Fencing Boxing Wrestling
Fencing Boxing Wrestling
Fencing Boxing Wrestling
yi^.^i'f
-m^^ .^^^li^'iic^
http://www.archive.org/details/fencingOOpoll
Pwu^
Jt/T
C/VtC Ci^jstajtZ
/tub ?H^T4.s4^t^
\\
OF
HIS
K.G.
WATSON
PRINTED BY
SrOTTISWOODE AND
0^
P 7
FENCING
BY
WALTER
/r/77/
ART
BOX NG
I
E. B.
MICHELL
WRESTLING
WALTER ARMSTRONG
LONDON
CO.
^^^i^^^rfttMitftaB
BBlOH^^p^^va UTAH
DEDICA TION
TO
H.R.H.
Badminton
October^ 1889.
Having received permission to dedicate these volumes, the Badminton Library of Sports and Pastimes, to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, I do so feeling that I am dedicating them to one of the
best and keenest sportsmen of our time.
I
is
no
man who
own and
live
Also,
I
when
seen
the wind
in
first-rate
vi
DEDICA TION
style.
workmanlike
He
is
who
love
School,
testifies
all
to
his
being, like
sports.
I
manly
do
devotion.
bp:aufort.
BADMINTON,
PREFACE.
A FEW
EINES only are necessary
to explain the object
forth.
There
is
no
modern encyclopaedia
to
who
Some
but one
Lawn
Tennis,
some on
Fishing, and so on
and
arc
women is wanting.
to supply the want.
is
offered
be found
in
a design
we
viii
PREFACE
Experts often
differ.
conscious.
But
this
we may
say,
that those
who
many
years'
experience written by
at the Sport or
men who
point the
way
to success to those
who
are ignorant of
the
To
those
to place simply
Vvall
and
which he
find within,
it
That
has been
no
been written he
must acknowledge
but
it
by the
Editor,
and by the
subject
intelligent
of each
by the various
who
are
so
treat.
The reward we
all
hope
to reap
is
that our
work may
THE EDITOR.
CONTENTS,
FENCING.
CHAPTER
PAGE
i
Introduction
I.
Practical Instructions
-35
.
II.
43
59
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
Practical
74
.88
.
98
no
II.
.......
117
135 148
III.
Boxing
CONTENTS
WRESTLING.
CHAPIER
I'ACE
Introduction
I.
175
.
.
.190
197
II.
Chips'
III.
Ring Reminiscences
Styles and Systems
.
2c6
.
IV.
221
241
295
IL L USTRA TIONS.
The eighteen Intaglio Plates in
Messrs. Hachette <^
'
'
l^y
permission of
Co.
in preparatioji.^ entitled
UEscrime^ par
ly J. D.
Cooper
after Photographs by
Geo. Mitchell.
FENCING.
Vignette on Tit
Up age
The Salute
line.
Parried by tierce
......
...
.
Frontispiece
First Position
To face p.
:
36
Second Position
on guard
,,
38
38
Third Position:
,,
Engagement
Parry
Parry
in
in
Tierce
.
.
,,
44
44
Seconde
Tierce
,,
in
in
in
,,
44
44
Parry Parry
Quarte
Septime
.
,,
,,
44
92
92
Time Thrust
in Sixte
in
,,
Time Thrust
Octave
,,
The Salute
taking position
,,
98
Xll
The Salute
First position
The Salute
The Salute
taking distance
....
left
.
To face p.
98
100
Recognition to the
100
. .
100
Parried by quarte
:
.....
102 102
End
of the Salute
BOXING.
On Guard
Stop with the Left
.
117
122 126
Retreat
in
good order
130
.
The
Side Step
Slipping
.... ....
.
134
140
144 148
152
Left-hand Lead-off
Right Arm Guard
Lead-off at the Body
Page 156
7h face p. 156
Right-hand Cross-counter
Cross-counter Body-blow
Left-hand Cross-counter
168
Xlll
WRESTLING.
The Hank
Catch Hold Style
Buttock
Inside Lock or Click,
To face p. 175
,,
194 198
,,
,,
200
202
The Hipe
The Hold
,,
,,
204
,,
224
,,
230
f^
FEN C
BY
(;.
W. H. POLLOCK,
F. C.
p--
FENCING.
INTRODUCTION.
By
F. C.
Grove.
The
to
it
art of giving
considerable time
but,
endeavouring to improve
it
it,
to develop
to perfection so far
as might be
were
enlightened form of
self-interest, that
man
to
little
pro-
made
and the
noble science,' as
remained
foolish Masters of
Fence
to
to follow egregiously
wrong systems
literally
although
in
matter of most
vital
concern to them.
It
might be thought
was
far
case.
To show
and how
how
methods followed
in
what was
to be gentle-
FENCING
in the old-fashioned sense of the word,
men,
we must
reverse
Let
us,
now
man accustomed
and
its
the
self
is
first
'
en garde.'
He
will
perfect in a world in
being improved.
for
any thrust or
The combatant's sword-arm is free as can be parry he may wish to execute. He is perfectly
and
at the
is
firm
on
his feet,
retire
necessary
which
is
same time
defending
right
one
that
it
trouble,
and
&c.
that,
parries, ripostes,
may
facing an adversary
must soon
Well
to find
it
it
out.
Men
began
to
ponder
in Italy
of encountering an 'opposite'
slash in the
first
who could
all
thrust as well as
position which
finally
is
now adopted by
fix
the best
swordsmen was
at least a quarter
later.
;
but
one.
The
position
now taken by
the fencer
^.
INTRODUCTION
on guard seems so certainly the right one, and,
the expression, the natural one, that
it
if
we may use
under-
appears
;
difficult to
if this
stand
why
it
it
out
and,
be thought
we may
quote, in support of
it,
the authority
who was well versed in the old literature of the schools, and who ranked high amongst the quickest fencers that even Paris ever saw, enjoying a considerable reputation in what we may call the Bertrand period, when skill was carried as far as
of one
it
In
that
inimitable
book,
'
show
mimic
to
man how
,'
My
I
dear
C
will
he
fencing,
think
me
to
use you as
an exponent?'
'With
For a few
minutes, perhaps,'
fate,
replies
the Baron;
it.
'that
is
the
common
Now
on guard
that
to
and
defence.
is
Bend
the haunches
an expression which
with clear-
my meaning
. .
.
ness)
sink the
body a
little.
The
right
arm must be
With
it
this
the lines
has to
guard.
'
advance on you.
To
retreat,
and
at the
and
let
To advance
is
the
left follows.
Bravo
Take
FENCING
steadily balanced, equally ready for attack
and
Are you
tired ?
'
^No.'
'
it
is
the
it
Such
is
defence.'
man-
and winds up by
saying,
One
last
word
?
why have
seems
this position
been chosen
He
certainly
but
it is
natural
and
instinctive
'
move-
ments.
How
and
right
how by
of evolution the
we
shall
endeavour to
is
tell
but
a practical
Manual
in his
well-known work,^ by
which
exists
on the
is,
that,'
strange as
it
of fire-arms.
may seem, fencing resulted from the introduction The Barons of old, who are usually referred to in
whom
nevertheless every-
when
little
need
must
in
prize-fighting
1
was known as a
real slogging
the
match.
to
Covered with
the Eighteenth
Schools
Middle A^es
Century, with a Sketch of the Development of the Art of Fencing with the Rapier and the Small Siuord : by Egerton Castle, M.A., Con Brevetto di Nomina a
Maestro
di
Scherma
London
George
Bell
and Sons.
'
INTRODUCTION
to think of not exposing the
body unnecessarily, or of
protect-
ing
it
They hacked away at each other vigorpierced, weak armour cut through, or
As, however,
into disuse,
armour by degrees
and
as duels very
much
in
had any
left to
self-respect to acquire
what they
at first despised
;
and
men
a
of low degree,
skill in
until in
it is
time
it
became
now
need
for
man
more
for fencing
as distinguished
men
from
mere
which
thus
the sword-and-buckler
only the latter for defence, and not being clad in armour of
proof,
had need
to
be deft with
their w^eapons.
In time gentleat
first skill
men had
in fencing
and although
also, strangely
enough, in France,
gradually
became apparent
first
that a gentle-
man would do
he was
in
willing to
be
killed
by the
bully he met, or to
fall
It is
As
men
of gentle blood,
was discarded
a very
common
one,
we would here remark, must small-sword of later days. The at least in England, and, when
FENCING
is
there
is
This
is
many
generations, there
is
say
that
its
times.
One
of us has handled in
rapier, so
an
Italian
it
collection
beautifully
mounted
feet
long that
was hard
it,
to under-
stand
how any
ordinary
man
could wield
or
it.
under seven
good sense of
awhile,
duellists,
and the
rapier,
came a very
deadly as
its
useful
was not so
same precision
purposes.
Probably,
ended
after
in the death
all,
could be
required
We need
which
and
arms.
To
having been
but the
latter,
following an
most deservedly
lost after a
time the
now
re-
membered
most
is
that
one of
their
on fencing ever
written, which,
we may
IN TROD UC TION
observe,
as there
is
7
different,
was
The method,
method
can be
;
not at
all
astonishing,
art,
sword
w^as
a totally
new
which
had
to
be
learnt.
we may
it
who wished
whole
skin,
so long,
and
In our
may
result
where there
par-
weapon.
Some
highly advisable to be
consequence
a quickness and precision in firing have been attained in parts of America which seem miraculous to those Europeans
who have
skill.
to witness
for the
and though
developing
many
stood,
that
now underBaron de
is,
when they
it is
learn what a
it
but
always dangerous
by the
light of after-acquired
knowledge.
must
also of course
at first
swordsmen fought
mind that the Italian with sword and buckler, and afterbe borne
in
wards with sword and dagger, and that the use of the former
differing
somewhat consider-
FENCING
now assumed. The
With the dagger, however, the
best position was not, or rather should not have been, of so differ-
ent a character.
been
quarters.
To
man who
;
and we
can hardly suppose that the old masters of fence ever practised,
or even counselled, such attacks in actual combat, though they
in their books, in
But
it is
the
for
and
were meant
serious
large
and
practical combatants.
They probably
to give
inserted a
an imposing appear-
pupils with
amazement and
;
and
in this
respect the usage of the old masters has unfortunately not been
so
much
There was
old teachers should set forth for their pupils' benefit various
strange gymnastics.
to wield the
They had
sword
in a regular
how
to defend
rixe.
For
this
if
practised
till
Of books
us
how
fight, either in
ceremony on the
field
The works
of
published, or
;
said to have
been published,
Perpinan
;
of Pedro de la Torre
now to be
found, and
;
been
felt
but,
INTRODUCTION
seems most probable that these were
real books,
earliest
works
at
Modena and
work apCamillo
The
latter writer
tation as a fencing-master,
and
peared
but
it
had nothing
Agrippa, published at
Rome
in 1553, or of
Giacomo
de' Grassi,
light
The
first
that
is
is
to say, fencing
was not
his sole
main pursuit
and
it
made an imcalculated
The Schoolmen
how many
Agrippa
first
was resorted
to.
and bade
all
fighters rely
upon
In
first
and
definite
it
must be
to raise.
It
first
insisted
on
in their published
Italians
owed
their skill
and repu;
In
many
and, though
it
may seem
demnation
will
is
known
that
about
first
to
after
lo
FENCING
that, generally
speaking,
it
was best to
keep the
He
Lo Schermo appeared
at
Venice
in
literally,
a real
His
'
illustrated afterwards
by
his
imitator,
French
fencers, and,
though
as that
far
we should
Grassi,
a contemporary of
Agrippa
it
and
his
book was
was published
to those
must be given
to the world.
w^hole, the
who have
made
themselves
known
Of these
most
was
first
certainly,
on the
original
little,
to him, in the
two not a
In
this respect
they
it
made
The
hew one another in a barbarous, somewhat jolly fashion. The Spaniards were
and obeyed a
set of elaborate rules
slaves to a
senseless pedantry,
as
which had
much
to
do with fencing
as they
the French
made
little
progress at
first
Even method
merit,
and
Italian teachers
that,
were
having comparatively
early got so
further, but
many
having
years, get
any
and
senseless
movements, unable,
after
made
a great
INTRODUCTION
The
Saviolo's
'
ii
London
in 1595.
Saviolo, like
and
like
Angelo
i.e.
in the eighteenth,
came over
;
Englishmen in
and he seems
;
to
have been
much
patronised by
men
ill,
of high degree
George
Silver, to
be referred to
but
is
a valuable
compendium
and
showed
marked
It
away.
not a
little
Next
in order of
time to Saviolo
came
Docciolini,
at Florence,
and
had
art
Fabris of Bologna,
who brought
Denmark.
size
It
and grandeur
and
it
may be
said that
no
special
when
Viggiani foreshadowed
'
Capo Ferro
at Siena.
Whether
other, or
;
is
impossible to say
their fortunate,
very nearly as
and we doubt not enraptured, pupils the lunge, now taught and delivered. It is curious to see,
last
however, what deadly error there was when one truth had at
been reached.
Ferro's
to
Fencers
Capo
work
will
move-
12
FENCING
and determine what he hadvicious.
merits
Nothing could
be more purely
not to do on the
skill,
This
is
pupil
attack.
Where
there
is
great disparity of
may
writers
may be
said
it
to
have culminated in
:
Men
continued to cultivate
there were
teachers of renown
and others of
Three works of
but, if the art did
decline,
it
made no
and
in
the
first
(Tarmes of France.
During the
The
published
Ducoudray
flourished, w^ho,
if
probably
of
made
attack
more formidable
Rennes brought out a work which showed that, after carefully studying the Italian method, the French masters had
improved on
clearly
it.
One
thing he
and
his
who,
and
do sometimes
The
be a
thrust.
The Frenchmen
INTRODUCTION
Italians
13
trying to
do two things
at
separated the
faintly
and indicated
'riposte
de pied
In
most deadly of
all
in
1670 by
De
la
Touche, whose
name seems almost as appropriate as that of Gatechair did in our own time, by De Liancourt in 1686 and by Labat inj^(^o,
1696,
and
701.
When
The
were supreme.
Italians
had had
their day.
it
.They had
with eloquence,
and
illustrated
it
who,
learnt to rely
entirely
clearly
on the
The
illustrations of
this time.
Some
of the
movements
century or the beginning of this; but the Italian waltzing was not
yet altogether
left
hand played a
large part
in the encounter,
adversary's sword.
One
apparently wresting the sword from the other's grasp with his
which,
swordsmen
in
'
many people.
In struggling
in
at close quarters,
wrenching
his adversary's
at the
own weapon
where the
same moment.
blunt,
One
it
edge
is
and break
short
off.
14
left
FENCING
hand gradually disappeared
;
but
it
is
not a
it
little
curious
that, after
should again, in
come
to the front.
