Sloane MS No.5229 contains a brief series of German fencing illustrations created in 1512 by Albrecht Dürer.[1] The original currently rests in the holdings of the British Library in London, United Kingdom. These illustrations, like all of Dürer's fencing material, appear to be connected with the visit of Emperor Maximilian I to Dürer's home city of Nuremberg in 1512.[1] Unlike the MS 26-232 these devices do not seem to be copied from another fencing manual, though they appear to be related to the tradition of Johannes Lecküchner.
Provenance
Contents
Folio
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Section
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1r - 67r
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[Uncertain]
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67v - 69r
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Devices of Messer by Albrecht Dürer
Images
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English Translation
Open for editing
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Transcription
by Friedrich Dörnhöffer
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1512.
A[lbrect] D[ürer]
Item: The following four devices show the four guards of the messer, according to the usage of an artful master, and the four [master] hews that counter them.
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[67v] 1512
AD
Item dye fir nachfolgetten stück sind dy fir leger im messer, wy sich ein künstlicher Meister dorein schicken soll und sind dy fir hew oder prüch dorwider.
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Bastion is broken by the Danger Hew
Watch Tower is broken by the Anger Hew
Steer is broken by the Waking Hew
Boar is broken by the Constraining Hew
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pastey — pricht geferhaw
luginsland — pricht entrusthaw
stir — pricht weckerhaw
eber — pricht zwingerhaw
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The guard is Bastion
- The Danger Hew is its counter.
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[68r] Leger in der pastey
- geferhaw ist sein pruch.
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The guard is Watch Tower
- The Anger Hew is its counter.
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Daz leger luginslant
- entrusthaw ist sein pruch.
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The guard is Boar
- The Constraining Hew is its counter.
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[69r] Leger im eber
- haw den zwinger ist sein pruch.
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The guard is Steer
- The Waking Hew is its counter.
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Daz leger im stier
- der weckerhaw ist sein pruch.
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69v -
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[Uncertain]
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Gallery
Additional Resources
References