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Difference between revisions of "Ledall Roll (Additional MS 39564)"

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{| class="wikitable floated master"
 
 
|-  
 
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! <p>{{rating|B|Modernization}}<br/>by [[Terry Brown]]</p>
+
| <p>'''The 19th called The Cross Rakes with a Quarter'''</p>
! <p>Transcription<br/>by [[Stevie Thuston]]</p>
 
  
|-
 
| <p>'''The 19th Called the Cross Rakes with a Quarter'''</p>
 
 
A proffer followed with as many rakes as you will, then suddenly smite a full spring to his elbow, with another quarter voiding and be at your stop.
 
A proffer followed with as many rakes as you will, then suddenly smite a full spring to his elbow, with another quarter voiding and be at your stop.
 
| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|18|lbl=-}}
 
| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|18|lbl=-}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p>'''The 20th Called the Broken Quarter with a Thrust'''</p>
+
| <p>'''The 20th called The Broken Quarter with a Thrust'''</p>
 +
 
 
A proffer, a rake lifting up your arms as if you were to smite a quarter, then suddenly thrust at his chest with your left hand, followed with the left foot. Then set in your right leg with a full quarter and another voiding, and be at your stop.
 
A proffer, a rake lifting up your arms as if you were to smite a quarter, then suddenly thrust at his chest with your left hand, followed with the left foot. Then set in your right leg with a full quarter and another voiding, and be at your stop.
 
| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|19|lbl=-}}
 
| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|19|lbl=-}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| <p>'''The 21st Called the Broken Foin with a Spring'''</p>
+
| <p>'''The 21st called The Broken Thrust with a Spring'''</p>
 +
 
 
A proffer, a rake with a full quarter, then set in your left leg and with the left hand bring the sword over the top of your head. Void back and start to play a rabett, breaking the rabett to strike a full spring at his leg with a full quarter, and another quarter and a quarter void, and be at your stop.
 
A proffer, a rake with a full quarter, then set in your left leg and with the left hand bring the sword over the top of your head. Void back and start to play a rabett, breaking the rabett to strike a full spring at his leg with a full quarter, and another quarter and a quarter void, and be at your stop.
 
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| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|20|lbl=-}}
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
| The end.
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| <p>The end.</p>
 
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| {{section|page:Add. MS 39564 1v.jpg|21|lbl=-}}
  

Revision as of 20:10, 3 September 2014

Ledall Roll
Additional MS 39564, British Library
London, United Kingdom
Add. MS 39564 verso.jpg
Top of the verso side of the roll
HagedornLeng
WierschinHils
Type Fencing manual
Date between 1535 - 1550
Language(s) Early Modern English
Scribe(s) J. Ledall
Material Vellum
Format Roll
Script Bastarda (?)
External data Library catalog entry

The Additional MS 39564 is an English fencing manual apparently written by one J. Ledall between 1535 and 1550.[citation needed] The original currently rests in the holdings of the British Library in London, United Kingdom. Along with the Man yt Wol and the Cotton Titus manuscript, this is one of only three extant treatises describing Medieval English martial arts.

The only fencer with the name J. Ledall active in Britain in this time period was John Ledall/Ledale (ca.1515-1582), a British merchant born in York, England, between 1513 and 1518 and awarded Freedom of the City of York in 1529 or 1530. The only son of a glover, Ledall was himself a merchant and seems to have been quite wealthy; he was also a prominent member of the Guild of Corpus Christi, which he joined with his wife Elizabeth Vavasour in 1533. In 1547, Ledall was awarded the title Chamberlain of York, which indicates that he must have been a bridge-master at some point before that time. He died in 1582 and was buried at St. John's Chapel Micklegate.

However, this attribution is questionable as the name seems to refer merely to a scribe, not the original author. It appears in the phrase Amen Quod I Ledall ("confirmed by I./J. Ledall") tucked between two lines in the upper part of the back side of the roll, not at the end where a signature might be expected. Additionally, the sequence of plays suggests that it was copied by rote from an older document by a scribe who didn't understand the material well enough to recognize that the pages were out of order, which would argue against its being copied by any sort of fencer.

Provenance

The known provenance of the Additional MS 39564 is:

  • scribed by J. Ledall between 1535 and 1550.
  • before 1917 - acquired by Rev. Alfred Fuller.
  • 1917 - donated to the British Museum.
  • 1973 - moved to the newly organized British Library.

Contents

Folio Section
1rv

Gallery

Additional Resources

  • Bradak, Benjamin "Casper", and Heslop, Brandon. Lessons on the English Longsword. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press, 2010. ISBN 978-1-58160-734-5
  • Bradak, Benjamin "Casper", and Heslop, Brandon. "A Brief Introduction to the Boon of the English Flourysh." Masters of Medieval and Renaissance Martial Arts. Ed. Jeffrey Hull. Boulder, CO: Paladin Press, 2008. ISBN 978-1-58160-668-3

References

  1. Text continues "called: The Broken Spring with the thrust", but this title seems to be misplaced.
  2. Text reads "The Turning Quarter", but this title seems to be misplaced.
  3. This paragraph may be the misplaced text of the "Turning Quarter"