In a comparatively recent
left
hand and
in
made
conduct perfectly
fair,
hand
permissible.
hand
is strictly
forbidden,
mimic and
been
real
combat.
was used
a marked
made
much
as
pected
fencing as
it
has
own time
interest for
was approached.
this
One
reason which
art
may
slow progress
when the
but they had no very great value, the only one of importance
Though someart
:
his
but un-
London, of
all
may
of the art
of fencing as
it
INTRODUCTION
perfectly the
15
neces-
methods
of attack and
play.
i.e.,
rapier
to
and small-sword
to any,
there
to
is little
be said of interest
all sorts
but, like
some of those
office,
of the executioner's
ceeded
in killing
somehow or
;
other.
it
They began
to write
about
but
would be
difficult to
name any
German
writer
who
Marozzo, Agrippa, Grassi, Viggiani, Capo Ferro, Marcelli, Liancourt, Labat, or Angelo. Indeed, the best
in rapier play
was acquired, as
it
was
in those of Italy or
France.
As
the
Germans then
were,
when using
of
the rapier,
not necessary to
It
German manuals of
like writing
would be something
case
about
:
English
violinists.
was
different
the
Spaniards had at
first,
refined
and mystic
Italian
FENCING
renown.
The most
practical of arts
was
lost
in a haze of pedantry,
and constant
lists,
practice
years ago,
became strong
In 1599-
Narvaez published
which, even
at
Madrid a
is
treatise
already referred
to,
made
for the
crude condition
It
seems some-
and even symmetrical, but unfortunately have no relation whatA magic circle was ever to the human body or its ailments.
inscribed in which the combatants had to go through a series
same
and
volti
is
'
does to a waltz.
the reputation
it
This work
and elaborate
rules
of
it
its
no
it
So
far as
Italy.
is
something
in
When
introduced into
travelled in Italy
when
advo-
new sword
play with
Girard Thibault,
'
Acad^mie de
I'Epee,' folio,
Leyden, 1628.
INTRODUCTION
extreme disfavour, not because
it
17
other men were not troubled with humanitarian those days but seemingly because Englishmen
had been
this
accustomed
to
way of operating as the only legitimate kind of fighting, and looked upon the new system as treacherous, unfair, and ignoble
:
why,
it is
and so
The
regarded
the pointed rapier has certainly proved lasting, since the prejudice against fencers was,
if
the expression
spirit,
may be
allowed,
the
How
but of which we
came
to
England
to teach
swordsmanship,
much
indigenous swordsmen.
Amongst
who were
greatly aggrieved
first
twice accursed,
insomuch as he was a
and secondly
George
Silver,
to
remain inactive
the
Italians,
of their
discomfiture
skill
by himself and
others,
against their
method of
in
'
fighting.
London
of great
certainly,
in 1599,
he
tells
reputation, established in
if
London
in his time,
who
they gave as
much
to
have occupied
much
c
'
FENCING
Jeronymo,
his son,
Now if it be true,
Rocko
received twenty,
it is
forty, fifty, or
not
him a cowardly
did with a
'
This Rocko
well,
stroke
more
'
familiar
Eton boys
in the
first fault
him to
forth,
live.
On
when
words only passed, but these were of a serious nature befitting the grave dispute. Rocko the younger and Saviolo spoke
contemptuously of English swordsmanship.
as there
and they
They having
to fight
accustomed
and
his brother
on a
man who
but this
is
some-
times carried out in our day, was not accepted, and the Italians
still
more
dis-
whom
mauled by a Somersetshire bravo, towards he showed, according to Silver, the most Christian for-
bearance.
The
in those days.
him
in a
whom
a happy
INTRODUCTION
and obvious occasion
for calling
19
to fight,
on him
and
killed
him
forthwith.
Italian Maestri di
So the
ill
at the
hands
men, having
all
the worst of
if
it
accept a challenge,
Silver's narrative
to
be trusted
but
probably
it
own
a foreigner,
phenomenon
as yet
unobserved by a student
may be
Whether truthful or not, however, Silver's pages are most amusing and it must be said that his suggestion mentioned above was an admirable one, and might well be carried
solution.
;
own
time.
to
make men
rails
than causing
them
to fence
on a platform without
not
charitably
hoped the
Italians
might
tumbles would bring about an amount of ridicule which would cause those timorous fencers who dance away from an attack
like frightened girls either to
mend
or to give
up a masculine
sport which
entirely unsuited to
The
i.e.
for thrusting
the cutting sword, which Silver expressed so vigorously, continued to animate his countrymen, and the result of the fond-
in our
own
time in the
game
of single-stick, which
neither sabre
c 2
20
play
FENCING
nor
cudgel,
but a bastard
sport,
with
no
particular
meaning.
By
was
for long
ment
fit
contrition that
public as
saying
is
we allude to anyone so frequently forced on the the Needy Knifegrinder, but really his hackneyed most applicable to fencing in England. With or
is
none
to
tell.
men
learnt fencing as
it
was practised
in Italy
ideas, but
on the whole
had no great
merit, and,
though he studied
It
may almost be
no
original
books
of real value saw the light until Angelo brought out his gorgeous
folio
'
To
it
referred.
When
like
appeared the
it
art of fencing
what
one
now
is
this,
strange to say,
fifty
years
onger.
wrote,
though
It is said that some of the a ghastly story about this book. by a man condemned to death, who was allowed a respite The work done, he was to finish them for the benefit of his wife and children. hanged. Whether this painful legend is true, we are unable to say.
There
is
INTRODUCTION
certainly the old masters of fence took
21
an unconscionable time
From Marozzo in 1536 to Domenico Angelo Tremamondo (simplified at the request of a noble
'
considered
made
more
in introducing
As has been
use,
seen,
when
came
into
the
though
latter.
The
them
use of
some of the
features of the
;
and,
to these
two arms,
it is,
as has
we
might almost
of gymnastics,
made
good
man who
persisted
\\\
standmg
on one
leg.
To
of illustrations showing
given here.
with the
how not to do it, which cannot be The reader who desires to become well acquainted
is
referred to
to say that
now
what
is
in the present
day most
most
strictly
enjoined.
To
;
as has
been
movement
of defence
must
also
be one of attack
;
must
also
be a thrust
that
is
to say, with
no command of
point, they
command
22
FENCING
it
of
to
is
now
only
be rarely attempted.
necessary to keep
it
steadily foremost.
It
to bring the left foot to the fore, not always for the sake of
facilitate a
variety
movements
to the right
and
left,
for the
purpose of avoiding
sometimes the
right foot,
sometimes the
'
left,
being fore'
most
and though the point must have been most irregularly disordered, these no doubt were executed by the duellist with
;
much
One
It
in death.
left.
seems
to be
more
in
and
when it is remembered that in those days ignominy attached to wounds behind, it seems strange that such a way of avoiding
thrust should be counselled
;
method of defending
advantage
stepped to the
They
and
to perceive that a
man who
and
command
over the
our days,
much
In course of time, however, the French masters, and be added some of the
to better things.
after
it
should
saw
their
way
allowing the
foot to
INTRODUCTION
for the
23
front,
and
movethe
ments were a mistake, and that the fencer should step forwards
and backwards
parries,
in
line.
They
also
much improved
and improved
all
most
formidable of
beyond aught else makes a man formidable in the duel. When Angelo wrote, then, a very pretty system of swordsmanship
trations,
existed,
though he thought
fit
The
principal part of
vital
due
of fence,
who
which they
after-
As long ago
as the
middle of the
last
now
it
but,
though
it
might
be
seems clear
that,
fencers of repute
taste, or, as
it
bad form,
wear them.
To
hit
an
the
work by an opponent
but
taken into
;
strained
for
it
can
just
partial consolation to a
his antagonist
24
FENCING
careless
and inelegant
in style.
Then
it
of grave
accident,
to rest the
this must*
far
as
possible,
left
and
and
leg
unreal.
Anyone
trained in the
will
take
how
safe-
probably wonder
much
guard which would have made the free use of their limbs
possible."
As
it
until
some time
As made
changed.
their youth,
and touching
to
There
is
and
free,
pedantry was, as
had been
before,
Stiff
movement with
and, in a way, their assaults must have been very pretty, but
A
well
now
long departed,
who
INTRODUCTION
remembered the old
assault
still
25
days, described to
one of us what an
was
like
between
two
;
maitres
d'armes
when form
been given
reigned supreme
^
making an
appel
'
'
Voila. monsieur
how an
du tac-au-tac
'
precision, half a
deceive
how throughout
its
no
flurry,
no unseemly scrambling.
way, but
it
was very
'
finished, very
clever in
ever,
was not
'
la guerre,^
in time.
long
art
retarding, so
far as
which ought to have become much more practical after masks came into general use the terrible Bertrand, who has
been called the Napoleon of fencing, appeared, to baffle and bewilder the dogmatic veterans, as Napoleon bafiled and bewildered the generals of Austria.
despise rule, or
'
He
in
form
all
'
as
it
but,
on the
contrary, accepted
that
was good
fencers
artificial,
or to consider any-
In a word, he broke through rule where rule was unmeaning, showed that moveit
and bringing
it
life,,
vigour,
and
fire
made
it
what
ought to be,
26
FENCING
The
old fencers shuddered
;
them and
their disciples,
hits, as
it it
Bertrand prevailed.
If
others,
As has been
indicated,
he
no work behind
him
during his whole career one pupil of great renown, the justly
celebrated Pierre Prevost,^ long resident in this country.
in the assault
But
and
to
to
anyone
is
this
extra-
who
to
men who
can play
and
man may be
in
Of
his extraordinary
to
be reproved by him,
his
may
give
some
idea.
was
his
to run
not
One
and
when he and
together,
'
his assistant
latter
smart
pace
the
c'est
slipped
Trainard,^
said Bertram,
temps par
glisser.^
terre.
Levez-la
le
temps de
his
full
off at
work.
this
INTRODUCTION
speed
'
27
indeed
follow
along
as
the sHppery
pavement, leaving
best
he might.
his astonishing
At a public
assault,
he
fell
famous fencing-master of the day, because the latter would The public seemed rather disposed to not acknowledge hits.
side with his foe,
whereupon Bertrand,
on
his
remark
off for a
His an-
He
was met
by an irreproachable
was no
riposte.
A second
became apparent
that Bertrand
or retreat an inch.
he
he could
not mark Bertrand's jacket with a touch that would have killed a
fly,
effort
had
to give
up exhausted. Such
in the
feats
splitting of the
famous romance;
extremely
rare.
but in real
least,
When the
be
antagonist has
acts
almost certain to
vanity,
and
One
day,
coming
late to his
for
'
some
time.
'
M,
vous
etes
en retard,^
'
Je ne
suis pas
etes
other.
Qu'-est'
ce
que vous
Vous
etes
un maitre
d''
amies,'
Mon-
sieur^'
replied
''
maitre
d'armes with
infinite
scorn and
majesty,
un
officier
comme
vous
et dans
art
monde
Bertrand'
The
28
as
FENCING
may
well be imagined, various literary exponents during the
many
be named
those of Possellier,
Cordelois,
Gomard
the
Grisier,
known by
first
The
of these,
who adopted
so,
name
sword unusually
his
'
and
list
Theorie de
French
the
writers
to
one of
best,
Mr.
Castle's
work
appeared.
writer
Grisier's
for a time,
it
and the
heralded by a long
;
Dumas
to
and
now
'
but
little
The well-known
it
'
Lemons
d'Armes
Copious, written
achieved
We
it is
open
to con-
siderable
criticism; but
we do not wish
to
undertake the
who
is
is still
remembered by many.
and
'
On
one
point,
how-
Cordelois condemiued
^^
the
'
coup de temps
coup (T arret
is
perfected.
The
The
coup de temps
when
brilliant in
coup d'arret
is
The
little
work of Prevost
aine,
'Theorie Pratique de
kind.
Conit
same time
perfectly clear,
INTRODUCTION
contained
all
'
29
to
be a
full
manual of
of his
own
teaching,
who desired to study carefully his method of and who also desired that some record of it should
pupils,
it
remain.
thing
Necessarily, however,
was but an
abstract.
Any-
Of
'
named
is
at the
The
others were
swordsmen
for dis-
who took
author
to writing.
He
the famous
himself, absolutely, as
instructor,
said,
and
all
audacity.
The
fencing-masters thought
and
last
too in
how
to use
the
self
sword.
Bazancourt
albeit
first
a mighty
and much
followed
:
writer's instinct,
and thought
of pleasing
to the
which he did
unmistakably.
From
its
happy
title
happy sentence
which
which ends
seems no
at all
it,
style at all
never palls or
it
may be read
he
is
afar
the reader
must not
an
mind
charm.
;
In
but,
bright
30
FENCING
to him, as
it
it
was not
all in all
to a
weak one,
sense.
a certain
'
amount of good
in his
'
Why have I
written this
'
open-
ing sentence.
To amuse and
might be answered
truth,
though
it
should in
fair-
was
in
some
is,
however,
it
mos t
fury
stirs to
professeur d'escrime
to reject.
it
should be
but we
may be
this
and loathe
modern
appellation, which,
great fencers
seem inclined
The
irregular
like
latter,
They
They
and the
To
in
they are not bound, as the others are, by any set of views
set
forth
the
shape
of
and
instruction
but
Bazancourt
though, as
is
may be regarded
who have
followed him.
Shortly,
is
may be
at
any
INTRODUCTION
way
that
31
t,
to duck,
prod and
poke as he thinks
fit
which
enough
fencing
but
it
must be remembered
itself is artificial.
A man
To
him out of
real
it.
can be no
guide
may
do what
is
is
wrong, but
right.
Men
it
used
dis-
for a considerable
time before
was
ear.
As has been shown briefly, and but imperfectly we fear, modern fencing is the result of a long study, extending over
very
many
It
was
it
made
progress
more
to
precise,
more
make
the limbs
and body
and three
be
centuries after
Marozzo wrote
may be assumed
of using the
hoped
of his
for in
and
to Bertrand's period
Bazancourt belonged
about according to his own sweet fancy, of which his followers have availed themselves to an extent which certainly he never
anticipated.
Such
license
is
not
permissible,
32
FENCING
may be
the reasons given for granting
it.
plausible as
A system
just as
belief,
which
it
Though
tenacious of
life
almost beyond
absurdities
out,
and
this
by Bertrand
is
now
Of
instinctive,
because
it
was so eminently
and obviously,
as
it
seemed
it is
So
far as
bow
of the violin
is
undoubtedly the
One
is
about as
So with the
once the
case,
rest.
due
to
The rules of fencing are not, as was dogma and caprice, but are the result
and of
infinite
of hundreds
of thousands of combats,
pains
system undoubtedly
it,
is,
to master
but this
is
is
desired.
and
be in a
it
is
worth,
;
and
who
deride discipline
coming
away
is,
to the
There
is,
we
believe,
no case
as
who claimed
liberty to
do
far
it
'
dernier,^
Of
course
may happen
that
INTRODUCTION
No
and put the slow by the
naturally quick
side of the swift,
33
is
much for one who is Bazancourt, who was a left-handed naturally slow and heavy. swordsman, had astounding natural quickness, and may have In like manner a man prevailed against well-skilled fencers. who has a natural talent for acting, but has never studied, in the old sense of the word, may produce certain brilliant effects but study is advisable for those who wish to act all the
and
active
may be
too
same.
this chapter,
an attempt
is
made
Englishmen
in the
most
practical
manner
possible
is
now
is
The system
followed
whom,
perhaps, swordsmanship
;
culminated after
despite
its
for assuredly,
the
zealous efforts
As has been
he
left
who
in turn
it
imparted
to
it
most strenuously
careful tuition.
to teach
working
for
and amplification
be necessary.
in
some
respects as experience
is
had
shown
to
An
attempt
and
to give
believed to be
34
FENCING
that
is,
a rule of
obedience to
rule,
35
CHAPTER
I.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS.
