gracefully with a hop backwards, and passing forward from here with your right you will do a montante into guardia alta, and will draw your right foot behind your left, which, having done, you will then embellish the play in the fashion described a little above.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And resuming the play with your right foot forward you will throw a fendente to end in guardia di faccia, recoiling your right foot even with your left, and then with your left forward you will throw a tramazzone to the head, and placing your right forward thereafter, you will make a show of turning another tramazzone, but you will strike his leg opposite you with a mandritto instead, so that your sword goes under your arm, and your buckler to the defense of your head. Then you will throw a riverso from low to high to your enemy’s hand, hopping gaily back so that after finishing the leap you will find yourself with even feet in coda lunga alta.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then crossing forward with your right you will do a montante into guardia alta. Then throwing a tramazzone into porta di ferro larga, entirely uncovered, you will remain alert, so that if perchance your enemy wants to strike you in the head, immediately casting your left foot forward and letting your sword go into coda lunga [alta] you will take the said blow with your buckler, and you will respond to him with a falso across his left temple in such a way that your sword goes under your arm.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Casting thereafter your left foot behind your right you will throw a riverso to his face, falling into coda lunga so that your head is well guarded by your buckler. Then, with your right foot retired to the rear, you will extend a thrust to his face, and then returning forward with the same right foot you will redouble two tramazzoni upon each other, of which the last falls into porta di ferro stretta, following with a montante into guardia alta, and here for the third time you will embellish the play in the aforesaid fashion.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Crossing forward with your right next, you will cut a tramazzone fallen into porta di ferro larga. And you will cause your apposed buckler to guard your head well. Then drawing your left foot near your right you will do a falso from low to high going into guardia di faccia. And casting your right foot immediately forward, you will throw a mandritto traversale to the face so that your sword falls into porta di ferro.<ref>Not specified.</ref></p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You will then go into guardia di testa with your sword, and will throw a mandritto to his leg, going under your arm, and immediately recoiling your right foot to the rear, you will throw a riverso to his sword hand in such fashion that it falls into coda lunga, and stepping forward from here with your right, you will extend a thrust to his face, and as he raises his sword to block that, you will immediately place your buckler under that, and in that tempo you will pass toward his right side with your left foot, giving him a mandritto to the leg, and making your right foot then immediately follow behind your left, and thereafter retiring your left behind your right into large pace, you will make a half turn of your hand, so that your sword is finally reposed into coda lunga stretta.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will extend a thrust to the face without moving your feet, and immediately after having done this, you will step toward his right side with your left foot, throwing a riverso to his right temple so that thereafter your right foot follows behind your left, and that your buckler is a good guardian of your head. Then you will extend a stoccata into your enemy's face, lifting yourself to the rear with an easy leap, causing your sword to be reduced into coda lunga alta.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/54|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|55|lbl=23r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|56|lbl=23v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|57|lbl=24r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|58|lbl=24v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/59|1|lbl=25r|p=1}}
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|-
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|
 +
| <p>[4] Passing forward then with your right foot, you will extend another thrust to the face. Pretending to strike him in the head with a mandritto, nonetheless you will strike him across the right temple with a riverso, dropping your sword into coda lunga.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will throw a falso traversale to the sword hand, that goes over-arm, and raising the sword hand into the air, you will throw a mandritto to the face going under-arm. Then immediately drawing your right foot back you will strike his sword hand with a riverso.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then stepping forward with the right foot you will extend a thrust to the face, and pretending to throw a riverso to the face, you will give him a mandritto across the left temple, reducing your sword into porta di ferro stretta, where you will shield your head well with your buckler. Then withdrawing your right foot back you will make a half turn of your fist, recovering your sword into coda lunga stretta, and here cutting the enemy's hand with a mezzo mandritto falling into cingiara porta di ferro without moving your feet, thereafter you will step forward with your right foot and will extend a thrust to the face, redoubling two tramazzoni to the head, and making your buckler good, and then you will do a montante into guardia alta, retiring your right foot even with your left. Having furnished such, you will embellish the play in the fashion already described above thrice.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/59|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[] Then making a close to the half sword, which is done by throwing a tramazzone that falls into porta di ferro larga, you will immediately advance your left foot forward, extending a thrust to the right side of the face, and as he raises in order to protect himself from the said thrust, taking his sword to the inside with your left hand, you will throw a mandritto to his head or wherever it seems better to you, and thus you will have satisfactorily furnished the play.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But wanting, as is custom, to return gracefully from the play, going with your back to the rear, in such going you will cast your right foot back, throwing a mandritto under-arm. Then similarly retiring your left foot to the rear, you will execute a montante from your left side, and another from your right, in which your sword goes into guardia alta. Then casting your right foot back another time you will throw a mandritto underarm. Then leaning your weight over your fixed feet toward your right side you will throw a riverso so that your sword is turned overhead, lowering that into guardia di Alicorno, which has been described above. Subsequently, casting your left foot back, you will extend a thrust that goes into guardia alta, drawing your right foot near your left, and thus you will be returned to the first place from whence you began to come to the play.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/59|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/60|1|lbl=25v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] '''The Third Assault'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Not otherwise than was described above in the two previously discussed assaults, finding yourself with every genteel manner at one end of the fencing hall, and wanting to assault your enemy, you will pass diagonally with your right foot toward your right side, executing a molinetto, that is, a circling turn of the sword outside the arm, and then similarly passing with the left foot you will do a riverso from low to high that goes over your arm. Then stepping forward with your right you will throw two riversi so that at the end of the last one your sword will lie in guardia alta. Then you will step forward with your left, retouching your buckler, and reducing your sword into guardia di testa. Then similarly crossing forward with your right you will do a montante in the gesture of a thrust, that is resolved into guardia alta, and in this tempo done thus, you will withdraw your right foot near your left, and having done such, you will embellish the play, not as in the two previous fashions, as it is already plain that each assault has a separate embellishment, and this one is thus: that you will cut the edge of your buckler, throwing your right foot back in this tempo, and making your sword successively fall and rise into guardia alta, whence you will make another molinetto to the inside of the head with your wrist, that is, a revolution in the manner of a circled turn, and then you will draw your left foot near your right, retouching your buckler with a good blow. Then you will step your left foot forward, setting yourself into guardia di testa, and crossing forward with your right foot, you will do a montante in the gesture of a thrust, recovering your sword into guardia alta, and in this tempo you will draw your right foot near the left.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/60|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/61|1|lbl=26r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[] And wanting at last to come to blows with your enemy, you will pass forward with your right foot and will throw an over-arm mandritto, recovering similarly your right foot near the left, and immediately returning the said right foot forward, you will do a mezzo riverso to end in guardia di faccia, and then you will throw a fendente overhead, followed by two tramazzoni, making the last fall into porta di ferro stretta, and here the buckler must make itself a good guardian of your head. Then you will throw a montante into guardia alta, recoiling your right foot near the left, and (following this) pass forward with your right, and you will throw a mezzo mandritto to end in guardia di faccia, and thereafter you will strike him in the head with two tramazzoni, of which you will do the last for pretend, that is, you will make a pretense of giving him a tramazzone, and yet you will strike him in the leg with a mandritto, dropping your sword into porta di ferro larga, and then you will raise a falso to end in guardia di faccia, and then retiring your right foot to the rear, you will assume coda lunga alta; that accomplished, you will draw your left foot near your right, and then you will step forward with the same foot, extending a thrust to the face, and then pretending to give him a tramazzone to the head, you will strike him in the thigh with a riverso, driving a thrust into his face followed by a tramazzone falling into porta di ferro stretta, defending your head well with your buckler; and thereafter drawing your right foot near your left, you will do a montante into guardia alta, and here you will embellish the play in the aforesaid fashion.