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'''Hugold Behr's Fechtbuch''' (MS var. 83) is an anonymous 16th century [[nationality::German]] [[fencing manual]] created some time before 1573.<ref>Bauer, Matthias Johannes. "The Fight Book of Hugold Behr: A Late Sixteenth-Century Fight Book in Comparative Perspective". ''[[Acta Periodica Duellatorum]]'' '''8'''(1). 2020. pp 89-90</ref> The original currently rests in the holdings of the [[Universitätsbibliothek Rostock]] in Rostock, Germany. It was previously owned by Hugold Behr the Elder, from whom it takes its nickname, but its original author and artist are unknown.
+
'''Hugold Behr's Fechtbuch''' (MS var. 83) is an anonymous 16th century [[nationality::German]] [[fencing manual]] created some time before 1573.<ref name="Bauer">Bauer, Matthias Johannes. "The Fight Book of Hugold Behr: A Late Sixteenth-Century Fight Book in Comparative Perspective". ''[[Acta Periodica Duellatorum]]'' '''8'''(1). 2020. pp 89-90</ref> The original currently rests in the holdings of the [[Universitätsbibliothek Rostock]] in Rostock, Germany. It was previously owned by Hugold Behr the Elder, from whom it takes its nickname, but its original author and artist are unknown.
  
 
== Provenance ==
 
== Provenance ==
  
 +
The known provenance of the MS Var.83 is:<ref name="Bauer"/>
  
 +
* Created in the mid-16th century.
 +
* before 1573 - Owned by Hugold Behr the Elder (1527-1576).
 +
* 1573 - In the library of [[wikipedia:John Albert I|Johan Albrect I]] (1525-1576), Duke of Mecklenburg; included in a library catalog in 1573.
 +
* before 1789 - Acquired by the University of Bützow.
 +
* 1789-present - Transferred to the University of Rostock when the two universities merged.
  
 
== Contents ==
 
== Contents ==
Line 179: Line 185:
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
| rowspan="3" | [[file:MS Var.83 18r.png|400px|center]]
 
| rowspan="3" | [[file:MS Var.83 18r.png|400px|center]]
| <p>Then, when you<ref name="eer"/> want to take it out in a cross, remember to mainly do this when your adversary cuts at your right ear, dropping with [your] body to [your] left side, to constrain his weapon and come through with a thrust.</p>
+
| <p>Then, when [you]<ref name="eer"/> want to take it out in a cross, remember to mainly do this when your adversary cuts at your right ear, dropping with [your] body to [your] left side, to constrain his weapon and come through with a thrust.</p>
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 19r.png|1|lbl=19r.1}}
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 19r.png|1|lbl=19r.1}}
  
Line 196: Line 202:
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p>Secondly, if your adversary thrusts or strikes, you<ref name="eer"/> must attack in this same strike, and with a movement of your left foot deliver a half thrust to his face, so that he<ref>German: ''eer''. Note the change in meaning.</ref> falls against that with [his] rapier, and then make a full strike below to the legs.</p>
+
| <p>Secondly, if your adversary thrusts or strikes, [you]<ref name="eer"/> must attack in this same strike, and with a movement of your left foot deliver a half thrust to his face, so that [he]<ref>German: ''eer''. Note the change in meaning.</ref> falls against that with [his] rapier, and then make a full strike below to the legs.</p>
 
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|23r|png}}
 
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|23r|png}}
  
Line 208: Line 214:
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p>If you<ref name="eer"/> cannot step to the side, simply step back, and make a full thrust against this. Thus, you can injure your adversary’s fist, if it is not well protected by his rapier.</p>
+
| <p>If [you]<ref name="eer"/> cannot step to the side, simply step back, and make a full thrust against this. Thus, you can injure your adversary’s fist, if it is not well protected by his rapier.</p>
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 25r.png|2|lbl=25r.2}}
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 25r.png|2|lbl=25r.2}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| rowspan="4" | [[file:MS Var.83 26r.png|400px|center]]
+
| rowspan="3" | [[file:MS Var.83 26r.png|400px|center]]
| <p></p>
+
| <p>Then, when your adversary makes a strike or a thrust to your left [side], you can take this out with your dagger and rapier, and suddenly drop your rapier onto his legs, though with the advantage of stepping to with your left foot.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|1|lbl=11r.1}}
+
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 27r.png|1|lbl=27r.1}}
 
 
|-
 
| <p></p>
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|2|lbl=11r.2}}
 
 
 
|-
 
| <p></p>
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|1|lbl=12v.1}}
 
 
 
|-
 
| <p></p>
 
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|2|lbl=12v.2}}
 
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| rowspan="4" | [[file:MS Var.83 29r.png|400px|center]]
+
| <p>Then, then someone thrusts up from below at your fist, remember to raise your arm high and turn your point onto your adversary’s arm.</p>
| <p></p>
+
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 27r.png|2|lbl=27r.2}}
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|1|lbl=11r.1}}
 