It may be well to begin by the explanation of a few elementary
technical terms in constant use.
in the course of the instructions.
The
Tierce ; Quarte.
speaking, they
mean
and
and
than
of,
or small sword,
any other
much more
frequently spoken
and
are thought
by many
easiest
to indicate the
and mystery
of fencing.
The
to
language
is
say that
way of explaining them in popular tierce means right, and quarte left.
Thus, when the swords are crossed with the points upwards,
the fencers are engaged in tierce
if
of each other
in quarte, if to the
To
lunge in tierce
;
is
to lunge in
be described a
in a
little
one
engaged
in quarte
;
Supination
tion
when the other is engaged in tierce. pronation. The hand is said to be in supina-
when 'the finger-nails are turned uppermost when they are turned downwards.
in pronation,
D 2
36
Opposition,
FENCING
To take opposition
when
engagement
is
so to protect the
body
cannot
e.g., if
the
left that, if
must go
To
it
;
nullify,
is
so to
manipulate the
parry misses
foil
e.g., if
his point
sham
him
real
to parry to the
and
makes the
left.
This
is
some of the
methods of
the extreme.
be seen, complex in
deceiving a parry.
The French
is
always
call this
In
this case,
translation
best, so
we
do
It is
fensive
movement.
If the
combatant who
is
make
all
wrong.
Nothing
more marks a
power of
going to do
power which
FOIL OR SWORD.
on the upper
that
is,
the convex
hilt,
and lower
part,
FIRST POSITION
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
side.
yj
The
fingers should
is
lightly.
This way
that
by the action
If,
of the
thumb and
forefinger aided
by the other
fingers.
as
some masters have taught, the forefinger is stretched away, the middle finger and the other two fingers must grip the hilt, and this will tend to make the movements less quick and less
light.
The
parries
specially will
be wanting
in precision
and
smartness.
THE
Three
fencing
1.
:
POSITIONS.
rightly
only, in
recognised in
guard.
2.
3.
The The
position on guard.
extension
i.e.
the lunge.
heels
First position.
The
must touch,
the
right
at
foot
and the
the
left
foot
right
the
arm
the
straight
left
and inclined
to the right
the
side,
hand in supination
but clear of
it,
arm
falling naturally
by the
the
To
it
first
to the
second
Lower the
down-
wards, and
move
it
towards the
;
left,
lift
lightly just as if
was sheathed
movement
it
slightly
backwards, keeping
at the
same
arm
and rounded
bring
right
the right
hand
below the
38
breast, the
FENCING
arm
bent, the elbow close to the body, the button
;
of the
foil at
and bend
left.
Keep
two
legs,
Press the
left
hip in well
left.
The
maintained.
it
This position
is
known
as being
on guard.
When
self,
advance or
retreat,
paratory movement.
find
it
If,
on
firs-t
taking
as
is
it,
natural
and
instinctive,
Bazancourt called
let
him be persuaded
art,
The more
penetrates
more chance
of fencing
facts
is,
there
is
of ultimate success.
One
it
of the beauties
that, like a
kindly doctor,
teaches
men many
least
suspected before.
Third
position
:
position.
To
the
stretch
right
arm
straight,
keeping
;
it
at the
the
hand
in
supination; advance the right foot about a sole and a half the
stature of the individual being always taken into consideration
little,
same moment
men do when
hand
down
in the left hip, straighten the left leg to the left thigh without touching
and
it,
thigh,
drop the
left
wards.
The
left
foot
must remain
flat
o
o ^ ^ o ^ ^o o
cXDO
o
C/1
^ O ^ ^ W
2 w c
X
a;
(U
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
avoided.
39
The
is
right
knee must be
straight
above the
instep.
This
Anglice^
point
;
so
as
may be
practicable the
his eyes.
who
as
has had
many
followers,
combatant should
should turn the
efface himself as
much
possible that
is,
left
side as
much
as
he can
as
may
be.
In our opinion
in this
an
error.
manner,
extremely
to
quence the parries become large and slow, and the lunge
rapid than
it
should be, as
is
it is
arm
in the
manner indicated.
posed
for grace,
It is not, as is
is
but
falls,
and
greatly
is
raised again.
Indeed
importance.
resting too
for
much on
the right
freedom necessary
quick extension.
makes
almost impossible to
retreat,
40
FENCING
time necessary to bring the body well on to the two legs again.
Further, this position obliges the combatant to
spite of all that has
jump
and, in
been said
in novels
fencers, there
is
advance
or the lunge.
It
left
knee should be
left
straight over
foot
haunch out of
left leg.
and a
little
antagonist
is
it is
hoped
to touch him.
and tends
in
much
danger.
The
on the
floor
in.
It
altogether
abandoned
and
now looked
is
upon
to
is
lift
as vulgar.
To make
step,
necessary
movement.
The
lunge
a glide
and not a
first
when
To
side,
bring the
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
right foot
41
back
left
to within
some two
bend the
To
bring
and
steadily, there
must be pressure of
which gave impulse,
left hip,
similar to that
and quickness
to the attack.
The
fencer
may
left
by drawing the
to within
Bring the
left
foot
about two
the
left
who have
attained
some
skill in
When
of the
leg
;
Throw
all
the weight
body on
by a vigorous
left,
effort
of the right
two
length with
left foot,
To regain
either for-
heel
To advance,
Being
to
same
maintained.
As
advance
more
To
the
retreat,
left foot,
left
the
foot starting
tained.
When
is
the retreat
the
when on
to
the lunge.
The
appel,
To
make
the
appel
stamp, or rather
to slap the floor with the sole of the right foot, producing
42
FENCING
unmeaning noise already spoken
were concerned
it
the
of.
So
far as first-class
fencers
in the
was
still
to
of
Arms has
it
Of
course
five,
and served no
who made
it.
It
43
CHAPTER
II.
THE
LINES.
LINE, SO called,
foil
is
or sword
is
side or limit
The word
we
lines in fencing
first
The upper
and outside
the inside
being to the
left
The
left
lower to the
of
lines,
it
is
down
but
is
not necessary,
been
be engagement.
THE ENGAGEMENT.
The engagement
simply, or
is
is
It
may
take
and
is
either called
is
engagement
named
which
Engagements
'
'
in
'
in this sense,
are dessous and dehors. Of the latter, when used no exact translation in one word can be given, and, in order to avoid a dual name, an arbitrary meaning is given to the word exterior.
44
FENCING
When
the Itahan system
is
followed
it is
otherwise.
SIMPLE PARRIES.
Simple parries are those which meet the blade directly in
the line in which the thrust
is
made.
for
two
each
line.
They
are called
Prime,
Octave.
lines,
Seconde,
Tierce,
Quarte,
Quinte,
Sixte,
Septime,
and
The
movements
versa.
upper
lines, semi-circular in
the lower
when
vice
The hand
arm
bent,
and a
hip,
lower
line.
little
Seconde.
Hand
to
the right a
;
and well
in front
hand
in pronation
little
the
arm
straight
without
stiffness,
the point a
in pronation, the
elbow by
little
the side
at the height
The
hand
to the
left,
thumb uppermost;
body
and
slightly
beyond
the inside
Quinte.
The
;
hand
of the belt
Sixte.
beyond the
inside line.
;
right in supination
little
the point at
line.
supination
< o
o o
IxJ
CO
<
uq
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
at
45
;
the
the
arm
half extended
the
point to the
Octave.
The same as
eight simple
We
should
know what
find in
room and
books
may
be reduced to
four.
introduced
things practical,
and abundant
The
1.
may be abandoned
large
are
;
Prime^ because
difficult
on
is
by no means easy.
because
it is
Septime, which
smaller and thereis
same
lines, is better,
if it
fore quicker,
and because,
much
2.
easier, the
hand being
in supination.
and
the
hand
hand being
only the ends of the fingers to resist the effects of a smart beat
in the outside line,
left
or
knock
it
With
tierce there is
the
thumb
is
to
beat,
and
same
line as sixte.
Not a few
is
fencers think
:
that sixte
is
an error
indeed,
it
be slower, because to deflect the adversary's blade the point must be raised higher than it need be for the other
likely to
parry.
We may
pronounced but
46
4.
is
FENCING
Octave^ because, the
hand being
inferior to
seconde
given.
line as octave.
We
now
indicate the
manner
in which, starting
from
From
the
Engage ?7ient
the
in
Quarte.
To To To
point,
making
it
describe a
half-circle
from
left
to right.
parry
tierce^
Take the position of seconde. move the hand to the right, taking the
tierce position.
parry septime,
height of the
move the hand to the right and to the shoulder, the arm half extended, and, at the same
and let
it
from
right to
left,
coming
The
From Engagement
in Tierce,
To
left.
foil
into seconde
by making
To
left,
parry quarte^
move
the
right to
To
it
parry
septi77ie^
bring the
foil
by making
From Engagement
in Seconde,
To
parry
tierce^
make
the
point
left,
describe
a half-circle
foil
and bring
describe
to
tierce
To
parry quarte^
make
the
point
half-circle
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
from below to above, passing from right to
to quarte position.
left,
47
and bring
foil
To
foil
I^ro7n
Engagement
foil to
is
in Septime,
To
as has
line
is
seconde position.
With
engagement there
by
no need to parry
tierce line.
;
tierce, since,
The
inside
-
comprehensive parry
but, never
theless,
when the adversary's point is aimed high, the quarte parry may be used without making the half-circle to do this raise the point and move the hand to the left, lowering it a
:
little.
his point
is
Changes
made by
said,
but, as has
been
engagements in these
As
engagement,
frequently be
it
is
made
and take
the
This
is
name
this
Simple as
movement
hand and
skill
in finger-play are
it
required to execute
is
an
48
FENCING
In advancing
it is
admirable exercise.
of great use, as
it is
not
upon
it
but
it
SIMPLE ATTACKS.
Simple attacks are those which are preceded by no
feint.
straight thrust,
In
this attack, as
in
all others,
the
movement of
or foot.
the
It
is
hand and arm must precede that of the body impossible to pay too much attention to this most
The
straight thrust
is
in the line in
When
in this or
hand
best in supination
is
positions apart,
pronation
and makes
point
finger-play difficult.
When
the adversary's
may be
given by seizing with the fort of the sword the faible of his,
the
high.
is
To
is
necessary.
quitting the line
in
This
which the
It
line
that
which
occasionally be used
latter
To disengage
line to
Pass
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
spring-like
49
taking
movement
of the
the
hand
in supination.
many
On
be advanced so as
should be, in
fact,
to pass
under
hand or arm
there
one continuous
spiral, if
the expression
his
may
blade
when
it
or
is
unhappily pre-
activity.
to
low.
Drop
The two
effected
named
are of course
The coupe or
The
coupe
is
it is
upper
lines.
To make
other,
the coupe.
Raise
it
over the
other fingers.
line,
slightly as
lunging.
The
counter-disengage.
This
can
only be
made on
of
a
it
By means
may
it
As
stated above, a
made by
one
line
in
is
for another.
A
;
made
in fact reversed.
to tierce.
The
E
50
FENCING
is
under
his
forefinger,
keeping to a continuous
extend
hand
in supina-
Reverse
tierce to quarte.
On
movement must be
made on
disengage
made by
hand.
The
when
touch
counter-disengage
may sometimes be
abridged by
Thus
in
and lunge
that hne.
In
like
tierce,
he may
called
These are
still
made
When
is
When
the
blade
is
On
septime
line,
parry,
quarte,
or
seconde
On
inside
line
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
after the
51
septime
and seconde
respectively.
FINGER-PLAY OR DOIGTE.
The
point should
be
directed
in
fencing
by the
all
use
its
principally of the
thumb and
feint,
it
forefinger,
which govern
movements.
The
other fingers
blade steadiness in
power
a
and by supporting
sary to close a
line
in
shock or
when
it
is
neces-
by taking or maintaining
pressui'e with
it
opposition.
them when
but they
to feel.
little
ceases;
hilt,
The
hilt,
however,
may on
occasion be separated by a
it
by the
Without
this
it is
impossible to exe-
movements
properly.
fingers,
The
is
thumb and
called doigte,
is
in fencing,
but
extremely
to a
difficult to acquire,
man's
him
to use his
In
first
must be taken
to
make
If,
the
point in
the
manner
indicated.
arm and
all
its
self-control as will
probably exhaust his entire stock, and leave him none for the
other efforts of
life.
E 2
52
FENCING
of these
movements the
adversary's sword
is
got
may be
attacked.
They
made by
This
it
is
move
make an
The
beat,
This
it,
is
blade, paralysing
resist
him
to
makes
it
easy
must work
in the battemejtt.
The
the
'
scrape.
;
'
If slang
were allowed,
is
this
ought to be called
Scrooge
but there
delivered in tierce
or
his
when
too
low,
arm stretched
line,
out.
The
object of
it
is
to
paralyse his
for the
moment, or
to drive his
so that his
Often
disaniTS.
To execute
the faible of
it
seize, so to
his,
down
and giving
for the
his
moment,
in this
;
movement,
and the adversary's blade must be well felt but there must be no heavy pressure due to clenching of the muscles. The
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
"Scrape in tierce
is
53
is
advised to
attempt.
The
tiioist
(croise),
This
is
bringing
the
adversary's
line,
is
too low.
in quarte
:
thus
executed
fort,
with
engagement
seize
over his
hilt.
will
either disarm
in his grasp.
little
higher
in the usual
:
With engage-
ment
in tierce
The
more
the
twist
undoubtedly the
This
is
somew^hat like
movement, but
that
is
less violent
is
movement, so
it
is
only possible
when
is
too low.
in quarte
:
To
ing the
execute
it
with
engagement
hilt,
straighten-
arm at the same time, and lunging in the exterior line with the hand in supination, and taking marked opposition to the right. This is the famous thrust known as flanconnade or
liement
d ^octave.
twist
The
tierce
to a
bwer
line
to,
and from
seconde to an upper
now
resorted
as they so
54
FENCING
may be
prefaced by a change of
Hoiv
to
to
and hoiv
parry
the attacks on
sword and
body.
The
pressure on the
frustrated
line.
by a disengage
upper
low
As
lower
the
first
line,
they
may be
nullified
line.
The
twist
is
frustrated
by a
dis-
that
from
by yielding
and disengaging
The
as
twist
engage
marner
would be great
it
of
must there-
be parried.