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then stepping forward with your right foot, you will follow it with the left in a similar step, sending a thrust from beneath upwards into the enemy’s face, and promptly opposing your right foot to your left again, you will strike him in the arms with a ridoppio riverso. Then you will throw a fendente to the head which falls into porta di ferro stretta, and then crossing forward with your left, you will extend a shrewd thrust to his face, and as he raises to ward it, you will strike him in the thigh opposite you with a riverso, going into guardia di testa, and returning your left foot to the rear, you will strike him in the sword hand with a mezzo mandritto falling into porta di ferro larga. Then, pretending to hit his sword with your false edge, as he wishes to block it, you will thrust your sword from beneath his into his face, and if he wants to protect himself from this thrust, you will immediately strike him in the right thigh with a riverso. Then for your safety you will strike his sword hand with a falso followed by a mandritto to the face, that falls into porta di ferro larga.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will push a thrust into his same sword hand in such fashion that your sword hand goes covered by that of your buckler. And then you will immediately redouble two tramazzoni to his head, and executing a montante into guardia alta you will draw your right foot even with your left, and embellish the play in the above fashion.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Afterwards you will step across with your left foot, and throwing a mandritto in pretense of descending, you will swiftly propel your right forward, placing your false edge beneath his sword. Thereafter, passing forward with your left foot, you will make a turn of your hand, extending a thrust into his face, and then carrying your right forward into large pace, you will redouble two tramazzoni to his head, of which the last must go into porta di ferro stretta, so that your buckler guards your head well, and afterwards you will do a montante into guardia alta, retiring your right foot feet even with your left. And passing forward with your right, you will throw a mandritto which will go over-arm to his leg, and similarly crossing with your left foot toward his right side, you will throw a riverso to his face. And then you will make your sword fall into coda lunga, letting your right leg go behind your left. Then you will cross forward with your right foot, throwing a falso from low to high, to end in guardia di faccia, and immediately pretending to strike him with a riverso to this right temple, you will reach his forward leg with a mandritto going under-arm, so that your buckler guards your head well.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And following this, you will draw your right foot near your left, and stepping forward with your right foot you will throw a riverso to his face which falls into coda lunga stretta, and making then a montante into guardia alta you will draw your right foot near your left, embellishing the play in the above said fashion.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will pass forward with your right foot, striking him with an over-arm mandritto in such a way that your right shoulder is placed with its point toward the breast of your enemy. Then throwing a riverso at him in the manner of a fendente that falls into coda lunga stretta you will strike is sword hand with a falso returned over-arm, and thereafter raising your sword hand into guardia alta, you will throw a mandritto at him under-arm, recovering your right foot near your left, and immediately stepping toward his right side with your right foot, you will strike him with a falso going to end in guardia di faccia; then, driving your left foot forward, you will pretend to give him a riverso to his right temple, but promptly crossing toward the left side of your enemy with your right foot, you will give him a fendente to the face which falls into porta di ferro larga in such fashion that your right leg will be the follower of your left to the rear, and here you will make your buckler guard your head well.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then retiring your left foot near your right, you will propel a falso to end in guardia di faccia, and then crossing forward with your right foot, you will go with your sword into guardia alta, and you will immediately strike him in the head with a fendente followed by two tramazzoni to the face, and your buckler defending your head well, you will next do a montante into guardia alta, drawing your right foot near your left. Then stepping forward with your right foot you will throw a fendente to end in guardia di faccia; doing similarly with your left, but towards his right side, you will throw a tramazzone at him falling into cingiara porta di ferro, and from here you will pass with your right foot, making a show of giving him a tramazzone to the head; nonetheless you will strike him in the leg with a mandritto that goes under your arm. Then retiring your right foot to the rear you will strike his sword hand with a riverso, in such fashion that your head is well protected by your buckler. Then stepping forward with your right foot you will do a falso to end in guardia di faccia, and then immediately pretending to strike him with a mandritto, you will reach him with a riverso, passing forward with your left foot. Then you will retire your left foot to the rear, throwing a mandritto in that tempo that goes into guardia di faccia, and casting your right foot back next, you will make a turn of your hand, setting yourself into coda lunga alta; then, recovering your left foot near your left,<ref>N.B. original says “…piede manco appresso il sinestro”, i.e. “left foot near your left”—this should be “left foot near your right”.</ref> you will next pass forward with your right foot, extending a thrust to the face, followed by a fendente which does not go through guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then going immediately into guardia di testa you will throw a mandritto at him that goes under your arm, reducing your right foot near your left. Then, stepping forward with your left foot toward the enemy’s right side, you will throw a falso from low to high, to end in guardia di faccia; crossing subsequently forward with your right, you will go with your sword into guardia alta, throwing a fendente to his head, which will descend into porta di ferro stretta, so that your buckler is a good defender of your head. Afterwards, you will do a montante into guardia alta, retiring your right foot near your left and embellishing the play, as was said above.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, driving your right foot forward, you will throw a less than full mandritto over your arm, and that done, you will pass with your left foot toward his right side, turning your buckler over your hand, and going with your sword into cingiara porta di ferro, and immediately passing forward with your right foot, you will hit the enemy’s sword with a falso that goes into guardia alta, and immediately throwing a mandritto to the leg, that goes under your arm, you will make your buckler guard your head well, and then, casting your right foot back, you will strike his sword hand with a riverso, so that that falls into coda lunga larga.<ref>Note that this guard is not described in the text—see [[Achilles Marozzo|Marozzo]], Cap. 143, for description and illustration.</ref> Then, drawing your left foot near your right, you will pass forward with your right, and will extend a thrust to the face. Thereafter, passing with your left toward your right side, you will pretend to give him a riverso; nevertheless, you will pass with your right toward his left side, throwing a fendente to his face in such a way that your sword descends into porta di ferro larga, and the left foot follows behind the right.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then withdrawing your left foot near your right,<ref>This action may describe a gathering step forward with the left, as the left foot is presumably already to the rear.</ref> you will do a falso gone to end in guardia di faccia, accompanying it with your buckler, then immediately stepping forward with your right foot, you will throw a riverso to the face that falls into coda lunga stretta, and you will make your buckler defend your head well. Then, passing forward with the left, you will stick a thrust into his face, and doing similarly with the right, you will redouble two tramazzoni to his head, of which the last falls into porta di ferro stretta, and subsequently you will do a montante into guardia alta, drawing your right foot near your left, and embellishing the play in the fashion already described above.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then you will make a close to half sword, that is, you will pass forward with your right without moving your sword or buckler, and then you will step forward to large pace with your left foot, extending a thrust to him that goes in the gesture of a montante, to end in guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, crossing forward with the right foot, you will pretend to strike him in the head with a mandritto, giving that to him across the legs instead; then you will make yourself be a little bit beneath your sword by going into guardia di faccia, and here you will protect yourself from the enemy’s blow. Then, stepping forward toward his right side with your left foot, you will throw a riverso at his right temple in such a way that your right foot follows behind your left, and your head is well cared for by your buckler. Then extending a stoccata into his face, you will lift yourself with a leap back, so that your sword remains in coda lunga alta.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then, with your right foot come forward, you will do a montante that goes into guardia alta, and withdrawing your right foot near to your left, you will have furnished the play.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/61|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|62|lbl=26v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|63|lbl=27r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|64|lbl=27v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|65|lbl=28r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|66|lbl=28v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|67|lbl=29r|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/68|1|lbl=29v|p=1}}
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|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Second Book}}
+
|  
 +
| <p>[6] Wanting then to return with the victory to the place from whence you started in the beginning, going as usual with your back to the rear you will cast your right foot back, throwing a mandritto under your arm. Then, similarly withdrawing your left foot in this second step you will do a montante towards your left side that goes into guardia alta, and you will promptly do another montante toward your right side, recoiling your right foot near your left, and then the same right to the rear, and you will throw a mandritto under your arm, and reducing your left even with your right, you will lead the sword to your chest and then over your buckler arm.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/68|2|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
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| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" | <p>[7] Then crossing forward with your left you will do a molinetto outside your arm that falls into coda lunga stretta, and then you will replace your right foot at ease, so that its heel touches the point of the left foot, lifting your sword in this tempo into guardia alta with your buckler well extended toward the enemy.</p>
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| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/68|3|lbl=-}}
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|}
 