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>When your adversary directs his dagger high, then remember to lower your blade, and threaten a thrust below, and if [he]<ref name="eer"/> takes it out, complete the thrust above his arm.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|2|lbl=11r.2}}
+
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|28r|png}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| rowspan="5" | [[file:MS Var.83 29r.png|400px|center]]
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|1|lbl=12v.1}}
+
| <p>In this high guard, if your adversary thrusts at your breast, you will take this out with your dagger, and deliver a thrust at his face, which you can conveniently do by raising your hand and lowering your point.</p>
 +
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 30r.png|1|lbl=30r.1}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>Then, you can deliver a lower cut<ref>German: ''unterhauw''.</ref> to his legs when your adversary makes a thrust. But if [he]<ref name="eer"/> cuts, you will avoid the strike, and come against it with your point below.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|2|lbl=12v.2}}
+
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 30r.png|2|lbl=30r.2}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| rowspan="4" | [[file:MS Var.83 33r.png|400px|center]]
+
| <p>When you make a round thrust<ref>The exact meaning of this ''runden stich'' is unclear, but it may imply that the thrust is delivered along an arc, rather than straight at his legs.</ref> to his legs, you will stand with your rapier on your left knee and step straight<ref>German ''geleich'' may alternatively simply mean “at once”.</ref> to with your left foot, having your point [aimed] at your adversary. If he now delivers a thrust to your right side, you will take this out with your dagger and drive your point to his right side with a movement of your right foot.</p>
| <p></p>
+
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|31r|png}}
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|1|lbl=11r.1}}
 
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>If, in the above-said strike, your adversary attacks hard with uncertain blade, you must step back again with your left foot, off the straight line, and deliver a lower strike<ref>German: ''unterstreich''.</ref> to his legs.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|2|lbl=11r.2}}
+
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 32r.png|1|lbl=32r.1}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>Fourthly, you must note that in equal guards, you can suddenly reach your adversary’s left hand.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|1|lbl=12v.1}}
+
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 32r.png|2|lbl=32r.2}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| rowspan="3" | [[file:MS Var.83 33r.png|400px|center]]
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|2|lbl=12v.2}}
+
| <p>In this low guard, you must be diligent that when your adversary thrusts, you must step forth with your right foot, and make a thrust below<ref>German: ''unterstich''.</ref> halfway before [he]<ref name="eer"/> steps to. But if [he]<ref>German: ''eer''. Note that in these two instances, what person is intended by ''eer'' is rather unclear.</ref> steps forth, you will complete your thrust above to his breast.</p>
 +
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|34r|png}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| rowspan="4" | [[file:MS Var.83 37r.png|400px|center]]
+
| <p>In this guard, if someone makes a strike to your right ear, you will take this out with your rapier blade extended over [your] dagger, and immediately bind with your dagger and direct a strike to his head.</p>
| <p></p>
+
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|35r|png}}
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|1|lbl=11r.1}}
 
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>If your adversary delivers a full thrust on the inside of your dagger, you will take this out with the point of your blade, and then press in with your blade.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 11r.png|2|lbl=11r.2}}
+
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|36r|png}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| rowspan="2" | [[file:MS Var.83 37r.png|400px|center]]
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|1|lbl=12v.1}}
+
| <p>If you stand long in this high guard, and your adversary delivers a thrust below, you will take this out with the blade of your dagger, and attack above with a half thrust, and immediately lower your blade behind [your] dagger and deliver a thrust to your adversary’s breast, or at his genitals.</p>
 +
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|38r|png}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p></p>
+
| <p>When you stand long with extended arm, and your adversary strikes at your head, you will take this out with the half cross, and slice at his face.</p>
| {{section|page:MS Var.83 12v.png|2|lbl=12v.2}}
+
| {{paget|page:MS Var.83|39r|png}}
  
 
|}
 
|}

Latest revision as of 02:49, 18 March 2024

Hugold Behr's Fechtbuch
MS Var.83, Universitätsbibliothek Rostock
Rostock, Germany