To parry
the flanconnade.
first,
Without
losing
is
touch,
yield
horizontal (the
left)
slightly,
and
raise
opposition in that
line.
is
A
ment,
frustrated in the
i.e.
same way
as an ordinary
change of engage-
by a counter-disengage.
of engagement
The change
frustrated
made by
the twist
may
also be
by a counter-disengage.
On
scrape.
feint
is
sham
or false attack
made
without extension,
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
In order to deceive
parry by preventing
it
55
that
is,
a com-
posed
attack,
in
attempt to
hit,
in
by no means uncommon
little
for fencers to
feint,
hand a
arm out
We
movement
but
it
must be kept quite supple, and great care must be taken not
to
The
arm
The
adversary, startled
almost obliged to
in danger,
make
which he appears to be
thereby rendering
all
the
:
more
in
likely that
he
will
Further
composed
attacks the
ning.
will be.
The
execution,
command
of finger-play
lines,
is
essential.
In
in
all feints,
the
hand should be
supination.
the
movement
must be
at the
end
that
is
to say, there
must be no extension
is
When
there
an advance with
together,
feint
must be
the
made
To
may be
due
nullify or
steel, if
tromper
le fer
'
and precision
This
latter
as each parry
is
formed.
56
FENCING
is,
course
when
there
is
some
foil
disparity in
It is
be
laid
down
for this,
The
The
first
steel
may be
called nullifying
When
may be
parry wnll
resorted
to.
The
fencer
first
for nullifying
the others.
In doing this
it is
him
to regulate his
Too many
composed
this
is
They make a
is
that
movement
be.
it
or
defence
succeed,
likely to
is
Of
course
may
credit
but
no
on the
swordsman.
this
moveto
object.
To do
this
is
be
that
it is
playing.
COUNTER PARRIES.
counter
is
a circular parry
circular
it
that
is
to say,
one
in
which
the blade
makes a
body.
movement
ward
it
off the
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
est
57
is
contre, for
which there
no precise
equivalent.
made.
properly
made when
versa
in
of the engagement
\
i.e.
z^/V^
Counters are
made
as follows
Engaged
in quarte to
parry counter-quarte.
The
moment
his
makes a coupe,
to attack in out-
under
left
segment of the
his.
The
thumb and
forefinger, aided
fingers, so as to
at the last
moment by
give a sharp clean rap which will drive the other blade away.
From
The instant
the adver-
sary disengages or
makes .a coupe
make
down
From
seconde
to
parry
counter-seconde.
Directly
make
left,
the
the
right to
passing over
as in counter-quarte.
From
sword
is
The
exterior line,
left
describe a circle,
moving
first
from
When
are to the
there
is
no junction of the
steel,
to.
named according
left
to the lines
approximated
called counter-quarte
and
Septime,
it
is
to
58
FENCING
used instead of counter-tierce.
attacks as the other,
It can,
as,
tageously
the
It
protects
from
as
same
than counter-tierce,
much
sooner caught.
name
indicates,
Reversed
tierce
from
;
quarte
engagement
is,
therefore,
and
counter-tierce
and counter-quarte.
other
is
The
first is
it is
seldom resorted
easily
to,
but the
an excellent parry, as
made and
not easily
avoided.
lines,
in the lower
save
when
(to
be explained
on) then,
in
retreating,
septime and
counter-septime
may sometimes be
useful.
59
CHAPTER
III.
PRACTICAL. INSTRUCTIONS
Continued.
HOW TO NULLIPT OR
Engaged
make
a beat,
and
diserbgage
make
a coupe.
line of
engagement are
lines there
nullified in a similar
manner, but
in the
lower
can be no coupe.
in
From engagement
eno;ao-e into
quarte,
To
nullify
seconde
dis-
To
1.
nullify tierce
This
It
is
called one-two,
and
is
a frequent
attack in fencing.
in
may be abridged by
in inside line,
simulating thrust
dis-
low
line
and attacking
line
and by simulating
and attacking
line.
in exterior line.
Change engagement, giving a pressure or beat, or the scrape on making the change, and disengage into exterior or
3.
inside line.
6o
FENCING
To
1.
nullify septime
Make
feint in
low
line, feint,
lines)
and counter-disengage.
in the line of
If the adversary
is
exposed
engagement,
Fro?n engagement in
first
tierce.
To
nullify
seconde
one -two,
ing in tierce.
To
1.
nullify quarte
tierce.
2.
One-two
and attacking
in low^ line.
3.
To
1.
nullify
septime
Feint
disengage
into
is
quarte,
and
counter-disengage
This
a double.
2.
3.
From engagement
seconde.
To
nullify tierce
one- two
line.
To
1.
nullify quarte
line.
2.
and counter-disengage
into
tierce.
To
hilt.
nullify
septime
: One-two,
nullify
seconde
one-
To
nullify quarte
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
6i
i.
To
one-two
in inside line
and
quarte.
Seconde may be
if
the feint
is
the
anyhow,
judgment.
2.
To
one-two in exterior
line
when
A
is
change of engagement
in the
upper
line,
with a beat,
pressure, or scrape
parried in the
same way
;
in the
above paragraph
movements
and
same manner
:
as the second.
To disengagement
To one-two
parry septime or
seconde.
4.
parry
or
or
Engaged
in tierce.
i.
To meet
tierce.
counter-tierce, or quarte
and
rightly
may
of course be parried.
line
:
To
septime, or quarte
and seconde.
is
parried in the
same
way
as the
first
a change so followed
as the second
manner
of.
To
and counter-disengage, or
:
parry septime
62
FENCING
HOW TO NULLIFY OR
Engaged in quarte
disengagement
tierce,
2.
AVOID COUNTER-PARRIES.
to
is
avoid counter-qiiarte,
to
say,
i.
Double the
that
end
in
in this case,
little
be in complete
lower than the
pronation at the
and should be a
make
make
a coupe,
just at the
end of the
might be
called counter-coupe).
4.
quarte or
into low-line
hand may be
in
complete
E?igaged in
tierce^ to
avoid
counter-tierce.
line.
i.
Double
dis-
make coupe
or,
simulate coupe
quarte,
quarte or exterior
are avoided
line.
for counter-seconde.
LAST MENTIONED.
in
in quarte.
To
upper
parry
counter-quarte
is
and
tierce,
or
double
counter-
quarte that
To meet
and
into
parry counter-quarte
Engaged
in tierce. \,
To meet
a double disengage
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
inside line, feint of disengage
feint of
63
and coupe
parry
counter-tierce
and
quarte, or
counter-tierce
and septime, or
double counter-tierce.
2.
To meet
and counter-disengage
parry counter-tierce
meet by counter-seconde
and
tierce or quarte
in septime,
adversary's
aimed
high.^
To
:
frustrate a
change of engagement to
and parry
in quarte
mduce movement
change
and disengage
this
called
one-two on
in
change.
:
To
avoid the
to tierce
and parry
change to
seconde
To
frustrate a
tierce
double
Ei2gaged in
tierce,
To
:
to
2.
To
To
counter-
simulate
See page
30.
64
FENCING
low
line,
over
ATTACKS.
in quarte.
i.
To meet
quarte) or quarte
and
tierce.
:
To meet
after the
the counter-disengage
septime.
To meet
;
after
the
change parry septime and seconde, or septime and counterseptime or, if the attack is aimed high, septime and quarte.
Engaged
in tierce
i.
To meet
one-two
after the
change
To
reply by parrying
after the
To
tierce
reply by
and counter-quarte.
feint of
To
septime, or septime
high, septime
and seconde
or, if
aimed
and
quarte.
To frustrate a double engage and avoid a simple parry, On the change to the second engagement, make the movements which have been described above. To meet these attacks,
resort to the
same defences
as have
been given
on the
single
change of engagement.
To frustrate a change from one high line to the other, and From engagement in quarte to nullify nullify a counter-parry.
counter-tierce
nullify counter-quarte
double
line.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
To meet
line
:
65
in inside
the
after
first
of these attacks
when ending
parry,
or
counter-tierce
to the
and septime.
double-engage
is
frustrated,
and the
circular
parry
;
nullified,
and
met by defences
Engaged
two-three
and
quarte.
Make
one-
that
to
attack in tierce.
first feint
This
may
often be shortened
by making the
in
or by
making the
this last
feint in
By
movement,
tierce
nuUified.
in tierce are
avoided
same way as
tierce
reversed.
From engagement in seconde to nullify septime and seconde. Make one-two-three over the hilt. This may be shortened
first feint
by making the
in tierce, the
second
in exterior line,
and attacking
feint in
in
low
line, or
by
feint in
tierce or in
tierce.
low
line,
66
FENCING
LAST DESCRIBED.
Parry
in the
(counter-tierce)
may be
low
and simple
When
the attack
is
parry tierce
From engage??tent in
counter)
attack.
or,
better
feints,
From
counter
counter
;
seconde
or, or,
and seJ>time,V 2ixry septime and reverse septime on the attack or, seconde and reversed
;
To
nullify counter-quarte
and tierce
line.
In
hand
3.
time
4.
Hand
the
best in supination.
5.
feint coupe,
to avoid
counter,
and disengage
into quarte.
able precision.
To
1.
nullify counter-quarte
and seconde
tierce.
Double-disengage into
2.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
To
I.
67
nullify counter-quarte
and septime
tierce,
This attack
may be shortened
into
instead of simulating
it
into tierce.
In complicated attacks of
the
of having
hand
is
not
the body,
Engaged
1.
To
and quarte
line,
and
dis-
Double
hand
in pronation at the
end.
3.
or simulate
Feint a coupe,
and counter-disengage
into
exterior
line.
To
1.
(passing the point over the hilt) into low or outside line.
2.
the
same
as
defence should be
this
by a
triple
but attacks of
It is
kind are
the
F 2
68
fencer has not speed
FENCING
and precision
thrust, for
this,
to
rely
on the
here-
counter-riposte
after.
or
second
to
be
explained
From seconde
to
avoid
counter-seconde
and septime
From
late a
simu-
i.
To meet
feint of
double disengage
feint
and disengage
into quarte,
of
tierce
or
septime,
and
;
or counter-quarte
and septime.
The
last
is,
2.
To meet
To meet
:
and
septime
counter-quarte, septime
and counter-septime.
i.
Engaged
In tierce.
To meet
the double-disengage,
and
line,
and attacks
in tierce
parry counter-
counter.
To meet
and
and seconde
parry respectively
and counter-septime,
These
common,
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
at least in the
69
in
thrust
is
Engaged
i.
Simulate
line, or
is
If the adversary
exposed in the
line of
engagement,
make
as above.
Engaged
i.
Simulate
line.
In
may be
in seconde.
line of
If the adversary
exposed in the
engagement,
make
and counter-disengage
Reversed
counter-parries
seconde
line respectively.
in quarte,
i.
To meet
and counter-disengage
and septime.
2.
and counter-disengage
yo
FENCING
Engaged
in tierce.
i.
To meet
:
engage into
and counter-disengage
tierce,
into tierce
quarte and
double counter-quarte).
2.
To meet
:
line,
or
to
and counter-disengage
low
line
The scrape, unless made with great lightness and quickness, may be frustrated, and the adversary caught on the false movement, by a disengage in the manner indicated when speaking of
that attack
on the sword.
to
parry
reversed
or,
reversed
in
quarte,
To
avoid
reversed
counter
and
line,
Make
To
Simulate one-
and
dis-
engage into
2.
tierce.
Give a beat or simulate a straight thrust and counterdisengage into quarte or only into seconde, and disengage into
tierce.
3.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
4.
yi
Give a beat or
and counter-dis-
To
1.
into seconde.
2.
Give a beat or
counter-disengage.
Engaged in
1.
tierce,
2.
and
counter-disengage into
To
1.
disengage into
3.
and disengage
into quarte.
line of
Simulate
septime.
4.
and coun-
To
1.
tierce,
and
into
i.
To meet
one-two,
counter-dis-
tierce,
or beat or feint a
72
FENCING
movement
:
Meet one-two and counter-disengage into seconde, or beat or feint of straight thrust and counter-disengage into seconde by reversed counter-parry and septime.
2.
Meet one-two and double counter-disengage into seconde, or beat or feint of straight thrust and double counter-disengage with the reversed counter, septime and seconde, or if the end
3.
is
Engaged
gage into
in tierce,
i.
To meet
:
parry
reversed
counter and
or the
counter-quarte).
2.
To meet
dis-
and septime.
Meet these
attacks
and seconde.
3.
To meet
parry reversed
We
made with
or
small-sword,
and
the
defences
by
met by
more elaborate
parries.
fol-
Thus
may
deceive a counter-parry
in like
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
manner, or two counter or two reversed counter-parries
to
:
J2>
and
is
a fitting answer,
First,
because they
be of very
skill
little
use to him
if
he does.
Where
and the
there
is
there
not high
and
perfect regularity
on both
figures,
sides, the
complicated
result
real
When
mastery of fence,
is
The
such a thing as
now
out of fashion
left
and
to
if
the
We
describes
it
has, unlike
adopted
in ordinary speech,
The
riposte
is
not confined to
74
FENCING
CHAPTER
IV.
Continued,
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
THE
The
ing
;
RIPOSTE.
is
riposte
not,
is
dehvered
after parryis
be
and wards
it
off the
body.
On
the defensive
movement
Just in
proportion as the
first is
second
be quick and deadly, and the more accurate the parry, the
safer the riposte.
The
because
return thrust
it
is
certainly
more
difficult
is
and be-
movement may have necessitated such cause some contraction of the muscles, which
:
but,
less
has driven off the adversary's blade, thereby somewhat disconcerting him,
given,
and
is
near
when
it is
and can be touched by merely extending the arm without moving the body.
The
is
needed
is
not required for the riposte, as the fingers are not used in the
and when
thrusting.
To
the
riposte
with
slightly
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
loosened immediately after the clash of the parry.
75
Some
cases apart, the fencer should always riposte after he has found
ripostes
some preparatory
temps
The
in
direct riposte.
The
found.
is
a thrust
which the
in-
adversary's blade
stance,
if,
on a disengage from
may be
which
is
delivered
in
two ways
or,
quitting
the steel after a clean, smart parry, which ought to sound like the click of a
good gun-lock.
This
is
called, with
dii tac-au-tac^
better.
As has been
already said,
is
fencer's thrusts.
The
because
is
direct riposte
it
ought to be given
at the
moment when
make the point miss the antagonist's body. To deliver what we will call the Bertrand riposte {tac-autac) from quarte. Turn the hand to supination, and thrust
riposte
and tends
to
with
all
left.
To
is
The
riposte without
quitting
the
steel
should only be
76
FENCING
the adversary presses strongly on the steel in such
made when
a way as to
it
:
make
it
To
execute
Keep the
point a
more
sword
to
turn the
hand
raise
it
and be
hilt
To
give the
Bertrand
riposte after
(i.e.
parrying
tierce.
The
com-
moment
of course, the
moment
to
hand
The
sible,
only be given
blade, so as to
deliver
it
:
when the adversary presses strongly on the make the Bertrand riposte impossible. To
raise the point a httle higher
\
After parrying,
than
then
usual
raise the
drop the point towards the body and extend the arm, taking
marked opposition
It
to the right.
has parried tierce cannot clear his blade for the tac-au
it.