|}
{{hidden end}}
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{{master end}}
  
{{hidden begin
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{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">Third Book</span>
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| title = Third Book (Sword and Buckler)
| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
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| width = 90em
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
 
 
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{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
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{| class="master"
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|-
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! <p>Illustrations</p>
 +
! <p>{{rating|start}}<br/>by [[W. Jherek Swanger]]</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
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|-
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| [[file:Manciolino 5.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Third Book.'''<ref>N.B. I have glossed over sections of the short introduction of this particular book, skipping straight to the swordplay</ref></p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[1] </p>
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|
 +
{{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|69|lbl=30r|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/70|1|lbl=30v|p=1}}
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|-
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| class="noline" |
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| class="noline" | …as it does not occur that "mandritti", "riversi", "falsi", "punti", and similar such words (which need to be understood in the art) can be changed into other names, as the signification of "to pass" does, which occurs to me continuously while writing with the pen, whence many times one comes to say that players “pass” with the left or the right foot, since one can say "pass", "cross", "glide", "guide", or "direct" the feet, and so where "right"<ref>''Destro.''</ref> is said, we will sometimes say "straight", or "strong", or "able", because man naturally has more strength in his right side than in his left, and equally sometimes "sinister", sometimes "left", or "weak", in order to avoid tedious regret, there being nothing more odious than the frequent repetition of the same word…
 +
| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/70|2|lbl=-|p=1}}
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|-
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| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" |
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| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/70|3|lbl=-|p=1}}
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|-
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|
 +
| <p>[2] Hence following my decision, I say that in this third book we will teach the art of playing at half sword. Often, in playing with your enemy, in such do you bring yourself to a strait, so that it behooves you to play at half sword, but not without the greatest wit and art. Accordingly, among all others this is held to be chief, and one who does not have perfect knowledge of and an ideal foundation in this cannot otherwise be a good master; and if nonetheless he happens to be a good player or defender of himself through being gifted with quickness of hand, and yet does not know how to teach others the true art, which consists of being most secure, it has already been said of these such [persons] that they are not to be called knowledgeable, but lucky, when yet they wound someone; and it must be made manifest that all of this third book will be divided not into chapters, but into offenses and their counters, and that it be understood that the play is with the sword and small buckler.</p>
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|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/70|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/71|1|lbl=31r|p=1}}
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|-
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|
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| <p>[3] Finding yourself hence with your enemy at the close of half sword, and wanting to be the agent, it will behoove you to be quickest of hand, more so than in other play, because if you will be sluggish, you will always be the patient. Beyond this, it is to be known that in not other than two ways can you find yourself with your enemy in this play: either true edge to true edge, in such fashion that the points of your swords face each other's left shoulders; or false edge to false edge, so that your swords are directed with their points at each other's right shoulders; and accordingly certain blows in order to offend and defend are born from the one manner, and others from the other.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But taking first, that which can be done finding each other false edge with false edge, I say that:</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/71|2|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
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|
 +
| <p>[4] Being in the aforesaid way with your enemy in such fashion that the false edges of the swords are in contact, and you with your right foot forward, you will make yourself agent if you turn your false edge across his left temple in a gesture of a tramazzone, and immediately for your defense you must retire back with the same strong (or right, as you care to say) foot, delivering a riverso to his right temple.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/72|1|lbl=31v}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] The counter to this close will be for that one who wishes to defend himself, when the falso in the gesture of a tramazzone is turned at you in the aforesaid fashion, immediately stepping forward with your weak, or left, foot (as it pleases you to say) toward his right side, you will give him a riverso returned from low to high into his right temple.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/72|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[6] And if you don’t succeed in offending him in the aforesaid fashion, being thus at the half sword you will give him your right foot in the belly, and then immediately retiring that same foot to the rear, you will give him in that tempo a fendente atop his head.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/72|3|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[7] The counter to the offense is, that when he wants to give you the shoe, you will immediately strike him in the shin of the offending leg with your buckler, because his plan will not [therefore] come to fruition.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/72|4|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[8] The third way of offending will be that finding yourself with your left forward you will cross toward his left side with your right foot, pretending to strike him in the head with a mandritto; nonetheless in that pretense you will let your sword fall to the ground behind you, and immediately crossing toward his right side with your left foot, you will stick your head under his right armpit and your hand inside the thigh of his leg, and lifting him from the ground you will make him fall behind your shoulders.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/72|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/73|1|lbl=32r|p=1}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[9] The counter of the previous close and offense is that when he pretends to give you the mandritto, you will not make any response to that pretense. But as he drops his sword in order to put his head under your armpit, retiring your right foot into large pace, you will give him a riverso to the neck.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/73|2|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[10] The fourth fashion of offending will be that having your right foot forward, you will make a show of striking his left temple with a mandritto, but in that show you will let your sword turn in the manner of a molinetto, and immediately stepping with your left foot toward his right side, you will give him a riverso in his right temple.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/73|3|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[11] The counter to this is that when he makes the show of the mandritto, you will close your sword hand together with that of your buckler, and in the step that he takes of his left foot in order to give you a riverso, you will immediately cast your left leg behind your right, and deliver a mezzo mandritto to his left temple in the manner of guardia di faccia, doing which, his riverso cannot offend you.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/73|4|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[12] The fifth way of offending will be, that having the aforesaid right foot forward you will point your sword hand up from beneath on the inside of his sword hand, knocking that down enough that you can stick your false edge into his neck.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The counter to this offense is that when the enemy wants to place his hand in the described fashion, you will push his sword arm toward his left side with your hand and thereby he will not achieve his intent.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/73|5|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
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|
 +
| <p>[13] The sixth way is, that finding yourself again with your right foot forward, you can cross toward his right side with your left foot, giving him your buckler hand to the outside of his sword hand, and subsequently a riverso to his neck or head.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/74|1|lbl=32v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[14] The counter to this sixth fashion is, that while he directs his left foot forward in order to give you his buckler hand, you will immediately give him the edge of your buckler to his approaching arm.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/74|2|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[15] The seventh trap, also with the right foot forward, is that you can cross into large pace with your left foot toward his right side throwing a riverso at him from low to high, and then immediately passing toward his left side with your right foot, you will give him a mandritto in the manner of a fendente, making your left leg follow behind your right.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/74|3|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[16] The counter of this seventh fashion is that while he steps forward with his left foot in order to strike you with the aforesaid riverso, you will go into guardia di faccia with your buckler under your sword hand so that your hand is touched and covered by your buckler, and as he turns the mandritto in the manner of a fendente, immediately casting your right foot back you will give him a mezzo mandritto to his sword hand.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/74|4|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[17] The eighth manner is, that having your left foot forward, you will step toward his left side with your right foot, throwing your sword back beneath his and in that same tempo you will put your buckler under his sword hand, striking him with your false edge in the left side of his neck. Then letting your left leg go behind your right you will arrange yourself with your sword in guardia di faccia, and then retiring to the rear with your right foot you will strike him in the temple with an extended riverso.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/74|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/75|1|lbl=33r|p=1}}
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|-
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|
 +
| <p>[18] The counter to the previous is that when the enemy throws his sword back under yours, presently withdrawing your right foot back, you will assume guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/75|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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|
 +
| <p>[19] The ninth fashion, which will also be with the left foot forward, is that you can step forward with your right foot pretending to strike the enemy in the head with a mandritto, and in this pretense you will execute the Perugian Maneuver, that is, casting your sword and buckler away from yourself you will take him in both your arms, and having him thus strongly pressed, without detaching yourself, you will fall to a seated position and immediately you will give him your evenly raised feet heavily in his belly, and falling because of this impact, he will be found cast behind your shoulders.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/75|3|lbl=-}}
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|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[20] The counter to this aforesaid offense is that while he crosses with his right foot in order to feint a mandritto, being alert, you will have your eyes on his hands owing to the presa, and when you see him drop his sword and buckler, immediately retiring your right foot to the rear, you will strike him in the head with a riverso.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/75|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[21] The tenth fashion of offending, with the left foot forward, will be that you can pass toward his right side with your right foot, striking his sword with a winning mandritto, and then crossing toward that same right side with your left foot you will give him a riverso in the neck, making your right foot follow your left.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/75|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|1|lbl=33v|p=1}}
 +
 