MS Var.83 Iv.png
MS Var.83 01r.png
HagedornHBLeng38.9.10
WierschinHils
Type Fencing manual
Date Before 1573
Language(s) Early New High German
Author(s) Unknown
Scribe(s) Unknown
Material Paper
Size 51 folia (160 mm × 200 mm)
Format Text with scattered illustrations
Script Cursive
External data Library catalog entry
Treatise scans Digital scans

Hugold Behr's Fechtbuch (MS var. 83) is an anonymous 16th century German fencing manual created some time before 1573.[1] The original currently rests in the holdings of the Universitätsbibliothek Rostock in Rostock, Germany. It was previously owned by Hugold Behr the Elder, from whom it takes its nickname, but its original author and artist are unknown.

Provenance

The known provenance of the MS Var.83 is:[1]

  • Created in the mid-16th century.
  • before 1573 - Owned by Hugold Behr the Elder (1527-1576).
  • 1573 - In the library of Johan Albrect I (1525-1576), Duke of Mecklenburg; included in a library catalog in 1573.
  • before 1789 - Acquired by the University of Bützow.
  • 1789-present - Transferred to the University of Rostock when the two universities merged.

Contents

1r - 39r
40v - 51r Illustrations of human figures

Gallery


Front Cover
MS Var.83 Cover 1.png
Inside Cover
MS Var.83 Cover 2.png
Ir
MS Var.83 Ir.png
Iv
MS Var.83 Iv.png
Folio 1r
MS Var.83 01r.png
Folio 1v
MS Var.83 01v.png
Folio 2r
MS Var.83 02r.png
Folio 2v
MS Var.83 02v.png
Folio 3r
MS Var.83 03r.png
Folio 3v
MS Var.83 03v.png
Folio 4r
MS Var.83 04r.png
Folio 4v
MS Var.83 04v.png
Folio 5r
MS Var.83 05r.png
Folio 5v
MS Var.83 05v.png
Folio 6r
MS Var.83 06r.png
Folio 6v
MS Var.83 06v.png
Folio 7r
MS Var.83 07r.png
Folio 7v
MS Var.83 07v.png
Folio 8r
MS Var.83 08r.png
Folio 8v
MS Var.83 08v.png
Folio 9r
MS Var.83 09r.png
Folio 9v
MS Var.83 09v.png
Folio 10r
MS Var.83 10r.png
Folio 10v
MS Var.83 10v.png
Folio 11r
MS Var.83 11r.png
Folio 11v
MS Var.83 11v.png
Folio 12r
MS Var.83 12r.png
Folio 12v
MS Var.83 12v.png
Folio 13r
MS Var.83 13r.png
Folio 13v
MS Var.83 13v.png
Folio 14r
MS Var.83 14r.png
Folio 14v
MS Var.83 14v.png
Folio 15r
MS Var.83 15r.png
Folio 15v
MS Var.83 15v.png
Folio 16r
MS Var.83 16r.png
Folio 16v
MS Var.83 16v.png
Folio 17r
MS Var.83 17r.png
Folio 17v
MS Var.83 17v.png
Folio 18r
MS Var.83 18r.png
Folio 18v
MS Var.83 18v.png
Folio 19r
MS Var.83 19r.png
Folio 19v
MS Var.83 19v.png
Folio 20r
MS Var.83 20r.png
Folio 20v
MS Var.83 20v.png
Folio 21r
MS Var.83 21r.png
Folio 21v
MS Var.83 21v.png
Folio 22r
MS Var.83 22r.png
Folio 22v
MS Var.83 22v.png
Folio 23r
MS Var.83 23r.png
Folio 23v
MS Var.83 23v.png
Folio 24r
MS Var.83 24r.png
Folio 24v
MS Var.83 24v.png
Folio 25r
MS Var.83 25r.png
Folio 25v
MS Var.83 25v.png
Folio 26r
MS Var.83 26r.png
Folio 26v
MS Var.83 26v.png
Folio 27r
MS Var.83 27r.png
Folio 27v
MS Var.83 27v.png
Folio 28r
MS Var.83 28r.png
Folio 28v
MS Var.83 28v.png
Folio 29r
MS Var.83 29r.png
Folio 29v
MS Var.83 29v.png
Folio 30r
MS Var.83 30r.png
Folio 30v
MS Var.83 30v.png
Folio 31r
MS Var.83 31r.png
Folio 31v
MS Var.83 31v.png
Folio 32r
MS Var.83 32r.png
Folio 32v
MS Var.83 32v.png
Folio 33r
MS Var.83 33r.png
Folio 33v
MS Var.83 33v.png
Folio 34r
MS Var.83 34r.png
Folio 34v
MS Var.83 34v.png
Folio 35r
MS Var.83 35r.png
Folio 35v
MS Var.83 35v.png
Folio 36r
MS Var.83 36r.png
Folio 36v
MS Var.83 36v.png
Folio 37r
MS Var.83 37r.png
Folio 37v
MS Var.83 37v.png
Folio 38r
MS Var.83 38r.png
Folio 38v
MS Var.83 38v.png
Folio 39r
MS Var.83 39r.png
Folio 39v
MS Var.83 39v.png
Folio 40r
MS Var.83 40r.png
Folio 40v
MS Var.83 40v.png
Folio 41r
MS Var.83 41r.png
Folio 41v
MS Var.83 41v.png
Folio 42r
MS Var.83 42r.png
Folio 42v
MS Var.83 42v.png
Folio 43r
MS Var.83 43r.png
Folio 43v
MS Var.83 43v.png
Folio 44r
MS Var.83 44r.png
Folio 44v
MS Var.83 44v.png
Folio 45r
MS Var.83 45r.png
Folio 45v
MS Var.83 45v.png
Folio 46r
MS Var.83 46r.png
Folio 46v
MS Var.83 46v.png
Folio 47r
MS Var.83 47r.png
Folio 47v
MS Var.83 47v.png
Folio 48r
MS Var.83 48r.png
Folio 48v
MS Var.83 48v.png
Folio 49r
MS Var.83 49r.png
Folio 49v
MS Var.83 49v.png
Folio 50r
MS Var.83 50r.png
Folio 50v
MS Var.83 50v.png
Folio 51r
MS Var.83 51r.png
Folio 51v
MS Var.83 51v.png
Inside Cover
MS Var.83 Cover 3.png
Back Cover
MS Var.83 Cover 4.png