In this case
same way
is
not quitted.
There
is
pour
tierce
'im
eccentric, not to
This,
we must confess oui utter inability which would seem to be a sort of mixture
executed in the following manner:
it
is
The moment
be clean or with
hand
thumb
raised to
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
a level with the shoulder.
to
77
Extend the arm, directing the point We do not the body, and take opposition to the right.
because the sudden turn or
It is difficult to execute,
twist of the
hand
into the
it
at
same
time,
and
also to
make
the
to the
its
flat
Because,
it is
if
the riposte
is
parried or passes
to
(i.e.
misses
the body),
extremely
difficult
From
seconde^
to
g'we the
Bertrand
riposte,
The
instant
body
The
to
executed in the
same manner.
From
the
septum^
give the
Bertrand
it
riposte,
Instantly after
pass
parry,
may
it
;
under
it
the
to
in
and point
same
time.
To meet
With those
heavily
fencers
on the
who make hard or heavy parries, and press steel when taking opposition, seeking to succeed
>]%
FENCING
lift
must
opposition as he
rises.
is
no support so
tells
to speak for
When
it,
this
is
done, strength
against the
man
on
who
is
exerting
and sends
which gives
to put himself
To meet
or,
may
also
be parried
in the following
manner
keep
the
point to the
highest,
the
the
hand more
when making
that
parry in the
ordinary manner.
To meet
pour
tierce.
the
the
in the
To meet
this
'
Parry seconde
as
riposte
in
the
same way
the
flanconnade.'
To meet
Parry septime,
is
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
79
By
ripostes with a
nulHfied, save in
some few
To
gonist
is
necessary to
make
know
'
prone,
and
w^hich his
call
it
hand
almost instinctively
la
form.
The French
'
la
main
that
is,
greatest
makes automatically.
&c. are
are with
The ripostes with change of line and with feint, many in number. The principal ripostes of this kind
the
disengage,
the
coupe,
Others could
be named.
There are
;
just as
it
many
but
is
more elaborate than with the double-disengage. These ripostes must be made instantly after the
the parry, without the scintilla of a pause.
It is
strike of
sometimes useful
&c.) to extend a
rises,
in
the
composed
riposte (riposte
with
feint,
little
e.g. if
body back, or
In
composed
as to
riposte
it
which
may
his
take so long
is
make
impossible to reach
him before
body
partly
withdrawn.
In such a case
it
is
necessary to
make
a half-
when
it is
impossible to
i.e.
by
movement
of the foot or
8o
FENCING
that, if
it
body; and
is
sometimes well
let
to extend,
it is
invari-
To avoid quarte
This
when
the
hand
much
resembles
as quickly.
To meet this riposte parry septime or seconde while rising. To avoid quarte when the hand is not held very high or seconde riposte by a disengage into tierce. To execute this,
:
arm
as possible, the
hand being
in
supination,
and, in the
thrust,
any extension.
To
command
and the
of finger-play
required.
is light,
will the
and formidable.
To
tierce.
left
hand low
riposte
by coupe into
To
execute
this,
shoulder,
left
as the thrust
in supination.
To meet
coupe into
or, if
tierce
or counter-quarte
is
and
if it
quickly made,
in
To
septime
any pause
supination.
the
hand
in
To meet
the point
rising.
is
this riposte
or,
if
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
If,
8i
marked opposition to
the
left,
the riposte
may be made by a
In deHvering
right as
trary,
this riposte
when making an attack with the twist, the hand must be kept to the left and
hilt,
on the con-
hand being a
for this
supination.
The
follows
:
reasons
difference
and the
riposte are as
When
is
an attack
is
made
and
if
spit
driven
over to the
fore, are
left
The
not the same as in the attack, and the fencer could not
take opposition to the right without bringing the point into his
own
breast.
this riposte
:
To meet
turn the
hand
to pronation, taking
opposition in seconde.
Owing
by
same way
nade
is.
To
In ripostes
movement,
similar attacks
the
fully
extended
:
riposte
rising.
tierce or tierce
may be
nullified
by a riposte
execute this
:
line.
To
82
FENCING
left
left
shoulder, the
hand
he
drawn back a
little
breast, so that
may whip
it
When
the hand
shoulder.
With an adversary who turns round bringing the right shoulder forward and leans over covering himself with his hand
and arm so
riposte
as to expose his
body
as
little
as possible, the
is
in exterior line
most
telling
but in this case the hand ought to be inclined towards pronation at the end,
right flank
little
above the
and close
to the elbow.
;
To meet this
or,
riposte
To
slightest
nullify
counter-quarte
:
made promptly
riposte
pause or hesitation
line.
by a double ending
low or outside
To meet
rising,
parry while
or parry tierce
first
part of
its
To meet
of
or parry tierce in
first
part
movement
riposte
as just described.
tierce.
After a parry in
high
tion.
:
To
:
hand
by a disengage
hand
in supina-
To meet
rising.
this
riposte
parry
quarte
or
septime while
Another way of
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
also avails to nullify septime with opposition
is
%i^
to riposte
by a
hand
in supination.
This riposte
knowing
that he cannot
in
order to avoid
it.
When
this
ashamed
to resort to this
and many fencers are not ignoble device the riposting fencer
is
done
must, as above stated, deliver his thrust with the hand inclined
little
and
To meet
rising.
riposte
parry seconde
or
septime
while
To
To
riposte
by a coupe.
execute this
arm
is
may be
the instant
it is
the riposting
fencer's point)
into quarte,
and the
being
in supination, opposition
may be practicable,
:
to the
left.
riposte
by one-two, ending in
;
the
hand
in
To meet
counter
(i.e.
this riposte
To
riposte with a
coupe
and disengage
supination.
either in pronation or
To meet this riposte parry septime or quarte and seconde. To nullify the reversed counter made instantly riposte by
: :
line,
tierce, the
hand
in supination.
:
To meet
G 2
84
FENCING
(counter-quarte) and tierce,
or parry
To
the
nullify
septime
riposte
by a double
hand
in supination.
this riposte
:
To meet
point
is
or, if
the
and quarte.
nullify quarte
it
:
To
riposte
by a
disengage into
turning the
tierce.
To
execute this
is
necessary while
hand
to supination to
a curve large
enough
to pass
:
To meet this riposte parry tierce. To nullify tierce riposte by one-two into hand in supination. To meet this riposte
:
.
parry reversed
counter
or,
To nullify
ment of
line.
move-
hesitation
riposte
by a counter-disengage
in exterior
To meet
seconde.
this
riposte
parry
reversed
counter
and
low
is
by a
twist
the while.
i^parade
This
de
may be
septime enveloppee).
To
execute
it
the
hand
There
in supination,
and
to the right.
must be no extension.
To meet
The
this riposte
reversed counter.
parry of septime with opposition
is
avoided by a direct
line just
riposte or
by the
upper
marked,
and a disengage
To
nullify quarte
and counter-disengage
one-two ending high.
This resembles
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
To meet To
nullify
this riposte
:
85
or, better,
septime
hilt,
To meet
thrust
is
this riposte
if
the
adversary
may
the
half
make
is
When
parry
perfectly true,
this
moment's pause
movement, and,
if it
When
the parry
is
and
to deliver
the
stoop
when
just at the
moment when he
raising himself.
and
made
specially useful
his parry
;
when
making
do well not
adversary
to indulge
overmuch
kind of
riposte, as the
m ay
make
Remarks.
made during
86
FENCING
is
to say, while
the point
is
dehvered
in the following
manner
made,
lift
right shoulder
then,
when
After the
left,
left breast,
and
drop
coupe
is
decidedly dangerous, as
it
bcdy uncovered.
thp: counter-riposte.
This
parried.
is
is
given
when
has
The
who has
riposte.
It
has already been said that to parry the riposte the fencer
.should,
whenever
;
it is
possible, rise,
coming back
to the posi-
tion of guard
always be taught to
order that he
may
command
of any attack.
For
attack.
Counter-ripostes
may be
direct or with
change of
line,
or
preceded by a
feint, like
from these
said,
been
should
thrust
counter-riposte
is
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
third
Z-j
rules
which have
been
them
fourth,
&c.,
it
is
possible, as the
third,
&c.
Few
attack
and defence,
which a
but the
exchanged
is
moment
combat
need may
be.
88
FENCING
CHAPTER
V.
Continued,
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
QUITTING BLADES.
QunTiNG
by a pause
is
the
action of
attack or a feint
movements
dangerous.
To do
it
who
or very apt at
swift
attack
without preparation.
is
only half
You
it
and
yet not
The notion is to make him parry and riposte, keeping your own counter-riposte or remise in readiness as the case may be. Or you induce him to make an extension, or a time, on which
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
you parry and
riposte.
89
Or you may do
;
it
merely to mystify
him
what
them when
The
false attack
less nearly to a
it is
If
made with
it
own
counter-riposte or remise,
should go so
will take
is
it
far as nearly to
Thus he
If
it
full riposte.
it
made
to
lead
far,
him on
to
an extension or a time,
should
not reach so
parrying.
as there will be
The
abused.
ATTACKS ON PREPARATIONS.
These are
adversary
is
attacks, as their
name
implies,
made
while the
of
on
made to draw favourite parries on any movement of the legs made to facilitate attack or simply on shifting the grip to the pummel of the foil to obtain a longer reach, a
;
thing which
impossible.
difficult
and
riposting almost
if
they are
made
is
the right
time.
The
is
adversary,
occupied as he
with his
own
plan of attack,
seldom able
the
preceded sometimes
by a
light beat,
and counter-disengagements.
To
ensure their
90
FENCING
movement.
If
success you must have a good guard, so that you can execute
the attack without one unnecessary
yourself to
you have
make
Sometimes,
thrust
if
straight
you judge
that this
thrust,
a false preparation
then you
may make
you can
it.
and
counter-riposte, or
to
draw a
RENEWED ATTACK.
A
after
renewed attack
{reprise
d'attaque)
is
an attack made
For example,
two adversaries
find themselves
hit.
on guard
Then one
by a
time or not.
them
well
you must
in line,
To make
much
coolness,
to
make
a complicated
qualities,
much judgment,
and superior
swiftness in
comprehending the
Indeed
it
whole
situation,
finger-play.
is
one of
The
the
more
difficult to
execute, but
more
renewed
attack.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
THE STOP-THRUST.
{i.e.
91
Coup (TAin'H.)
indicated
is,
as
by
its
name, a simple
him when he
must be made
The
stop-thrust
lifts
moment when
Otherwise
it
the adversary
The
tion.
might
is
result in a
double lunge.
a brilliant, answer to
is
The
fencers
say,
stop-thrust
a good,
even
who
to
come
to
you
in parrying or riposting, or
you
try the
stop-thrust you
must have
all
your wits
moment
too late
is
as
execution.
TIME-THRUSTS.
The
time-thrust
is
such an attack
is
meant
to finish.
The
time-thrust
is
a thing
to
execute
it,
adversary.
is
ill
done,
and
if,
as
is right,
make
him half-way
to
92
FENCING
or,
touch him,
at least,
to
make
it
I'he finish of the attack must decide the Hne of the time.
degage
Hne
at the
line,
with a
and with a
upwards.
'
This
'
time
'
be
less certain.
line,
it is
To make
upper
line.
necessary that
If
be made in the
is
made
scarcely
line
which tends to put the points of both combatants out of the superior to that of the unless a quickness
infinitely
attacker
attacker's feint.
In
tierce,
on a one-two
feint is
in the outside
in the inside
:
(tierce) line,
made
at
the
moment when
make
a straight
thrust with opposition to the right, to close the outside line, the
nails
at the
moment when
if
the
to avoid a
change, with the exception that you must oppose to the right
and
half-lunge.
In
tierce, to
counter-tierce or septime
at the
moment when
if
the adversary
to parry septime
and
lunge.
H
><
c/:
> <
O o
CO
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
In quarte, to take the time on a one-two-three above
deceive tierce and quarte)
tion in tierce
:
93
(to
answer the
first
feint
by an opposi-
and make a
and
half-lunge.
In
tierce,
on one-two-three
first
(to
deceive
in
answer the
feint
by an opposition
;
opposition to
meant
to
feign the
thrust in the
In
tierce, to
meant
sary's attack
meant
to
at the
moment
at
when
the
adversary quits
your blade,
disengagement
the finale
;
arm only
In
tierce,
and disengage
and quarte
in the outside
hne meant
to deceive counter-tierce
or seconde
side line
;
and
TIME PARRIES.
If
in quarte,
and think
proposes to
make
feign a dis-
engagement
94
(to inspire
FENCING
more confidence
you think he
in
your adversary
who
intends to
In
tierce, if
will
exterior line,
movement
the
is
to feign a
and as
time instead
of executing
it,
parry
In quarte,
if
to take the
as
and
riposte.
Another
w^ay
is,
movement
In
hand
high,
or seconde.
tierce,
if
to
take
the
instead of
In quarte,
if
movement
or,
hand high
instead
hand
high, half-lunge,
tierce, if
:
and
riposte.
In
to time
on your
one-two-three
movement, parry
counter-disengage
that
is
instead of executing
the
third
movement,
half-lunge
and
riposte.
In
tierce, if
to time your
one-two
in executing the
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
third
95
tierce with
the
or,
instead of
In quarte,
if
to
time your
riposte.
movement
and
parry
the
hand
riposte, or
hand
THE REMISE.
The term
your point
at
remise
is
an
compound
riposte,
is
made
in the
done by a
slight
again aiming your point at your adversary's body with opposition, if opposition is
remise
is
riposte hits, or
when
it
fails
remise, therefore,
can never be
on a
is
direct riposte.
Opposition
made on
a timed
that
which
riposte.
it.
Again, opposition
The
is
certainly to be preferred
for.
96
to
FENCING
make
this,
first
direct one,
will take.
it
is
wrong
low
to remise
line.
on a riposte
in the
remise cannot
It is
Then you
changing the
line in
line,
As
movement
and
the
hand
is
low,
line
inaccessible.
On
these
ripostes,
without opposition.
In
this case
ment with
great rapidity,
Under
hit,
may
though
It is better,
it
is
wrong
to remise
on a
dis-
engagement
on a cut-over.
On
and thrust
in the out-
side line, or
riposte,
timed or
not,
of a disengagement on the outside line you can remise in the outside line with opposition to the right.
On
hand
up or down
as
you please.
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
After the parry of septime
:
97
on a
riposte
made
with a feint
On
a riposte
made
hilt,
the same
Counter-
do
in all cases a
time.
But,
an exception,
if
on a disengage riposte
a parry in
line,
REDOUBLING.
This
is
still
done
either
by a
slight
body
back.
is
necessary
but above
all
the
98
FENCING
CHAPTER
VI.
THE SALUTE.