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|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[22] The counter will be that when he directs his right foot as said above in order to give you a mandritto to your sword, you will hit him/it with your sword, expecting that, but as he passes to give you the riverso, in that tempo you will turn a mezzo mandritto to his face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[23] The eleventh fashion of offending is that finding yourself also with the left foot forward, you will cross with your right foot toward his left side and in this passing you will make a sign of striking him with a mandritto, but you will hit his thigh with a lovely riverso, and you will remain uncovered in your upper parts in order to provoke your enemy to attack those, but as he does as you wished, gliding your sword into guardia di testa you will protect yourself there, and then with your buckler hand you will take his sword to the inside of yours, giving him a fendente to the head or a thrust to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|3|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[24] The counter to this will be that right as he is past pretending to do a mandritto, you will not make any move against that, but as he wishes to strike you in the thigh with a riverso, you will turn the point of your sword toward the ground, thereby protecting yourself from that, and throwing a fendente to his head in response.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|4|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[25] The twelfth way of offending will be, that finding yourself with your right foot forward, you can throw a mandritto to his head, and if he is a good player he will hit that, so that immediately making a sign with your bent fist of giving him a riverso, despite that you will reach him with the same mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|5|lbl=-}}
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 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[26] The counter to this is, that as he wishes to offend your head with the mandritto, you will throw a riverso from low to high that goes into guardia di testa, protecting yourself from his mandritto. Then with your buckler hand you will immediately smack down his sword hand, striking him in the upper body, or wherever appears best to you, with a riverso.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/76|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|1|lbl=34r|p=1}}
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|-
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|
 +
| <p>[27] The thirteenth way would be that finding yourself again with your right foot forward, you will pretend to give him a mandritto to the head, but nonetheless you will throw a riverso in the gesture of a drilled thrust.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[28] The counter is, that when he does the aforesaid pretense, despite that you will make no motion, but in his throwing of a riverso you will recoil your right foot back, and your sword into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[29] The fourteenth way is that having the same right foot forward, you will pass forward with your left and make a half-turn of your fist with the sword, sticking him in that same turning with a thrust to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[30] The counter to this is that in the passing that he makes with his left foot, diverting your right foot promptly to the rear, you will arrange yourself in coda lunga alta.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[31] The fifteenth offense is that being with the aforesaid foot forward you will pretend to strike him in the head with a mandritto, and the enemy, taking fear, will want to protect himself from that, and you will give him a riverso to the thigh, settling yourself into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[32] Its counter will be that during the pretense shown by your enemy, you will not make a motion, but when he wants to hit you in the thigh with a riverso, recoiling your right leg to the rear you will give him a riverso of your own to his sword arm.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/77|7|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[33] The sixteenth offensive method, also with the right foot forward, is that you can indicate to give him a riverso to the head, reaching him despite this with a mandritto to the flank, and arranging yourself in guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|1|lbl=34v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[34] Its counter is that in the sign of the riverso that the enemy will make, you will throw your right foot back, and when he deems to strike you in the flank with a mandritto, you will ruin his sword hand with a mezzo mandritto accompanied by your buckler.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[35] The seventeenth manner is that finding yourself still with the right foot forward, you will put your buckler under your enemy's sword and simultaneously crossing toward his right side with your left foot you will give him a mandritto across his right thigh so that your right foot follows your left.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[36] The counter is that when he wants to put his buckler under your sword, promptly retiring your right foot back you will give him a mandritto to his sword hand, accompanied by your buckler.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[37] Having already written of that which one can do at the strait of the half sword when false edge to false edge, the second manner thereof follows, that is, if the swords are to be found to be [true] edge to [true] edge, adding what can be done for and against, observing the proposed order, for as has already been said above, there are no other ways of attacking at the half sword other than these two.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[38] Therefore, the swords being true edge to true edge, and you wanting to be the agent and initiator, when you are with your right foot forward, crossing toward his right side with your left foot, you will give him a riverso to his right temple, making your right foot follow behind your left.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/78|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|1|lbl=35r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[39] The counter to this first way will be that when he crosses to give you the riverso you will turn a mezzo mandritto to his head, which will rise to end in guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[40] The second fashion of attacking will be that still having your right foot forward, you will cross toward his right side with your left foot, giving him a riverso from beneath to above, to his sword arm, and then you will immediately withdraw your left foot back, giving him in that same tempo a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[41] The counter to this is that when he steps to give you the riverso, putting your buckler low you will be shielded, but when he withdraws his left foot in order to strike you with the mandritto, you will reach his right temple with a riverso traversale.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[42] The third fashion is that, still having your right foot forward as in any of the above attacks, which we will not repeat in order to avoid tedium, you will turn a riverso to his right temple, and if the enemy protects himself from that, you will, with the hilt (or guard as you wish to say) of your sword hit that<ref>I.e. the sword.</ref> of your enemy on the outside giving him a fendente to the head.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[43] Its counter will be that when he turns the aforesaid riverso, you will ward that with the true edge of your sword and when he wants to hit your sword with his hilt, you will swiftly raise yours up, because his blow will miss, and in this tempo you will give him a riverso to his head.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/79|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[44] The fourth way of attacking is that you can lead him to believe that you will do a riverso, and immediately crossing toward his right side with your left foot you will turn the pommel of your sword over the enemy's wrist from the outside, and you will drive it<ref>His hand.</ref> down in such a manner that you can strike his head with a riverso.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/80|1|lbl=35v}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[45] The counter to this is that in the show that he makes of giving you a riverso, you will not make any motion, but as he wishes to make the turn of his pommel, swiftly placing your buckler under his sword, you will reach his right thigh with a traversale riverso.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/80|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[] The fifth manner of offending is that you can direct your left foot toward his left side, pretending to strike him with a riverso, and yet you will return your left foot to the rear, giving him a fendente to the head.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/80|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[46] The counter is, that when he makes the show of the riverso, you will not move yourself, but as he wishes to turn the fendente to your head, you will immediately throw a riverso from below to above, that goes so as to end in guardia di testa.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/80|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[47] The sixth way of offending will be that you will cross forward toward his left side with your left foot into large pace, throwing a riverso to his sword arm from low to high, and subsequently you will do a presa, that is, pretending to give him your buckler to his face, as he moves his head due to fear, immediately shooting your buckler arm inside his sword arm, you will bind that, recoiling it with a great clenching under your left armpit. Then retiring your right foot behind to your left you will make it so that he cannot harm you with his buckler.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/80|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|1|lbl=36r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[48] The counter to this will be that when he directs his left foot in the said fashion to give you the riverso, you will stick your sword hand well forward, covered by your superimposed buckler, and during the pretense that he makes of giving you his buckler in your face, you will extend it<ref>Your hand.</ref> well forward with the sword, so that he will have reason to find your arm in the aforesaid way; and while he takes your measure, you will beat the arm coming toward you, driving it forcefully downwards, and feeling this crushing he will drop his buckler due to the consequent pain, whence at your will you may strike him in the face with a riverso.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Third Book}}
+
|
 +
| <p>[49] The seventh way of offending will be that you will make a show of giving him a riverso, and you will immediately give him a mandritto to the leg, recovering yourself with your sword into guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[50] The counter is that while he pretends to do a riverso you will not move, but as he wishes to strike you with the aforesaid mandritto, you will cast your right foot back, giving him a traversale mandritto to his sword arm.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[51] The eighth mode is that you will pretend to give him a riverso to the head, and then you will cross toward his right side with your left foot and place your buckler under his sword, throwing a mandritto to his leg so that your right ft follows behind your left.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[52] Its counter is that while he pretends to give you the riverso, you will keep an eye on his hands without moving, but when he steps with his left foot to give you the mandritto, immediately withdrawing your right foot back, you will give him a mezzo mandritto to his sword hand.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/81|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|1|lbl=36v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[53] The ninth manner of offending is that you will step toward his right side with your left foot, hitting him in the right temple with a riverso, and immediately give him the edge of your buckler in his face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[54] The counter to this is that in the stepping that he makes in order to attack you with a riverso, withdrawing your right foot back, you will assume guardia di faccia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[55] The tenth way is that you will step toward his right side with your left foot, giving him a riverso to his right temple. Then you will return your left foot back somewhat pretending to give him a mandritto to his head, and subsequently returning the aforesaid left foot towards his right side, you will strike him in the head with a riverso, letting your right foot go behind the left.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[56] Its counter will be that in the stepping that the enemy makes to give you the riverso, you will hit it with the true edge of your sword, and as he makes the pretense of the mandritto, you will go with your sword into guardia di faccia, but when he wants to give you the other riverso, immediately casting your right foot toward his left side you will strike him in the left temple with a mezzo mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[57] The eleventh offense is that you will throw a riverso to his right temple, giving him your left shoe in his belly. Then, returning your left foot to the rear you will hit him in the head with a mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[58] The counter to this is that in his throwing of the riverso, you will hit it with the true edge, and when he wishes to hit you with his shoe, you will immediately give him your buckler in his shin, and thence you will go into guardia di faccia, warding yourself thereby from his mandritto.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/82|7|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|1|lbl=37r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[59] The twelfth offense is that you will cross toward his right side into large pace with your left foot, pretending to give him a riverso, but despite that, you will draw back your sword fist, placing your buckler under his sword hand and giving him a thrust to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[60] The counter to this is that in his pretense of a riverso, you will oppose your true edge against that, but as he draws his sword back to give you the thrust, you will oppose one more time still with your true edge, driving the enemy's sword toward your left side, and thereby you will have defended yourself against his thrust, hitting him as soon as you can with a falso to his face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[61] The thirteenth offense is that you will cross toward his right side with your left foot simultaneously throwing a riverso traversale to his right thigh, and you will arrange yourself into guardia di testa, so that your right leg follows behind your left.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[62] The counter is that when he steps to give you the riverso, drawing your right foot back you will give him one done thus in his sword arm.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[63] The fourteenth offense is that you will advance your left foot to his right side, making a show of hitting him with a riverso to the head, but nonetheless you will step with your right toward his left side, striking him in the head with a fendente in such a fashion that your right leg follows behind your left.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[64] The counter to this is that in the stepping that he does with the show of a riverso, you will close together your sword and buckler, and as he advances to give you the fendente, you will turn a riverso to his right temple.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/83|7|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|1|lbl=37v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[65] The fifteenth offense is drawing your sword back and sticking a thrust into his right temple in the company of your buckler so that the right foot is the follower of the left, [and thus] will you have evaded every deadly blow.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[66] The counter is that while he does the aforesaid thrust, you will hit that with the false edge of your sword, striking him with a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[67] The sixteenth offense is that you will cross toward his right side into large pace with your left foot, and in such stepping you will take the enemy's sword at the middle with your buckler hand, striking him in the right temple with a riverso.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[68] The counter of the aforesaid is that in the crossing that he makes for the purpose of the presa, you will strike him in the face with a mezzo mandritto.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[69] The seventeenth offense is that crossing toward his right side with your left foot you will turn a riverso to his right temple. Then you will grasp your sword in the middle with your buckler hand, giving him your hand in his face via the inside route, or, if you wish, a good yank of his hair.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|6|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" | <p>[70] The counter is that as he approaches to give you the riverso, you will immediately make a half-turn of your fist, protecting yourself from that, and as he grasps his sword in the middle in order to give you a box in the face, you will hit the approaching arm with the edge of your buckler, giving him beyond that a mandritto to the face.</p>
 +
| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/84|7|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 
|}
 
|}
{{hidden end}}
+
{{master end}}
  
{{hidden begin
+
{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">Fourth Book</span>
+
| title = Fourth Book (Sword and Shield, Double Swords, Single Sword)
| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
+
| width = 90em
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
 