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. 1.0 1.1 Bauer, Matthias Johannes. "The Fight Book of Hugold Behr: A Late Sixteenth-Century Fight Book in Comparative Perspective". Acta Periodica Duellatorum 8(1). 2020. pp 89-90
  2. Note, that here the original reads “that your left foot must stand on the 2, and your right behind on the 3”. Based on the illustration, this is incorrect, interchanging “2” and “3”, and this was corrected in the translation presented here.
  3. Here, an alternative translation for im geleichen could be “at the same time”.
  4. In the previous guard, as well as in the image preceding the current lesson, the fencer stands on 2 and 3, rather than 3 and 6. However, in the previous lessons, the fencer does step with his right foot from 2 to 6.
  5. In the manuscript, this line is followed by a 3, the meaning of which is unclear.
  6. Note that the illustration on page 10r shows a fencer standing with his feet on numbers 4 and 5.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 German: eer.
  8. Alternatively, this could be “and when your opponent directs a cut, take this out to your left”.
  9. I.e., if your adversary makes feints.
  10. German: eer. An alternative translation here would be “if he binds you as well”.
  11. The exact meaning of oder Spitze im swanc is unclear.
  12. German: eer. Note the change in meaning.
  13. German: unterhauw.
  14. The exact meaning of this runden stich is unclear, but it may imply that the thrust is delivered along an arc, rather than straight at his legs.
  15. German geleich may alternatively simply mean “at once”.
  16. German: unterstreich.
  17. German: unterstich.
  18. German: eer. Note that in these two instances, what person is intended by eer is rather unclear.

Copyright and License Summary

For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the discussion page.

Work Author(s) Source License
Images Universitätsbibliothek Rostock Universitätsbibliothek Rostock
Public Domain.png
Translation Reinier van Noort Ensis et Mente
Copyrighted.png
Transcription Matthias Johannes Bauer Index:Hugold Behr's Fechtbuch (MS Var.83)
CCBYNCSA30.png