The
Salute, or prelude to the Assault, was, towards the
official
end
had been
The rules laid down by the Academy are here embodied. The purpose of the Salute is to give both fencers an opportunity of showing courtesy to each other
and
to the spectators,
and,
it
may be added,
of exhibiting their
It is
own
proficiency in
:
correctness
and elegance.
assumes the
thus conducted
Each
to his
mask on
fall
left,
the
left
first
foil
and
to the
Then both
a step
forward,
raising
and
to
Then
the
hand
is
towards the
face,
CiJ
H :d J <
(i:
o
en
O
p
Ul cOO
w ^ d: ^ H E-
J <
CO
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
go on
to salute his adversary
99
to the
hand turned
to the ground.
consists in bringing
seizes,
back the
right
it,
hand, which
without grasping
The
The
of,
third
movement
hands
to-
left
left
arm
still
drops to the level of the right breast, the arm half extended,
the elbow in front
of,
and close
to,
sword on a
In the
two steps
down on
the legs
for clearness
of demon-
must
moment
when the right hand drops, so as to give the movement of the legs. At the moment when
of tierce, with the blades joined.
are firm on the ground, the right hands must keep the position
Once on
first
movement.
of the fencers invites the other, with the words,
first.
*
One
It is
customary to g\N^
precedence
guest.
in this
take distance
first
becomes the
attacker,
loo
FENCING
To
take distance
nrJls
:
arm
full
stretched
and the
up, the
hand on the
To
steps
and a half
of the
left
heel,
left
When
the foot
is
The
arched, the
left
Having made
right
hand
to a slight distance
This
last
movement
of
fencers,
who then
is
exe*^
This
done by
little
saluting to the'
ad-
and half-way
to
the
Then
back near
hand
in
and Vice-President,
if
there
is
one.
On no
The
salute with
a motion of his
foil
Now
in quarte.
the adversaries
fall
on guard
as
above described
making an engagement
The
that the
sixte-tierce^
movement
The
adversary parries tierce or sixte lightly and then drops his point
m c<X
p
^1
H o C n i J < -5
01
r^j
0)
E-
<
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
with the nails
loi
down
as
if
The
own
left
movement
thumb and
ring,
forefinger.
The
nails are
and
is
little
finger leave
the hilt
The
arm
the
blade.
falls
He
keeps
moment
or two
tierce or sixte,
The
and
as
line,
The
movement
just described,
upwards.
falls
As
moment
and
back on
The
The
and quarte
number
last
of four or
six.
is
disengagement
In the
style
by a
slight
The
his
He
him
must take
make
The
now makes
hand
in tierce
after this
he recovers to the
hand
As
movement,
fall
done
before.
Then
the two
I02
FENCING
becoming the attacker
after taking distance,
parryer
versa.
and
vice
backwards, the
come on guard with a step of the left foot hand in tierce, make three beats on the floor
first
and
right.
When
back
left
behind the
right,
and
movement
this
Immediately on
foot
up
to the right,
Then they come quickly on guard, Once more they recover forwards,
hand brought
close to the chin,
and
Then
is
foot, allowing,
mark
la finale
e?i
garde
et des developpemenis,^
When
directions.
to-
gether, they have only to read right for left throughout the
A
his
left-handed
man engaged
right-handed
1.
man must
mask on
his right.
in
tierce
Lay
Take the right-handed man's engage first coming on guard. 3. Take distance with the nails dow^n.
2.
for the
4.
The
final
one-two
is
done
in sixte-tierce^
and
to this
end
who
parries quarte
on the one-two.
02
<
CO
^
en
a;
O
Q
<:
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
5.
103
tierce.
first
in quarte^ then in
President
on
his right.
THE ASSAULT.
The
assault
is
may be
called a
mock
duel.
It
demands
lest
The
bad
fencer
carefully
he
into
first
habits,
the
principles.
The
assault
is far
more
must
approval,
and the
first
adversary.
As
for
he
will
of
movement and
something
whom
he
will
avoid
He
will
indeed
hit.
Taking
is
an
irre-
reached,
it
is
indispensable to go on taking
However
watchful
over
himself he
may
be,
even
bad
The
professor
judgment has
failed him,
and
to give
him
hints of
what
line
The
professor
who knows
and the
way add
thing to
certain
pupil's progress.
The
avoid
is
assault
is
a perpetual
improvisation.
The
making of a
I04
FENCING
of attacks
or
parries,
number
corners.
upon
all
What succeeds
with one
own movements should depend upon one's adversary's. The crossing of blades is the signal for beginning the It is indispensable, by way of precaution against encounter. surprise, to come on guard out of distance, and not to join
one's
blades
till
one
is
completely ready.
It
when one rushing on the other profits by the other's confusion to make It is therefore a great mistake to come on guard within a hit.
the fencers place themselves too near each other,
distance.
It
is
wise
to
advance
gradually
within
distance.
The
;
adversary
therefore
may be on
it is
Nor
is
it
The touching
The
is
of blades
is
one of
;
it is
right
moment
for action
;
can
the
if
that
is,
attacks
made
is
result.
it
will
well
possible
to threaten
him
he
often
If
draw
his parry
;
and
riposte, to
be met
or to
make him
one
is
thrust
and
or, again, if
not quick
enough
to hit
him with a
it.
one to draw a
The
him
it
would serve
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
his opponent's blade to get a point of leverage,
105
is
better to
all.
be met by the
lightest finger-play.
Avoid engagements,
and so
attack straight
in, in spite
little
it is
good
to parry
closer to the
body than
usual, so as to
more on the
adversary's faible.
tall
man
;
and lunge)
advance or preparation.
Fencers often come on guard carelessly; they neglect to sink
down enough on their legs, thinking to avoid fatigue when they mean to attack they double themselves up, as it were, to get more spring and quickness. During such a preparation to
;
is
short
man must
he
to
make
the adversary
He
never relax
when once
one of
his attacks
their success
depends
in
such case on a
fine sense of
As
best
all
way
in the jjarticular
A
whose
slight retreat
;
riposte
and
it
is
style
Circular
counter-quarte,
and
semicircular
io6
parries like
FENCING
septime, are
more
difficult to
and
tierce.
until
His movements
what are
his
and
must be
carefully
watched
to discover
favourite attacks
difficulty in
and
parries,
and what
will
ripostes
he has most
meeting.
Then one
employ, as
much
as
Feints
possible
;
and
false attacks
should be disregarded as
is
much
as
to take
them
seriously
game.
Some
fencers follow
up
their attacks
by a redouble or a
remise without caring to parry the riposte, which they sometimes avoid by stooping.
their position
as
on guard
and
resort to
To meet
empty
air,
is
room, to
them
battling with
and
if
a stop-thrust.
Some
arm before a
iVt
riposte
this
the
moment when
fall
arm
it is
well to
make
a remise, and to
even though
comes
But
late
the
on
this
the
stop-thrust,
then one
must wait
retreat,
for the
end of
their
attack,
and
if
need be with an
advance.
retire
:
if
he does
not,
confusion
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
107
Other fencers continually extend, taking no heed of double attacks, and hoping to succeed by sheer audacity and by
twists
and they
will
even
start disputes
and lead
to
who
practise them.
With people of
lunge.
this
and
They
will
soon
try
another method.
They must be
tried only
when
the adversary
lunge, which
is
cellent discretion
and execution.
kills several
well-judged
ones
for
it
successes
chance.
When
suspect that he
laying a trap.
little,
as
and
as
little
even
after a hit.
Do
play.
not ask
if
When
of
it.
in a plan of attack
do not boast
Any
self, is
distracting
and unpleasing. With a tricky adversary do not complain turn his tricks to good account if possible if he goes tco far, find a decent excuse
;
;
for
io8
FENCING
As the
practice of the science of
qualities,
all
it
moral as on physical
nomenclature to cover
taken as a base.
fencing assaults,
impossible to devise a
methods.
When
let
But
if
he
is
him fence with anybody who asks him. lucky enough to be under a master who knows
let
him go on taking
the only safe
lessons from
him and
for
It is
LEFT-HANDED FENCERS.
With a left-handed fencer the
lines are naturally reversed,
parries.
Two
opposed
when the
and
first is
engaged
in quarte, the
second
is
engaged
in tierce
vice versa.
If right-handed fencers
but, as
not
so,
is
generally at a disadvan-
As
left-handed
man
chance of
parrying quarte.
He often follows a
;
parry of quarte
is
seconde
tierce
on the lunge, with the hand low and the point high.
an excellent chance
left.
The
for a
The
tierce
man
of quarte
his
favourite ripostes
are the
cut-over
and the
PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONS
disengagement in
tierce
:
109
therefore
it is
well to remise
and force
him
line
to a straight riposte.
If the left-handed
man
body
Timed
ripostes
and
handed men.
Time-thrusts between
avoided.
left-
An
excessive opposition
needed
lision of hilts,
and
this gives a
Tio
FENCING
CHAPTER
VII.
SINGLESTICK.
far
England than
simple matter
parries,
this,
it
fencing,
is
a
it
which
is.
More than
who imagined
himself to be in the
room
far.
them, as no such
art
existed.
Singlestick, as has
been said
in the Introduction,
a bastard
skill,
game, but
it
so
much
our disposal
it is
impossevere
sible to
do
justice to
play.
it,
or to the
work of sabre
it
laid
down
in the
that
'
the
foil
The
author
*
tells
us
'
also that in
{sen potius
'
England
wafter
'
century the
waster
?)
a
;
dummy
sword
was
the
foil
and
'
that in the
name
for
'
waster
was applied to
was the
Here
.evidently
SINGLESTICK
edged weapon which has found
singlestick of the present day,
its
1 1
latest
development
in the
spond
in a very
second chapter of
Tom
The
Brown's Schoolstick
days,'
*
used
at the
veast
in
common
singlestick.'
It
may be worth
was no idea
head or body
how I have purchased my knowledge in the Back Sword with many a broken Head and Bruise in every part of Nor is the captain's exquisite reason for taking up the me.'
describes
'
'
'
attention.
'
have followed,' he
and convincing
of a File, yet
get
if
and though a
is
Man may
him,''
dispute the
Stick,
full
Hit
he
he
will
hardly
just brushed
of wisdom
hits
we may
singlestick play,
is
and not
that specialised
*
chronicled in
Tom
Brown's
students'
German
on
schlager fight.
The
best
and
most
authoritative
book
sabre
and
singlestick, published
1
up
has been
Since these words were in print an addition of import to sabre literature made by the pubhcation of Captain Hutton's Cold Steel (Clowes).
112
is
FENCING
'Lessons
in
Sabre,
Singlestick,
by
J.
&
Co.).
The
his
late
Mr. Waite,
who
learnt fencing
from no
less
and
it,
work
is
when he
'
intro-
duced
in the ordinary
I
To
quote his
own words
it
made
it,'
he
part of
my work
as a teacher
to imin
entirely overlooked
fencer, to
by sabre
and
also,
by copying the
the attacks,
effective,
a closer,
too
much
the
enemy
in this case
or, to interfoil
File
')
There
is,
now be
pointed out.
singlestick
foil
is
may be
considered the
foil
may be considered the small sword of practice, and it very commonly believed that work with the stick enables
to
man
use the
far,
sabre
is
far,
very
from
perfect,
may
for
at first
it,
find
some
diffi-
when he exchanges
the
foil
this will
be nothing
who
steel sabre
substitute.
he
is
opposed
to a
good continental
tireur de
SINGLESTICK
sabre he will find, however skilful he
that he
is
113
may be
mere child
in the
hands of
his antagonist,
and
will
combat a
real instead of a
\
mimic
and
will
to his
annoyance,
stick has in
him
it
is
a mightily diiiferent
of the blade by
n'aiine
Je
du sabre
the
que
le
tranchant^ sang
Frenchmen many
years ago
fiat
when
of the sabre
In
real
gerous to the
man who
dealt
it
and
much
must be taken
there
if
is
any
lose
carelessness, throw a
his balance
;
man
out of
line,
or even
make him
is
and anything
hazel-twig,
such as
common
takes
that
becomes hazardous
that he has
in the extreme.
The
when he
hand
much
to learn,
and
the careful training he has gone through and the work he has
and unforto
may
it
is
by no means easy
knowledge he
in
requires.
is
Even
much
praclittle
but very
I
114
'
FENCING
skill.
inducement
assaults
to attain professional
In
all
probability
good
re-
really
not be understood.
so the
to
This
is
be
regretted.
skill
as fencing, but
is
We may
Take,
if
And
this hint
very brief.
you know
it
well, the
Hutton, draw, whenc^ver you think you can parry and riposte,
and never
forget
it is
skill.
Appendix
at
end of book.
'\
MICHELL
IFi^ure I. On
guard
may be an
incapable of
fingers
Although
fists,
to all of us our
skill to
as a
will,
means of
attack or self-defence.
human
institution or practice,
and you
same conclusion.
another, before any wicked intruder into the nursery has given
them a
the
biting
hint as to
fists
resort to
doubled
foe.
Scratching,
of attack
retaliates either
No
in the
for these
impulses
is
to
be found
These come
Ii8
and
it is
at a far later
period
sight
by the
of two
human
beings exchanging
stall,
fisticuffs.
Long
before this
the neigh-
or even the
home paddock or
its
heels or
purposes.
The
ready example of
But
it
ram
or sheep, as
human
race
girl
who
playmates.
Even
if
hand
out
this
is
used
it
is
in
ninety-nine cases
fingers open.
of every hundred
it
In
form
much
it is
better prospect of
damaging the
In the
first
place,
more
Secondly,
it
reaches
would
Thirdly, the
hand
is
way than
in the other,
sit,
and requires
exhibited
l)y
clenched
119
or,
is
handy
make
the
best
of the business
by
But the
fact,
howevei
when
we can observe
^
the
fellow creatures
pugilistic.
Even pummelling
practice,
is
'
is
not an
uncommon
is is
he
And
note also,
that
your
emergencies
will prefer to
pumon the
any armour
or
'
revenge.
slapping
and scratching
ingly, in all
are unsatisfactory
modes of
attack,
where the
Accord-
to resist.
doned
whose
some
impossible to
lived
go back even
actually
in
when men
But
if
such a
will
argue the matter out that they would assuredly not decide their
differences according to the rules of the P.R.,
and probably
fist.
strike a single
As
far
the
first
they
I20
constantly
mentioned
^
at a far earlier
And when
it
smiting
'
is
is
may most easily be inferred that some deadly weapon was used. The most that can be said by
either expressly stated
or
is,
that
it
was
employed
far
in
more
The
fact
is,
'
can be
own
'
be present
at the fight
some third
party or parties
who
are willing
at least
and able
Moreover, one
how,
close,' or
catch hold.
Lastly,
one of them
at least
must
also have
much
effect as to
be able
man by mere
hitting,
How
difficult
it is
to
may be
and used
manner
to
be
explained below.
not, as
may be remembered that prize-fighting many people are now inclined to say offhand, an
it
121
First blood,
the
more
it,
the
'
first
appearance
of the claret,'
struggle
;
and the
excite
his readers.
Much
less
attention
is
paid by the
After a short
struggle
There
laconic
summary
*
same Slasher
and
olfactory organ,' or
elicited the
redoubtable opponent.