 
}}
 
}}
{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
+
{| class="master"
 +
|-
 +
! <p>Illustrations</p>
 +
! <p>{{rating|start}}<br/>by [[Gindi Wauchope]]</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
 +
 
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Fourth Book}}
+
| [[file:Manciolino 6.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Fourth Book.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[1]</p>
 +
 
 +
[http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20sword%20and%20dagger%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy.doc Chapters 1-10 - Sword and Shield]</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20double-sword%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy.doc Chapter 11 - Double Swords]</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20single%20sword%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy%20and%20Samy%20Degli%20Orsetti.doc Chapter 12 - Single Sword]</p>
 +
|
 +
{{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|85|lbl=38r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|86|lbl=38v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/87|1|lbl=39r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[2] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/87|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|1|lbl=39v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[3] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[4] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[6] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|5|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[7] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/88|6|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/89|1|lbl=40r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[8] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/89|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[9] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/89|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/90|1|lbl=40v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[10] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/90|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[11] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/90|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[12] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/90|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[13] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/91|1|lbl=41r}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[14] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/91|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/92|1|lbl=41v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[15] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/92|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[16] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/92|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/93|1|lbl=42r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[17] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/93|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[18] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/93|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/94|1|lbl=42v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[19] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/94|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[20] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/94|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|95|lbl=43r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|96|lbl=43v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/97|1|lbl=44r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[21] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/97|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/98|1|lbl=44v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[22] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/98|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/99|1|lbl=45r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[23] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/99|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[24] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/99|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[25] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/99|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/100|1|lbl=45v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[26] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/100|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[27] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/100|3|lbl=-}}
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[28] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/100|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[29] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/100|5|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/101|1|lbl=46r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[30] [http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20double-sword%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy.doc Chapter 11 - Double Swords]</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/101|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/102|1|lbl=46v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[31] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/102|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|103|lbl=47r|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/104|1|lbl=47v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[32] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/104|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[33] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/104|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[34] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/104|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/105|1|lbl=48r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[35] </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/105|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[36] '''Capitolo 12 of the sword alone.'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Desiring combat against your opponent with only the sharp sword, first settle yourself with the right foot forward and with the sword in porta di ferro stretta, and without throwing any blow you will constrain him in this way, gather the left foot near the right, and then send your right foot forward.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The opponent finding himself so constrained will either attack or retreat, but if he pushes a thrust, hit it with the false edge and turn a mezzo riverso to the thigh, and to defend yourself throw a falso to the sword hand from below not exceeding Guardia di Faccia and finish by cutting into Porta di Ferro Stretta.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/105|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/106|1|lbl=48v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[37] But if he drives a thrust to the face in order to attack with a mandritto or a riverso defeat it with the false edge and when he throws the mandritto to the head avoid the blow by going with your sword into Guardia di Testa and wound him with the same blow (a mandritto) to the head or leg as you wish.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/106|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[38] But in the case he wants to give a riverso, or a mandritto to the leg. Against the mandritto withdraw the right foot to the rear, giving him a mezzo mandritto to the sword hand. But wanting to resolve the riverso, you retreat backwards with the aforementioned foot in order to wound his sword arm with a mezzo riverso, and finish in the said guard porta di ferro stretta.
 +
</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/106|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| class="noline" |
 +
| class="noline" | <p>[39] And when he pushes a thrust to give you a riverso to the head or the leg, but supposing the head, defeat it with the false edge of the sword without moving the feet and against the coming riverso, pass with with the left foot forwards making a half turn of the hand and ward the blow. Then immediately traverse with the right [foot] towards his left side, give him a mandritto to the head or the leg, as you wish, that done, the left leg must follow the right.
 +
</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if the riverso was thrown to the leg, you (passing forwards with the left foot) shall turn the point towards the ground pushing a stoccata to the flank , & removing yourself from presence with a jump backwards, afterwards settle yourself in the aforesaid guard of Porta di Ferro Stretta.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if you see coming from above a  mandritto, or riverso, or fendente, or a thrust, whatever of these parry it strongly with the false edge going no further than Guardia di faccia. Then immediately step with the front foot, making a turn of the hand. That done, push a thrust to the face or into the chest, as you wish.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>After parrying with the false edge you can alternatively throw a mandritto to his face, that glides below the arm and into the chest advancing the right foot somewhat forward as much as this blow requires. This [parry] is one of the singular defenses that this style makes possible.</p>
 +
| class="noline" |
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/106|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/107|1|lbl=49r|p=1}}
 +
 
 
|}
 
|}
{{hidden end}}
+
{{master end}}
  
{{hidden begin
+
{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">Fifth Book</span>
+
| title = Fifth Book (Sword and Cape, Sword and Dagger)
| titlestyle= background:#f2f2f2; border:1px solid #aaaaaa; padding:10px; text-align:center; vertical-align:middle; width:60%;
+
| width = 90em
| bodystyle = font-size:100%
 
 
}}
 
}}
{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
+
{| class="master"
 +
|-
 +
! <p>Illustrations</p>
 +
! <p>{{rating|Start}}<br/>Pietro Bravi</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
 +
 
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Fifth Book}}
+
| [[file:Manciolino 7.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Fifth Book.'''</p>
 +
<p>[1] </p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20sword%20and%20dagger%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy.doc Chapter 3 - Sword and Dagger]</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[http://digilander.libero.it/mandritto/Manciolino5content.html Chapter 4 - Sword and Shield]</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/107|2|lbl=49r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|108|lbl=49v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|109|lbl=50r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|110|lbl=50v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/111|1|lbl=51r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[2]"First Charapter about the play of sword and cape"
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
If, by chance, you will have the cape around, you'll let it fell from the right humerus till the middle of the left arm. After doing that, you will turn the left hand to the outside, taking the said cape and unsheathing the sword with the other hand you will prettily go on coda lunga alta guard with the left foot forward.
 +
And if, by chance, you'll see your opponent in the same guard, you will quickly advance towards him, and for your pressing he will have to strike, or to flee back. But if he well thrust a stoccata with his left foot forward, you'll step with your right foot towards his weak side <ref>his left side</ref> striking his sword's arm with a riverso in the manner of a cross fendente, doing this your left foot will follow behind your right foot. Then you will step back with your right foot, ending in coda lunga alta guard. </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/111|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/112|1|lbl=51v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[3]When you will be in that guard, You will advance with your right foot, striking an half thrust <ref>probably a feint</ref>. Then immediatly you will strike an half riverso in the cape's hand, without move your sword from there. So that he will returns you with a thrust, or a mandritto, or a fendente. When he'll strike a thrust, you will push his sword towards the ground with the true edge of your sword and then you will thrust a punta riversa in his chest, or you'll strike a riverso at his face.
 +
But if he'll strike the mandritto or fendente, against any of these strokes you will advance with your left foot, parrying with the cape and thrusting a stoccata in his side. Then you will jump back on the said guard <ref>coda lunga alta</ref>.</p><p>
 +
 
 +
If the enemy will be in that guard, like you, and he will thrust a stoccata <ref>feint</ref> pulling back his left foot to advance with his right foot striking at you head with a mandritto. You will not move during his stoccata, but when he'll strike the mandritto to the head, you'll step back with your left foot striking his sword's hand with a mandritto and then you'll step back with your right foot making an half turn of the hand to go in the said guard <ref>coda lunga alta</ref>.</p><p>
 +
 
 +
If you will be in that guard, like your enemy, and he'll strike you with a thrust, a mandritto or a fendente. For any of these strokes you'll move your left foot towards his left side <ref>cross step</ref> putting your sword with the point towards the ground and then moving the sword like a wheel you'll take whatever of these strokes. Then you'll hurt his head or his leg with a mandritto, stepping with your right foot towards his left side, and moving your weak <ref>left</ref> foot behind the strong <ref>right</ref> foot. After doing these, you'll step back with the right foot, doing the said turn of the fist, and ending in the said guard <ref>coda lunga alta</ref></p><p>
 +
 
 +
If the enemy did not want to get out of the guard, you could tempt him pushing an half thrust <ref>finta</ref> stepping forward with the right foot and striking with an half riverso to his leg, waiting for his reaction. If he'll makes a thrust, you'll knock his sword toward the ground with your true edge, and immediatly you'll hit him with a riverso thrust in the chest, or with a riverso to the face. But if he'll strike to your head with a mandritto o fendente, you'll go with the sword in guardia di testa, parrying his blow, and striking to reposte with a mandritto to the head or to the leg, as you prefer. And if he'll strikes to your leg, you'll step forward with your left foot, putting your false edge under the enemy's sword, and then you'll strike with a riverso to his leg, moving your right foot behind your left foot, and then you'll thrusts a stoccata to his face, jumping back in the said guard <ref>coda lunga alta</ref>.</p><p>
 +
 
