You are not currently logged in. Are you accessing the unsecure (http) portal? Click here to switch to the secure portal. |
Do you have permission to re-use this image? Just because scans appear on Wiktenauer does not mean that they are free to use. Wiktenauer is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit, and many of the scans we host are only licensed for nonprofit use. In other cases, the scans have no standard license and Wiktenauer has received special permission to host them (and can't grant that permission to anyone else). The license terms appear in the Copyright and License Terms box at the bottom of the page that sent you here. When in doubt, always check with the museum or library that owns a manuscript before publishing or otherwise reusing its scans. |
Page:Cod.icon. 393 II 190v.jpg
Ratio, qua equum assurgentem co[n]iicias correpto ferro, quod ori equi iungitur utrinq[ue].
Ex hac dimicatione equestri si victoriam obtinere cupias, stricto ense contra hostem citato cursu invehitor, atque ictu superno caput eius ferias, vel nodum ensis in buculam eius contorqueas. Sin autem pari ratione adversarius te adpetierit, etiam tu vicissim occurrito hosti neque ensem stringas, verum dextra inferne ferrum ori proxime adiunctum ut est videre in pictura equi corripias, idque sursum tollas in latus dextrum tuum. Si contingat ut equus sit ad assurgendum furiose propensus, quam proxime poteris ad eum accedito, et si totis viribus sustuleris ferrum supra commemoratum, equus et adversarius simul concident. Sed cum equus adversarii minus sit proclivis ad assurgendum eum habitum vel minime usurpabis, quia periculosus est, verum potius dextra adprehendas ipsius brachium itidem dextrum inferne id si feceris, citra ullum periculum ab hoste te liberabis.