And
may have
unlucky
too,
much
less to the
knocks
upon
to the
fall in
which
his collar-bone
and
after
which
his
interior
arrangements
as
if
they had
and
after
upon
This
is
more suggestive
it is
man
question,
who
finds
some two
him
as
he
lies flat
of which the
infant
is
forced with the whole impetus of that falling mass into the pit
of his stomach.
and
fighting
were
much more
effect
on the
result
and though
'
122
would
equal a
usually
when
all
more expert
from a
art into the
Regarded
strictly scientific
be regretted.
It pre-
who was
at
any
No
Tom
Cribb or Jem
Ward
some
fisticuffs
though he had
boxer rushed
belt,'
when an
inferior
To
win
'
the
man
per-
must combine
haps common,
and Pollux
is
is
by no means invariable.
At the present
Emerging from
digressions,
prehistoric speculations
and philosophic
however pertinent
we
dawn
of Euro-
pean society
his
boxing
man
in almost
modern aspect. Amidst the clash of arms in the before Troy a place is cleared for the veritable prize Amongst the mighty w^arriors whose names come down
on the grand Homeric
fists,'
plain
fight.
to us
roll-call is
'
mentioned
in the
known
as Pollux,
tw^in
who
His name
and practice
Figure
II.
123
brother Castor, of
all
The appearance
is
of
for
Lake Regillus
immortahsed
Rome
by the building of
their
and honourable
place.
skill
and
men.
it
seems, to
challenge strangers
who
visited his
dominions
to
on with him
his
hands
took up the
own
coin.
The
is
tale suggests
Not very
far
from
and
at
some
For
and
trees.
it is
'
a spot to be desired of
the eye
and the
servitors of the
riparian
owner
'
see their
way
camp
for
an hour.
of falling mercilessly
upon the
off
intruders.
Nor
is it
enough
for
him
to
warn them
invitations
if
of his
servants.
style of
He
invites the
not in the
Amycus,
at least in a sufficiently
provoking manner, to
124
'
have
out with
fair
with a very
tomed
with
One
day, however,
who had
one of
the
best
individual,
domain.
set-to
and
after
Amycus was
led off
more
to the purpose,
In the western parts of the world Sicily was for a time the
headquarters of the noble art of self-defence, and Eryx, one of
her kings, lorded
as
it
Amycus over the Bebrycians. His blood and brains^ were shown in the
But Eryx met
his
stained with
match
island,
at last in Hercules,
whose
all
and
men by
displays of athletic
And
South-
eastern Asia.
last
second King of
and
matches.
So
at
125
and
the
all
and carried
most active
if it
upon the
it
so that,
likely
list
had been
seems
that
of
entries.
But the
first
really authentic
is
come down
demigods.
to us
so good, that
and
had no other
title
it
to quotation, there
would be
ample excuse
hand of Homer.
immediately
and
number of valuable
details
may be
;
of
Enghsh
pugilism.
The
is
and
no
is
less a
hitting
we read of no
foul
blows either in
is
or
the
Virgilian account.
And
on
there
no other reason
it
easily to
be found
and
this
fitted
on by Diomede
to the
of his principal.
of course, and no
tossing
'
for corners,
126
advanced
by the
ring.
Nor were
there
in
row of
spectators,
ground.
That important
official
but
it is
if
known
Having advanced
one another, and
'
at the
same time
But
it
(in strictly
preliminary
of such tactics
exceptional
on both
together,'
and
at
For
just afterwards
it is
clear that
'
out
Epeiis
made
This 'lead
combat.
a heap.
was a
him and caught him full on the cheek. knock-down blow, and it decided the
The limbs of Euryalus w^ere relaxed, and he fell all of As when by the ripple caused by a sharp north'
easter a fish
is
cast
helpless
magnanimously
led off by
who was
w^ith clots
of blood rushing
'
127
to side,
mouth, and
his
and
*
his feet
much
same then
as now.
When
guard
the longest.'
;
'
The
and
contest itself
it is
announced
causing distress
clear that
'
that
it is
This
is
shown by the
same word
at
is
used as an
are given.
which no blows
all
Then,
it
man would
prize
latter
volunteer
handsome
While to the
an unbroken
of
mule was
offered,
the
And many
a Greek soldier
encamped
prefer the
in the plain of
articles
of property.
It is noticeable,
Two men
only are
whether by frequent
summoned and they are to be From this it is plain enough that, host. displays or common repute, it was well
;
champion boxer.
The
'
first
who
much
'
of a
record.'
He
;
'was a good
but by his
man and
own
tall,'
and was
actual battle-field,
and excused
by
128
His challenge
by the challengers of
ancient times.
'
He
break the
to
who came
dispute
is
He
the
Cadmeian
Almost
these
pugiHsts.
at the
same
similar display
honour of
Hector.
Virgil,
The account of this comes, not from Homer but from who in speaking of it refers to the fact that Paris was
all
Troy.
He
resembled
in this therefore, as
The
only
man who
a certain Dares,
who
His
From
man who
It is
thoroughly
too good to be
in
and
is
in every respect
this place
The
first
man
to enter the
lists,
which
were on
this
occasion open to
in Troy,
all,
man
in
Trojan force
encamped
in Sicily.
may
thus be modernised
Beg pardon,
129
to put
o'
me
standing 'ere
I can't stop
ye know.
Hand
prize.'
;
Upon
was
some applause
but an unexpected
to use a truly
Sicily,
orthodox term, a
His mode of challenging was eminently characterthrew both these gloves into the
ring.
He
size
and appearance of them appalled the Trojans, and caused a determined objection on the part of their champion, who at
once backed out of the whole business.
This matter was
Sicilian
pairs of gloves,
which
;
were fastened on
and
The
Sicilian
exposing to
view the huge joints of his limbs, his mighty bones and muscles,
and stood up
and puts
middle of the
ring.
(fault),
arms up high
Their heads held high are drawn back, and their hands are
confused together (another mistake) as they spar for an opening.
The one
is
legs,
and con-
and
and shaken
breath.
(short hits),
in his giant
Many
the ribs and chest (compare the Tiines account of the Sayers-
Heenan
fight,
ribs
is
compared
in
sound
I30
passage
is
inimitable),
accommodating
body
adversary.
The
tries
who
besieges a fort on an
eminence,
first
and
lead-off.'
only
when
the big
man assumes
Entellus
the
offensive
that
he
comes
to
any harm^
showed
that
on
high.
The
or,
other saw the blow coming from above, and with a quick
made
a grievous blunder,
which
is
more
the
and the
of the loaded glove slung round at arm's length towards the foe.
However
in
'all
this
may have
His
feet
were
man he
up
long
battles
at
man's second
once ran
in
to
pick
him
up.
Surprise was
manifested at the fact that the pugilist was neither damaged nor
*
dismayed
'
He
goes to work
w^ith
man
all
over the
Then
summary interference on the part of the master of the sports, who charitably attributes the mishap of his fellowcountryman to the influence of some god or goddess. The
there
is
man
in
complete
style
fells
Figure IV.
Ketreat
in good
order
131 as a sacrifice
in
it
up
'
a better hfe
Heu of that
'
not 'go
down
to save
Entellus, in true
to
'
of the
caestus,' or glove.
be
little
doubt
to the
arm
or hand.
hitting,
which
is
much danger
is
of bruising
the most
in
or breaking the
Even amongst
them
much overmatched
modern
his
it is
amply proved
when
Tom Sayers
portionate
'
giving away
amount of
extent,
weight,
guard arm
to avoiding
in the encounter.
it
With a view
some
as
arm and
fist.
Even
to this
in Siam,
where
strips
of
there
is
bound round the hands and arms of the men as high as the elbow. In the Homeric account, no mention of any covering for the hand except
leather from a wild bull's hide.'
It
was
at a
much
later
of
Even
in the latest
for
used,
especially in
practice,
They
K
2
132
were padded on the inside of the hand, and must have been
dangerous enough, as a hard blow with the clenched
anything
is
when
held within
it
is
But
in the ferocious
Roman
The
out of place.
The back
and sometimes
rings of
There were
names
great
for the
Romans
Greek games
and specimens
pugilist
in several
ancient monuments.
There
also
an admirable
statue in the
From this it would seem that the classical boxers stood and moved in the attitude of swordsn:ien, using the right arm very much as if it had been a sword or club, and the left very much as if it had
Louvre of a
on guard.
been a
shield.
It is said that in
common
The accepted
in Attica
opinion
and
that
From boxing
almost
at
one leap
to the
Hanoverian.
of course no
doubt that
was
common
in
many
countries in almost
While the
hands
up
in France,
an exactly similar
style of
Once
destruction,
and the
fist
really
THE HISTORY OF BOXING
suitable for deciding a doubtful claim than any other.
133
Once
find
admit that
differences
by temporarily
and you
or protected
hand recognised
as the
and
The mistake
is
to sup-
artificial
by fixed
rules,
and tumble.'
favourite
home
'
much
its
present form no
it
one
in
'
will
Ivanhoe
is
where no
less a
Lion
claimed as a professor of
must be regarded as
fanciful.
and
market towns
and
village greens
is
wrestlers
and
quarterstaff players,
local pugilistic
good show of
champions.
is
only after
the era of
when
and French
last
schools,
latter
;
and
consequently the
established
home
in the island.
In quite the
earliest part of
George
I.'s
memoirs of
travel in
all
Anything that looks like fighting is delicious to an Englishman. If two little boys quarrel in the street, the passengers stop, make a ring round them in a moment, that they may come to fisticuffs.
134
Dming
fight
and
these by-standers are not only other boys, porters and rabble, but
and mothers of the boys and hearten him that gives ground or has the worst. These combats are less frequent among grown men than children, but they are not rare. If a coachman has a dispute about his fare with a gentleman that has hired him, the coachman consents with all his heart the gentleman pulls off his sword and lays it in some shop, with his cane, gloves and cravat, and boxes in the same manner as I have described above. I once saw the late Duke of Grafton at fisticuffs in the open street Avith such a fellow, whom he lambed most horribly. In France we punish such rascals with our cane, and sometimes with the flat of our sword, but in England this is never practised they neither use sword or stick against a man that is unarmed.
of of fashion.
fathers
let
men
The
them
fight
on as well as the
rest,
Figure V.
135
CHAPTER
11.
The
Figg,
whose
portrait
we have on
first
the
roll
name
is
stands
17 19
;
on the
His date
and he appears
is
succeeded
Greeting.'
Pipes and
How many
another
is
but
it
seems that
won
alternately for
it
some
with
easily
who was
From
list
the
end of
sole
of
down
with
Farnborough
the
title
i860
trace
down
running
in the roll
may be
more
much
difficulty, as
for
fame
to the
rank and
file
'
136
and
Their
may be
inn,
taught
and
in
many
a country
traveller
may come
more
The
rest
of
mentioned
in the
?
Book
it
of the Chronicles of
From
century and a
Englishmen engaged
in print,
and
thousand
took place,
man, whether
'
winning or
losing.
international
encounters, as until quite recent times prize-fighting was confined almost entirely to
England
champion of the
day,
and a
a pass-
is
At the
first
rushed
him on
to
face
During
'
its
progress the
Frenchman,
off the
frequently
carted his
man
stage
for
in those days
of a boarded platform
and
in other
137
easily.'
who seemed
to
be
strange
tactics
of his opponent.
After
this,
and so avoiding
his rushes
and
in so
more the
battle
ended
hit
in favour
of the
islander.
Pettit
After receiving a
severe
in
the ribs.
Monsieur
suddenly bolted
^full
reporter's opinion,
strong,'
and able
to
go on.
Thus
on the English
champion
It
Duke
of
by the unexpected
but, finding
Slack to be a better
man
in his
lost again,
hit in
both
eyes.'
A propos
of the wagering
which went on
Ring,
it
may be mentioned
less
match with
Perrins in
Bullock for no
than 20,000/.
who
by Johnson, a
far smaller
man.
also a complete
answer
life in-
the danger to
all
appears from
pro-
exercises.
The
duration of
the
them
138
than twenty
minutes.
Nothing
is
in
which some
men,
after
appearing to be on their
managed by the evil moment, and actually Chance and luck have played
legs,
skill,
fame, which
is
strength, and,
above
that pluck
which
is
The
first
of those
it
an accurate science
and popularised
to
champion from 1740 to 1750, and who built and opened an amphitheatre for pubKc displays of the art behind Oxford Road,
near Tottenham Court Road, in the second year of his reign.
The next was Mendoza household word in the schools of arms who reigned in 1791, and opened the Lyceum in the
Strand, where he long enjoyed the
aristocratic admirers and pupils.
patronage of
the
most
Jem Belcher, and Pearce (the Game Chicken), were known in their generation as Wellington or Pitt and a
son,
;
modern
1808,
pugihsts, to Gully,
in
elected
Member
of
Parliament
The
features
of
striking
resemblance
to the first
Napoleon
and
scription belts,
and
their
they handsomely
lined their
139
and lived on
tlie fat
where the muses joined company every evening with the professors
'
noble
art.'
Nov.
24,
81 3.
Just
Emperor
I drank more than I like, and have brought away champion's. some three bottles of very fair claret for I have no headache. We had Tom up after dinner very facetious though somewhat prolix. Tom is an old friend of mine I have seen some of his best
battles
in
my
nonage.
He
is
now
a publican, and,
fear,
sinner, &c.
have been sparring with Jackson for exercise this morning, and mean to continue and renew my acquaintance with the muffles. My chest and arms and wind are in very good plight, and I am not in flesh. I used to be a hard hitter, and my arms are very long for my height (5 ft. 8|^ in.). At any rate exercise is good, and this is the severest of all fencing and broadsword never fatigued me half so much.
17, 18 14.
I
:
March
The
and
for
his life to
all
his profession.
Spring,
Jem Ward and Deaf Burke belong successively to this heroic age, and carry the title down to the time of Bendigo, whose pupils still
live
of their master.
The admiration
Prize
Ring
is
known
as
any of their
at
characteristics
vast deal
as well
as
amongst the
the
fists,
common
I40
The
and he
unbeaten
Then
a short
1857,
(the Tipton
latter,
who
reigned
when he was beaten by Harry brings us down to the time of Sayers and to fighting men who are still alive.
with Broome
till
the generation of
Tom
men who
ever got to
showing that
shoulders
;
body had
bricks,
stowed away
theory
Anyone who
pile,
may do
and
'
chucking
It will
'
them
good distance
be
seen that the attitude of the feet exactly resembles that recom-
mended
is
The
shoulders
who had
sufficient
knowledge
his
style, tell
or right he
The
was
mark with
effect
hitting a wall.
riAure VI.
The
side step
141
man
as
he came forward or
as
he shifted
his ground,
On
in
'
timing his
man
'
was
in the
most modified
he guarded
of
fight,
much more
to
movement
when
in
mantelling
oeuvring,
hit.
had worked
his
way
The
perfect balance in
which
was sustained on
both legs enabled him to attack and retreat with such speed
and
strength,
'
close quarters, he
flinchingly,
would
knee
at the
same time
head
fell
he took away
resistance,
his
In
lighted the
American
party,
damaging
who knew
Very
rounds
into
the native
different
champion
best,
the Benicia
fighting his
man
him and
falling
upon him.
and get-
So
the matter of
ting
mere
home
with best
effect.