 +
But If your enemy will try to attract you out of guard thrusting with a right step in order to hurt your head or your advanced leg with a riverso, you will defend yourself from the thrust striking his sword's hand with an half mandritto, that will end in cinghiara porta di ferro. And when he'll stikes the riverso to your head, you will step forward with the right foot, going with the sword in guardia di testa and parrying his blow, then you'll defend your head with the cape striking his head or his leg with a mandritto. Instead if he'll strikes the riverso to your leg, you will step forward with your right foot, making and half turn of the fist, pointing the sword towards the ground and parrying the said riverso. Then immediatly you'll strike with a mandritto to his head and for defense you'll step back with the righ foot, ending in the usual guard<ref>coda lunga alta</ref></p><p>
 +
 
 +
If the enemy will try to put you out of guard with a mandritto or fendente to the head, to defend yourself from any of these blows, you will step back with the left foot, striking his sword's arm with an half mandritto, and then stepping back with the right foot in the usual guard<ref>coda lunga alta</ref> But if he will strikes the mandritto to your leg, you will likewise step back with your left foot, striking his sword's hand with a mandritto, and then you'll step back with the right foot in the usual guard<ref>coda lunga alta</ref></p><p>
 +
 
 +
And if your enemy will strikes a mandritto to your head, you will step  with your right foot forward toward his right side <ref>cross step</ref> thrusting at his face and his sword's arm, and lowering yourself under your thrust for defense. Then you'll step with your left foot towards his right side striking with a riverso across his right leg and moving your right foot behind your left foot. And then, for your defense, you will thrust a stoccata at his side, jumping back in the usual guard <ref>coda lunga alta</ref></p><p>
 +
 
 +
If your enemy strikes your head with a mandritto o riverso, you will step forward with your right foot, parrying with the cape and in the same tempo you'll thrust a stoccata in the chest, and then you'll go with the sword in guardia di faccia for your defense stepping back with the right foot, and then you will step back with your left foot, ending in coda lunga stretta with the righ foot forward. </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/112|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|113|lbl=52r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|114|lbl=52v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/115|1|lbl=53r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[4]Because i have already talked about the stikes that can be done in coda lunga alta with the left foot forward with sword and cape, here i add some others equally useful that can be done with the right foot forward.
 +
</p>
 +
If you are in this guard<ref>coda lunga stretta</ref> remember that if the enemy will strike a mandritto or a fendente, you have to go in guardia di testa, parrying his blow, and immediatly responding with a mandritto to the leg, and then for your defense you'll step back with the right foot together with a thrust that will end in guardia di faccia jointly with the cape. Then you'll step back with your left foot, turning your hand so that you'll put yourself in the said coda lunga stretta with the right foot forward.
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
Agains the said mandritto you also can thrust to the face, bending yourself under your sword for defense, and then you will step with the weak foot <ref>left foot</ref> towards his right side striking a riverso to his leg and moving your right foot behind your left foot. Then for your security you'll thrust a stoccata to the face with a jump backward. Then you'll go in the said guard <ref>coda lunga stretta</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
Or else you can step forward with your left foot, parrying with the cape the said mandritto to the head, and then you will thrust a stoccata to his side and you'll jump back returning in the same guard we are talking about<ref>coda lunga stretta</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
Or else you will rise your cape in guardia di testa and in the same time you will strike his attacking arm with an half mandritto, so that your sword will end in porta di ferro stretta, and for defense you'll step back with your right foot, moving your sword in guardia di faccia with the cape jointly. Then you will step back with your left foot, ending in the already said guard<ref>coda lunga stretta</ref> </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/115|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|116|lbl=53v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/117|1|lbl=54r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] But if by chance he will strike a mandritto to the leg, you will step with your left foot towards his right side, putting the false edge of your sword under his blow, and immediatly you'll strike a riverso to his leg moving your right foot behind your left foot. And for defense you will thrust a stoccata to the face jumping gaily backward, and ending in the said guard<ref>coda lunga stretta</ref></p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/117|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[6]Or else you will step back with your right foot, hurting his sword's arm with an half mandritto and then you will step back with your left foot, ending in the said guard<ref> coda lunga stretta</ref> </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/117|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[7]If you both are on the said guard of coda lunga stretta with the right foot forward, and you want to attack, you will step towards his right side with your left foot thrusting to his face. And as soon as he will try to parry your thrust, you will step forward with your right foot, putting your cape under his sword and in the same time you'll pull back your sword's fist and you will thrust again but to his side<ref>belly</ref>. And for your defense you will step back with your right foot, hurting his sword's arm with an half mandritto, so that your sword will end in cinghiara porta di ferro, and then you with three or four step back you will go in the said guard <ref>coda lunga stretta</ref> </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/117|4|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[8]"Play of two versus two, with the swords and the capes embraced"</p><p>
 +
In this play, or mortal fight, you will place yourself with your companion in front of the enemy couple so that every one of you have an enemy in front of him, like a square. Then you you will agree silently with your companion to exchange enemy in this manner: The one of you that will be on the left will fake to thrust a stoccata to the enemy in front of him but immediatly he will make a long step with the right foot towards the other enemy, defending himself from his first enemy with the cape and thrusting the stoccata to the side of the other enemy.
 +
All this must also be done by the other of you with a similar cross movement and a similar thrust to the side, so that each of you will find unprepared the enemy of the other and will manage to win the fight. </p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/118|1|lbl=54v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[9] [http://www.hemac.org/data/Manciolino%20sword%20and%20dagger%20translation%20by%20Craig%20Pitt-Pladdy.doc Chapter 3 - Sword and Dagger]</p>
 +
<p>
 +
"The play with the sword in the right, and with the dagger in the left"
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
First you will position yourself with the left foot forward, and with the sword in coda lunga alta, and with the dagger in porta di ferro stretta, and you will approach your right foot to your left foot, and then you will advance with your left foot. So that the enemy will be forced to strike, or to retreat.
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
If he will strike a mandritto to your head, you will parry his blow with the dagger in guardia di testa, stepping with your right foot towards his left side, and during this step you will strike a mandritto to his leg, or you will thrust to his side, and your left leg will go behind your right leg, and for your defense you will do three or four backward steps, ending in the said guard <ref>coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
But if he will thrust a stoccata, you will parry it with the false edge of your dagger, and you will thrust a similar stoccata to his side, advancing your left foot forward <ref>like a short lunge</ref>. And for your defense you will jump backward in the said guard.<ref>coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
And if the enemy thrust towards your face <ref>feint</ref> to strike your advanced leg with a mandritto, you will parry his thrust with your dagger, and when he will strike the mandritto you will parry it with the false edge of your sword. Then immediatly you will step with your right foot towards his left side, striking a mandritto to his head or leg, and moving your left foot behind your right foot, and putting your dagger in guardia di testa. Then for your defense you will make three or four backward steps, ending in the said guard.<ref>coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
<p>
 +
If the enemy will thrust towards your face <ref>feint</ref> to hit your head or your advanced leg with a riverso, you will parry the thrust with your dagger, and when you you will see coming the riverso for your leg, you will parry also that with the dagger pointed towards the ground and in the same time with your sword you will thrust to his chest, or you will strike his sword's arm with a falso<ref>ascending cut with the false edge</ref>
 +
</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/118|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|119|lbl=55r|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/120|1|lbl=55v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[10] [http://digilander.libero.it/mandritto/Manciolino5content.html Chapter 4 - Sword and Shield]</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/120|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|121|lbl=55r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|122|lbl=56v|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|123|lbl=57r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|124|lbl=57v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/125|1|lbl=58r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
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| class="noline" | <p>[11] </p>
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{{hidden begin
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{{master begin
| title     = <span style="font-size:130%;">Sixth Book</span>
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| title = Sixth Book (Polearms)
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{| class="wikitable" width="60%"
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{| class="master"
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|-
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! <p>Illustrations</p>
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! <p>{{rating|Start}}<br/>Author unknown</p>
 +
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Steven Reich]]</p>
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
| [[file:Manciolino 8.jpg|400x400px|center]]
 +
| <p>'''Sixth Book.'''</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>[1] </p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/125|3|lbl=58r|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|126|lbl=58v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/127|1|lbl=59r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[2] '''Partisan and Rotella Play'''
 +
 
