Wiktenauer logo.png

Difference between revisions of "Kunstlicher stuck Kämpffens Ringens und Werffens"

From Wiktenauer
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 264: Line 264:
 
| rowspan="3" | [[File:Egenolff 26.jpg|400px|center]]
 
| rowspan="3" | [[File:Egenolff 26.jpg|400px|center]]
 
| <p>'''Ramming to the Ground.'''</p>
 
| <p>'''Ramming to the Ground.'''</p>
It is a bad advantage. If you are suddenly in an emergency, grab him backwards by the waist and lift him over yourself. Place him on the ground hard and strike him immediately with a knee on the back of his knee to make him weak. Thus you fell him to the ground.
+
It is a disadvantage to be suddenly in an emergency. Grab him backwards by the waist and lift him over yourself. Place him on the ground hard and strike him immediately with a knee on the back of his knee to make him weak. Thus you fell him to the ground.
 
| {{section|Page:Cod.I.6.2º.4 10v.png|1|lbl=10v}}
 
| {{section|Page:Cod.I.6.2º.4 10v.png|1|lbl=10v}}
 
| {{section|Page:Der Altenn Fechter anfengliche kunst (Christian Egenolff) 1531-1537.pdf/80|1|lbl=40r}}
 
| {{section|Page:Der Altenn Fechter anfengliche kunst (Christian Egenolff) 1531-1537.pdf/80|1|lbl=40r}}

Revision as of 03:20, 16 July 2020

Kunstlicher stuck Kämpffens Ringens
und Werffens
Artful Devices of Fighting, Wrestling, and Throwing
Kunstlicher stuck Kämpffens Ringens und Werffens.jpg
Author(s) Unknown
Illustrated by
Date 1530s
Genre Wrestling manual
Language Early New High German
Archetype(s)
Manuscript(s)
Concordance by Michael Chidester

Kunstlicher stuck Kämpffens Ringens und Werffens ("Artful Devices of Fighting, Wrestling, and Throwing") is a brief 16th century German wrestling manual of uncertain origins. The most extensive version is an anonymous chapter in Christian Egenolff's 1530s fencing anthology, Der Altenn Fechter anfengliche kunst. Two manuscript copies appeared around the same time, a series of sketches by Gregor Erhart in 1533 and a mostly complete painted manuscript by Jörg Breu the Younger some time before 1545. One of these two may be the archetype for this treatise, and until further evidence appears we will assume that it is the latter. The treatise was further duplicated in the succeeding decades in several other manuscripts, and in the 1540s it was revised for inclusion the manuscripts of Paulus Hector Mair.

Treatise

Additional Resources

References

  1. »sst« oberhalb der Zeile korrigiert aus »fft«