 +
<p>First arrange yourself at ease with the rotella on the arm, holding the partigiana in the hand in the act of thrusting against your enemy in front of you with the same weapons in the same way. And if by chance he wanted to give you a Partigianata holding in hand, to your left leg, you will cross with the right to the left side<ref>Of the enemy, I think.</ref> and directing the iron of your partigiana to the ground you will extend deeply forward towards his right part. And from that blow you will be able to avoid in a way that the left will follow your right. Then you will give him a punta riversa in the chest and towards yourself you will retire backwards with a leap, do a mezza volta above the head, finnishing in the same position as the begining. If you want to be the offender of the said Partigiana as said before, and your enemy was to defend in the way said before; as he passes with his right foot in order to ward himself you will immediately jump back with the left foot infront.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You will still be able to get to his side and you will still be able to feint a punta for the face, and as he, fore fear of the blow, will raise the rotella you will immediately change the partigana giving him a punta on the body and moving with a jump backwards you will withdraw into the aformemtioned position. But if by change he wanted to hurl<ref>Clash.</ref> the partigiana one against the other but the enemy was first, you will pass with the right foot across towards your right side stretching the partigiana arm out so that the iron looks towards the ground, and the left foot follows the right backwards, this done, you will be warded from the throw.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if he hurls another partigianata, you will take back the left foot across towards the left side extending the partigiana widely out toward your right side in a way that the strong foot follows the weak one.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/127|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{pagetb|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|128|lbl=59v|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/129|1|lbl=60r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[3] And so that the iron looks towards the ground and so you will ward from this other partigianata and in the said way of thrusting you will go back.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/129|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[4] '''Another Play of the Presaid Arms'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Following on you call on another gioco di rotella & partigiana. & although not so beautiful that the aforesaid, it will be the same very useful. To begin with, you will take with the right hand the partigiana at the pedale with left the other side of that so that you will hold well the rotella in a way that the joint<ref>''Nodi''.</ref> of both hands look upward & that the partigiana is positioned towards his right parts with the left foot advanced not very much in grande passo, waiting that the enemy strikes. If he were to make a partiginata at your leg, that you will parry that with your partigiana towards the outside, to his left side, so that the right hand is higher and able to ward better. Pulling immediately a cut in the leg, you return in the above position of the casting.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he trusts a partiginata at the face, you will lower the right hand towards the ground, so that the iron looks toward the above, and in this you will be safe from that slam. And you will give a partigiana punta in the turn, or for the leg, as you wish retreating in the waiting position.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/129|3|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/130|1|lbl=60v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[5] '''Partisan Play one on one'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Firstly you will take the partigiana in hand in a way that the left hand is ahead and that the knuckles of both hands are turned above, and the partigiana is across<ref>Traverses.</ref> towards your left side. If your enemy ajusts himself in the same manner or any other that he wishes, both of you may injure first. For if your enemy gives injury first thrusting a punta on your leg, you will hit<ref>Parry.</ref> it with your partigiana pushing it very outwards towards his left parts and seeing to that your right hand is placed high and to that the piont of the partigiana is quite turned to the ground and thus making yourself safe. Then immediately you will thrust a Partigianata for the flank, or the leg as you wish, retire back with a leap and come to rest as in the above. But if your enemy extends a thrust at the face or a cut<ref>Slice.</ref> to any of these, you will bend<ref>Or bow.</ref> your right towards the ground, so that the iron of the partigiana is infront of the enemy’s face, there ward from the said blows.<ref>Punta at the face.</ref> Immediately thrust him a partiginata on the flank.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he wanted to hurt you on the leg, you will ward from it, as you have been taught in the afformentioned game. If it was hurled in one of your upper parts, you will with your left hand near the iron doing so your knuckles must look upwards.<ref>Turned above.</ref> Then you will traverse with your right foot towards his left parts warding from it with the pedale of yours, so that the left leg follows the right backwards. But he having two partigiane, if he wants to hurl you with the second in the same way, you will pass with the left [foot] across, and towards his left parts doing a volta of partigiana so that the iron looks downwards<ref>To the ground.</ref> and the left hand is under the right. And the right leg follows the left, placing in the said position of the hurtling.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/130|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/131|1|lbl=61r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[6] '''Fighting Spetum vs Spetum'''
 +
 
 +
<p>You will arrange yourself with the left foot forward having the Spiedo in hand and the arms well extended away from the person<ref>Body.</ref> and the left hand low, but the right will be to the back quite high the iron turned towards the ground in the act of warding the ememy’s blows, and as you know with all spearlike-weapons, that is thrust of point therefore we won’t dwell on it too long. So I say that if the enemy will be arranged as you [as above] and if he wishes to thrustgive you a spiedata, either low, or high, this you will parry with your spiedo placed outwards, towards<ref>Turned towards your left part.</ref> so you will be safe, as a riposta to this spiedata you will thrust him on the flank. And increasing the left foot forward in the meantime you will feel like you have more power than him. You will try to lock to lock the wings of his spiedo with the ones of your own and not letting it go, you will make the effort to push it strongly outwards towards your left. And so being able to give him a punta on the flank.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he turns Guardia, and if he comes with the right foot forward you will change it<ref>The Guardia.</ref> like him. And the same can be parried with quadrello and spontone (as you wish to call it) except it doesn’t have wings so you can’t lock it like the spiedo.<ref>Spontone, according to Florio, was called a Forest Bill; as far as I can tell is a Spontoon. A Quadrello has a four-edged blade with a rondel its base, much like a rondel dagger on a staff.</ref></p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/131|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/132|1|lbl=61v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[7] '''Fighting Italian Bill vs Italian Bill'''
 +
 
 +
<p>You will arrange yourself opposite from your enemy with your right foot advance and with the left you will hold the ronca at its pedale and the right hand must be advanced and in this position you will turn towards the enemy and so the corno of the ronca will b turn to the ground, and increasing quite with the right foot advanced you will push him a punta on the face, and at the same time guisto with the said corno a stratiamento<ref>Rip/laceration.</ref> on the arms, and thrusting another punta on the chest and you will move out of the way with a leap backwards into even pace.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You will arrange with another guardia, that is with the left foot forward, and with the Ronca in the air in the act of giving him a mandritto on the head, you will immediately traverse with the right foot towards his left parts, casting a similar Mandritto on his ronca so that you will hit it on the ground, immediately you will thrust a punta on the flank, moving out of the way backwards with a leap backwards. And then you will go back in that guardia with the left foot forward, in the act of giving him a mandritto on the head.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he thrusts again to hurt your leg with a mandritto, you will immediately traverse with the right foot forward, ruining the said blow from below to above<ref>Upward.</ref> of your ronca and then pushing him a punto on the flank.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if he thrust a punta on the face you doing the same pass, you will hit his ronca with a mandritto, thrusting a punta on the chest.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/132|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/133|1|lbl=62r|p=1}}
 +
 
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <br>{{main|Antonio Manciolino/Sixth Book}}
+
|  
 +
| <p>[8] '''Fighting with Spear in Hand, One on One'''
 +
 
 +
<p>Firstly take your lance in the right hand and with the right foot advanced in large pace & supposing that the enemy puts himself in a waiting position.<ref>Rest position.</ref> So if he is first to injure<ref>Offend.</ref> at you, while he has the left foot forward,he’ll take his lancia in hand in order to throw it, towards you, you for a riposta will similarly<ref>Or do the same.</ref> but you will not move the point of the spear from the ground & while you thrust him the first Lanciata, you’ll parry that with your lancia traversing & towards your left parts in manner that you have the ease for delivering of injury.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>Then immediately you will pass with the right foot & then with the left extending a lanciata to the flank.
 +
 
 +
<p>But if you want to be the first to injure. You will cross with the right foot infront and push a lanciata in order he makes the same parry you did, as he parries you, immediately extend your lancia for traversing you will let it go out of the hand & fall above his, towards his right side & in this time running now towards the pedale of his lancia you will give hand to the sword or dagger that you will have at your side & as he won’t expect it, you injure him as you please.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>And if by chance he did this strike of the lancia to you, you will give a good blow/strike of your lancia with the right hand taken back leaving to slide of for the your left hand finally to the iron. And in this way he can not to offend you, neither with sword, and nor with dagger & and also he can make this same as you & because a few are experts in this thing, as such as is intended, you will be always the advantaged.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/133|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/134|1|lbl=62v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[9] Finding yourself again<ref>Or still.</ref> with the left foot advanced opposing your enemy, you traverse<ref>Better pass forward.</ref> with the right foot advanced and striking a lanciata for the chest with a risposta riversa, & if the enemy is the one who gives this lanciata. You will make the semblance of retreating four or five paces backward, taking your lance with the right hand, and in this run you will throw a traversing towards your right side, and there you will take the lancia in hand, and a then advancing on him you will thrust him a lanciata in the flank, because you will find him unprepared.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>But if the enemy did what I taught you above, you’ll ________ the lancia in the hand and you will follow him while he is retreating and as he wants to hurl himself across,<ref>Sideways.</ref> you’ll give him a lanciata before that he arranges to take his lancia.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/134|2|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[10] And more , when you’ll have your lancia in hand, you’ll be able to pretend as if one was going to strike and lanciata, and he for fear of this will retreat with the left foot backward in order to ward himself so you will run four or five paces across/sideways<ref>Traversing.</ref> and towards his left side and so finding him unsheltered you will give him a lanciata to the flank.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/134|3|lbl=-}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[11] You could still run towards his right side and do the same blow which is very particular and useful fighting solo e solo.</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>The counter of this is that while you’ll see him running you’ll retreat the right foot backwards, taking your lancia with you left hand because you won’t be injured, being advantaged to injure (like him).</p>
 +
 
 +
<p>You can _______ throwing him a lanciata with the right foot forward your left hand leaving the lancia, pushing your right arm towards your left side so that your right flank is infront of the race of the enemy<ref>Facing.</ref> and here you will wait that he strikes to injure you with a lanciata on the flank, you will slide with the left foot forward, pushing your right hand quite outward towards your right side and so you will be warded by that lanciata on the hip. Then you will take that lancia at once with the left hand and you’ll pass the right forward, hurting his chest with a lanciata.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/134|4|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/135|1|lbl=63r|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[12] His counter will be that while he uncovers to shield, you will feint to strike a blow. Because if he comes forward to do the same thing you did, he’ll be all uncovered for the feint you did and so you can injure him with a lanciata where you want. And if you want to put out the enemy for advantage, as you see him with the left foot forward, you’ll change the hands holding the lancia, so that the right is infront of the left and so you’ll slide the right foot forward. Or you will have the lancia with the right hand infront, you’ll change the hand to put out your enemy and when you see him with the right foot forward, you’ll know the enemy put out But you’ll do this change of hand when both of you are in, to put our the enemy, so that he can’t damage you.</p>
 +
|
 +
{{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/135|2|lbl=-|p=1}} {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/136|1|lbl=63v|p=1}}
 +
 
 +
|-
 +
|
 +
| <p>[13] But if you had the lancia and was attacked by someone who had the partigiana, ronca or spiedo or other weapon, you will take the lancia in the middle and it will be enough to satisfy you that you have an arms length of lancia of advantage and more than the enemy’s weapon length and so you’ll be sure that if you wanted to fight with all your lancia length against a short weapon he more easily could parry it and run you over and doing again another time the above said (I’ll close the book and end) that is of all the weapons. That is on the proper injuring, the one of punta.</p>
 +
| {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/136|2|lbl=-}}
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|-
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| class="noline" | [[file:Manciolino 9.jpg|center]]
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| class="noline" |
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| class="noline" | {{section|Page:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf/136|3|lbl=-}}
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| title = Copyright and License Summary
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| width = 100%
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For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the [[Talk:{{PAGENAME}}|discussion page]].
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{{sourcebox
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| work        = Illustrations
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| authors    =
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| source link =
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| source title=
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| license    = public domain
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{{sourcebox
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| work        = Translation (Books 1 - 3)
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| authors    = [[translator::W. Jherek Swanger]]
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| source link = http://www.drizzle.com/~celyn/jherek/EngManc.pdf
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| source title= Document circulated online
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| license    = educational
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{{sourcebox
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| work        = Translation (Book 6)
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| authors    = Unattributed
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| source link =
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| source title= Document circulated privately
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| license    = orphan
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}}
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{{sourcebox
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| work        = Transcription
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| authors    = [[Steven Reich]]
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| source link = http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/antonio-manciolino/5591635
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| source title= Lulu Press
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| license    = copyrighted
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== Additional Resources ==
 
== Additional Resources ==
  
* Leoni, Tommasso. ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531).'' Wheaton, IL: [[Freelance Academy Press]], 2010. ISBN 978-0-9825911-3-0
+
{{bibliography}}
* [[Antonio Manciolino|Manciolino, Antonio]]. ''Antonio Manciolino's 1531 Treatise on Bolognese Swordsmanship.'' Ed. [[Steven Reich]]. [http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/antonio-manciolino/5591635 Lulu Press], 2009.
 
* [[Antonio Manciolino|Manciolino, Antonio]] (in Italian). ''Opera Nova di Antonio Manciolino (1531).'' Ed. [[Marco Rubboli]] and Alessandro Battistini. Rome: [[Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali]], 2008. ISBN 978-88-8474-176-9
 
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
  
{{reflist}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Manciolino, Antonio}}
 
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Latest revision as of 17:06, 31 October 2024

Antonio Manciolino

Illustration from the title page of Manciolino's treatise
Born late 1400s?
Died after 1531
Occupation Fencing master
Citizenship Bolognese
Patron Don Luisi de Cordoba
Genres Fencing manual
Language Italian
Notable work(s) Opera Nova (1531)
First printed
english edition
Leoni 2010
Concordance by Michael Chidester

Antonio Manciolino was a 16th century Italian fencing master. Little is known about this master's life; he seems to have been Bolognese by birth and he may have been a student of Guido Antonio di Luca,[citation needed] the Bolognese master who taught Achille Marozzo in the same period. His fencing manual is dedicated to Don Luisi de Cordoba, Duke of Sessa, Orator of the Most Serene Emperor to Adrian VI; this dedication may indicate that Manciolino was attached as fencing master to the ducal court.

In 1531, Manciolino published a treatise on fencing called Opera Nova ("A New Work"),[1] which is the oldest extant treatise in the Dardi or "Bolognese" school.[2]

The 1531 edition describes itself as "corrected and revised" and was probably based on an earlier version printed in ca. 1523 (based on the fact that Don Luisi de Cordoba was only orator to Adrian VI between September of 1522 and September of 1523).[3] Manciolino had signed a contract with a French printer in Rome in 1519 to publish his treatise, but it's unclear if this was the same edition or an even earlier one.[4]

Despite the breadth and detail of his work, Manciolino's efforts were overshadowed by the release of Marozzo's even more extensive work on Bolognese fencing thirteen years later.

Treatise

As Craig Pitt-Pladdy has refused our request to host his translations on Wiktenauer, we instead have links to their locations on other sites in the appropriate sections until such time as another translation appears.

Note: This article includes a very early (2003) draft of Jherek Swanger's translation. An extensively-revised version of the translation was released in print in 2021 as How to Fight and Defend with Arms of Every Kind, by Antonio Manciolino. It can be purchased at the following links in hardcover and softcover.

It also includes an Italian transcription by Steven Reich which was also released in print as Antonio Manciolino; it can be purchased in softcover.

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.

References

  1. The full title was Di Antonio Manciolino Bolognese opera noua, doue li sono tutti li documenti & uantaggi che si ponno ha uere nel mestier de l’armi d’ogni sorte nouamente corretta & stampata, which translates to "New Work by Antonio Manciolino, Bolognese, wherein are all the instructions and advantages that are to be had in the practice of arms of every sort; newly corrected and printed".
  2. Both Dardi and Luca are thought to have published treatises in the 15th century that have since been lost.
  3. Leoni, Tom. The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531). Wheaton, IL: Freelance Academy Press, 2010. pp 11-12.
  4. Tassinari, 2021.
  5. I.e., as it was in front of the right knee in porta di ferro stretta.
  6. I.e. his mandritto.
  7. Note that these “two tramazzoni” were, in both cases, singular in Ch. 9
  8. I.e. yours.
  9. This counter has no antecedent in Ch. 15.
  10. I.e. a mandritto that goes over your own left arm.
  11. Unicorn.
  12. Not specified.
  13. N.B. original says “…piede manco appresso il sinestro”, i.e. “left foot near your left”—this should be “left foot near your right”.
  14. Note that this guard is not described in the text—see Marozzo, Cap. 143, for description and illustration.
  15. This action may describe a gathering step forward with the left, as the left foot is presumably already to the rear.
  16. N.B. I have glossed over sections of the short introduction of this particular book, skipping straight to the swordplay
  17. Destro.
  18. I.e. the sword.
  19. His hand.
  20. Your hand.
  21. his left side
  22. probably a feint
  23. coda lunga alta
  24. feint
  25. coda lunga alta
  26. cross step
  27. left
  28. right
  29. coda lunga alta
  30. finta
  31. coda lunga alta
  32. coda lunga alta
  33. coda lunga alta
  34. coda lunga alta
  35. cross step
  36. coda lunga alta
  37. coda lunga stretta
  38. left foot
  39. coda lunga stretta
  40. coda lunga stretta
  41. coda lunga stretta
  42. coda lunga stretta
  43. coda lunga stretta
  44. belly
  45. coda lunga stretta
  46. coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta
  47. like a short lunge
  48. coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta
  49. feint
  50. coda lunga alta, with dagger in porta di ferro stretta
  51. feint
  52. ascending cut with the false edge
  53. Of the enemy, I think.
  54. Clash.
  55. Nodi.
  56. Traverses.
  57. Parry.
  58. Slice.
  59. Or bow.
  60. Punta at the face.
  61. Turned above.
  62. To the ground.
  63. Body.
  64. Turned towards your left part.
  65. The Guardia.
  66. Spontone, according to Florio, was called a Forest Bill; as far as I can tell is a Spontoon. A Quadrello has a four-edged blade with a rondel its base, much like a rondel dagger on a staff.
  67. Rip/laceration.
  68. Upward.
  69. Rest position.
  70. Offend.
  71. Or do the same.
  72. Or still.
  73. Better pass forward.
  74. Sideways.
  75. Traversing.
  76. Facing.