They
the connoisseur, not for what they did, but for what they did
not, that
is,
for not
142
for a
fall.
telling
made
least
show and
And
the escape of
Tom
Sayers from
fact,
hands of
his gigantic
more
like
As
to the
real merit
by the
referee to have
differences of opinion.
difficult
The
almost as
to
believe
that a
man
with a broken
longer, as that
wxre
which caused
occurred,
it
it
for accident
may
fairly
be called
had
not
way the
better
man
of the two.
By the by, the puffed condition of Heenan's hands was commonly attributed by the professionals who ought to know
best about
it
to his refusal to
preli-
hands
to
which
is
is
The
lotion,
which
also
skin a dark
and curious
'
look,
'
to
be rather a
fine
gentleman
in his business,
dislike.
Prize fighting
is,
and
squeamishness
if
that
was the
From
the
moment
Thomas
who
Sayers had
Mr.
if
Member
of Parliament,
and
143
in
up manfully
defence of
decay.
ture
and unpropitious.
disorderly
And
in
Heenan,
it
seems
was engaged
England he was
afterwards.
Meanwhile
for
about
fitfully
survived
battles,
and a
series of trouble-
some
which
and
deter-
mined
became
fights
rapidly demoralised.
The
parties
to appear except
under the
some well-known member of the confraternity. Sam Hurst (the Staleybridge Infant) and another giant named
first
by
Tom
whose
style
type which has seldom been equalled and perhaps never excelled
in
any age.
The heavy
Wormald made
falling
result,
some of them
Their
last
1868
and since
more free-and-easy
country.
the only
144
of champion, wnth
great
some
interruptions,
from
1861
till
1872,
and indeed a
far
deal later;
finest
and
for
more
performer to
be found
in the world.
The
pany with
in
both hemi-
ring
and there
still
between,
who have
by the
'glove fighting.'
Here
style of
it
All the
modern boxing is that in which the bare fists are used. mere travesties of the original. rest are mere imitations
To
excel in
to
To
is
what
effect of their
the gloves
as to the
This
way of deciding
man
for every
it
to
the head or
becomes necessary
to count
those
for
flips
nothing
On
if
is
gloves^
then a
false
conclusion
is
fighting a dull
in real fighting
heavy thwack
it is
ribs with
if
they
damage
'
145
bad end,
prize lights.
Some
them by
amateur
the Marquess of
They
differed in several
important respects from those of the P.R., and chiefly in regulating the length
of the
capabihty of both
men
to
keep on
their legs.
The admixture
;
the time between each round (of three minutes) was extended
to
one minute
for a fallen
man
to get up,
which he must do by
seconds.
P.R.,
own
exertions,
rules
be awarded
to the
man
who
and
real thing
which
it
attempts to reproduce
artificial
sport.
vised for
and
for
number
of
This
We
must proceed
to less controversial
interest in the
'
argument one
Saturday Review
up
seriously for
it
against
hosts of
modern
detractors.
tain, that
146
fall
more commonly
It
in a brutal
and
row
as above, or
its
which
referred to in the
it
Ode
of Beranger, with
amusing plate
to bear
company.
?
les coups.
?
Le sangjaillit Dieux que les Anglais sont humains Non, chez nous, point,
battez des mains.
!
Modern
into the
boxing, or
'sparring,'
which
falling
as partly pugilism,
it
and
partly
The
first
of these to take
up on
Chambers and
its
amateur championship
Queensberry.
and
now
in existence a small
body of
all
whom
'
comers
in a veritable
sort of
ring.'
became
at
one time a
double
rules, set
its
777^
OLD SCHOOL
rival title of
147
to
its
champion
own
For
both com-
petitions
into one,
for
and
less
no
is
st.
41b.,
which
the
middle
'
w^eight,'
down
to feather
bantam weight
(8 stone).
Other gym-
and
athletic
clubs
and there
are
now
who dabble
in this
form of art
1.
MS
CHAPTER
III.
is
eminently
artificial
that
to say, that
and
a
practice.
is
become
bad boxer
and
in
The many
produce
local
champions who
are disfigured
by almost every
style
;
fault that
bad
is
in this
matter, as in
most
and
it is
who
good
;
school.
of books
few years, a
new chance
by
'
Professor
'
To
every beginner
there
is
may be
confidently
recommended,
'
especially
if
lectures
'
of a really com-
petent mentor.
It
may seem
paradoxical,
and provoke a
fists
the
first
properly
is
to
understand
allowed to touch
make a
hit or a guard,
he should be taught
rigure IX.
149
in the
By
the
feet a
connoisseur
almost at a
The
left
foot should
be
flat
on the ground,
The
it,
and the
be raised an
inch from the ground, both knees being slightly bent, as by this
means the
and the
is
joints are
much more
The
little
that
is
made up
for
by what
gained in
left,
agility.
right foot
it,
must not be
at right angles
to the
an angle of
And
body must be
so that
it
can be thrown in a
left
or the other.
foot
is is
the design
coming
to the
ground a
little
and
The
right foot
must immediately
and be
set
down
left
as gently,
Bur
in a lunge in to
fencing.
six-foot
man
enough forward
men
will
recovery.
When
is
so that
it is
The The
at least four or
^Nt inches
off the
ground.
left
recovery
is
effected
leg backwards.
In
lifted first.
I50
quickly, so that
after
may be resumed.
is
In retreating
usually adopted.
After the
made from
is
the
left
leg,
and
as the
right,
bent
body backwards.
the
left
is
same place
it,
where the
the right
right
little
behind
whilst
comes down
In alightfirst,
and
is
quickly followed by the heel, after which the right foot comes
down make
the
If
it is
intended to
is is
left
comes back on
legs
feet
is
is
both
xepeated.
Thus
and
in
covered
as the
advance
step,
properly made,
is
muchdess
to
out of reach.
is
boxing
or
become perfect in this lesson. Lift the wrong foot first, come down on the wrong foot, or in a false attitude, and it is
all
almost
His
is
and
up the
is
left.
His body
frustrated.
strides,
An
'
active
up with powerful
delivers a
and, catching
spills
'
him
him
like a
top-heavy jar of
water.
mentor
will
and
retreating
before he allows
him even
to put
on a
glove.
The body, in the meanwhile, should be kept upright, and the The left shoulder is thrown very most made of a man's height.
15
that
it
forms a complete
arm
is
adversary.
In
out directly in
the
to
attack,
and
it is
him
or body.
Figs. 11.
An
and
may be
will
position, but
more
on
this
side being
drawn back
attack,
need
little
or no defence.
The
fist is
the
left breast.
In
effectually
of the stomach
above the
known
to fighting
men
as
the mark.'
fist
Both
being
and the
right
raised
bones.
stiffness
come more and more forward in front of the The object of this movement is not only to prevent
in
the
arm-joints
to
prevent an
adversary perceiving
when
intended to be
made.
still
With a
body
will
in a stiif attitude
from time
to time
on
one or other
leg,
shifted occasionally
By
this
means,
his
it
becomes excessively
'
an adversary
to 'judge
distance
in
making or
152
left,
but
much
his
enemy.
point a foot or
left,'
two to
left,
eyes
the visual
If a
blow
is
to
be taken,
better to take
it
left
front.
in Fig.
The
I.
men on guard
*
'
is
shown
before an attempt
is
made
at
Almost no
all
who
They
consider
than
five different
methods of defence.
be
mentioned
to the
methods of attack
The
stop by 'countering.'
man who
is taller
than
well
his
if
he
is
skilled,
distance.
To
two
Extend the
of the
left
in a
boxing
Do
what you
will
you
will
for
home
come
opposing
left fist
of the bigger.
Of
longer-armed
must be sure
its
aim.
The
various
devices for eluding that aim, and preventing a long reach from
telling, constitute
the
ABC
art.
But, sup-
home when
is
short.
The
stop by countering
mani-
Figure X.
Left-hand lead-off
153
needs
less trouble.
There
no
shifting of ground,
no
no violent
Only the
arm
is
just
thrown forward
is
at the
same
time.
When this energetic system of defence the man who leads off, whether at the
fist
Of course
with a
(2.)
*
this
'
'
stop
'
guard
by the
The
retreat in
good
It
order.
is
This
leg,
is
much
safer,
though
is
less
telling
manoeuvre.
is
short
and
if
necessary shifting
Ducking.
in
to
be used
is
The
at
head
the
and
same
necessary, the
in the
same
very
direction,
the latter into great ridicule by actually nodding his head for-
at
him
to pass
harm-
of
'
cross-counters,'
a safe opportunity
man
^
it
exposes the
cut.'
may be used with tremendous effect when offers but when attempted Avith a clever defendant to the damaging hit known as an
;
upper
Fig.
V. shows a
combination
of the
device of
telling
duck-
ing
'
tremendously
form of
attack.
a forward
movement
154
is
pro-
As
exposed to the
and attacked
may be made more left arm. A small man engaged by a big fellow who knows someleft,
who
miay employ
to
and
if
he happens
flesh,
have a
is
the coup
not
The
side step.
This
is
either
or practised by
it
them
To
effect
on
left foot.
well
left
on the
put
The
down
right,
is
so to the opponent's
If there
is
left
aimed
at
body
When
well done,
man
empty
A
it
may be
effected
somewhat
similarly
but
to
the ropes.
Another mode of
is
more properly
ioot
is
called 'slipping,'
shown
in Fig.
VI L Here
left
the
left
raised
and
set
down
right following
in position
behind
it.
The
movement is that it exposes the left side to a very damaging blow. The proper style of breaking ground or shifting, or slipping, is by movements to the right, avoiding the
weak
part of this
155
left
hand blows.
'(5.)
The guard
Last
of
all
the defences,
first,
For
;
guard arm,'
Remember, however, in estimating the relative value of this defence, as compared with the others, that Sayers, during the greater part of his great fight with the American giant, could
make no
use at
all
broken early
in the day,
and
that
Ned
cessful teacher of
more modern
an
hour with
and beat
his
man.
The
left at
fist,
passing
it
towards
left, till it is
opposite the
it is
left
the angle
made by
hand
is
it is
not likely to be
hit.
to the face,
however hard
The
further
is
arm
is
fall
Otherwise there
great risk,
the
man
is
taller
and
stronger, that a
avoid
and
arm
hits
is
may
fall
of on the bone.
man who
down, you
will
To
leaning on the
left
forearm.
The
156
is
the
easier
will
once
to
its
normal
be ready
Fig. VIII.
left
;
but
will
man on
arm
far
enough
wrist.
to the
left,
near the
Arm Guard.
its
To
usual
position.
crosses the
'
arm ought
left.
right
much
guarding, but
when he
is
quickly,
to a
comes out
in leading
arm may be
raised in a
a left-hand lead-off.
in Fig. IX.
;
recommended for the right in stopping The position will then be as represented
'
157
good
deal.
That
round
result
hit.
may
With
also
this
be deliberately
object
'
intensified in guarding a
feint
your
man
with the
left,
full
blow,
turn up the elbow sharply, leaning the head and body forward.
The
arm
a
will
come
full
on the
sharp corner of the elbow, and he will have had a lesson not
easily
forgotten.
In
it
like
manner
cross-counter aimed by
him
at the body, if
may be stopped
fist
left
low,
and the
foot foremost
and leads
may be employed
'
with great
right
is
arm may
in
In
in-fighting
'
may be
And
the head
may
left
shoulder,
him
almost,
if
not
much damage
as the
man
he
hits.
When
a beginner has
become
at length
eluding an attack he
may
be allowed to
start
proceed-
And
his
for a long
left.
The
as
lead-off
whole attention.
Every day
for ten
and
much
full
Beginning
at a
moderate distance he
will hit
out at
this,
and
retreat-
now
As he begins
he
and of
his stride,
from which
158
he leads
and by degrees he
will
much
The reach
foot of the wall struck to the right heel of the striker, will be
an adversary
that distance,
who could do so and recover themselves easily. In extending the left arm as the foot comes out, the knuckles and elbows will be kept down, and the arm at the moment of
fewer
contact will be extended to
its fullest
much
The
left
foot
is
is
advanced
flat
till
from the
is
right,
and
put
raised
some
knee
inches.
is
The
it is
right leg
is
then nearly
straight,
but
the
left
bent
till it is
Fig. X.).
And here
With
the
full
well-timed,
and well
delivered.
It will
left
fist
view place a
his
man
be seen that
which there
a
no weak
point.
Take
it
human
or lean
end
of this semi-arch.
in destroying
its
effect
strength of resistance.
it
makes
its
resistance
it
more formidable.
And
the arch
itself,
consisting as
does of a bow-shaped
curve,
may be made
stronger
human
body, so as to straighten out the curve, and drive the upper end
(the
fist)
further forward.
The
when
blow
it
many different
agencies,
all
-159
telling
effect
against
the
unlucky
augmented
from the
in a rigid line
standing on
will
its
and you
produced.
But
and judgmentdelivering
it
are required.
the
usual mistake
is
loses its
chief virtue, as a
weak point
man
it
Another very
it
common
Not only
and
to
fist
before letting
go
out.
but
gives a watchful
Finally, the
fist,
about to happen.
it
should
and then
posed guard,
leave the
attack.
left
or, if
it is
not so stopped, to
fall
downwards and
open
to
To
is
only being somewhat lower, and the body and head correspondingly kept
down
(see Fig.
far
is
XL).
With a
and
taller
back or
;
his right-hand
it is
form of attack
the best
has
his
guard too
far.
The
recovery
The
i6o
greatest care
dummy,
not to
lean
object struck.
obvious that
if
The impulse
in
;
recovering
must come
entirely
from the
and
as the
body
is
left
partly ex-
hand blow.
and
The
is
how
to lead off
;
even passably
it
to be
a novice,
'
Now
am
going to
hit
left,'
and
will
do so
efforts to retreat, or
dodge, or guard.
The double step forward in leading off is used with a man who is shy and active but anskilled in the use of his legs. The first step may be a feint at the head or body, and the second The distance covered by a good man Mace, for a real hit.
example
is
first hit,
Leading
is
dif^cult.
It is
left.
you
is
as the
altogether different,
and depends
in a lead-off
its
on
different principles.
hit
Although
the
arm
is
will
come from
front.
It is
the shoulder,
force
shoulder
a sort of com-
promise between a half-arm blow and a blow with the straight arm,
and
it
requires far
less
mere
utilisa-
Figure XIII
161
other.
Tn delivering
it
and the knee bent very much forward. As the right arm comes forward, it is likely to meet with the left fist of the
adversary coming out with a counter
will force this fist
;
is
that
it
in
to his face,
;
There
it
is,
however,
fail
much
fear of
its
failing to
do
this
and as
does so
it
full face,
meeting
comes forward.
his
Moreover,
if
it
into
head
he
is
almost
sure to get
XII.).
home and
give at least as
much
may be
is
so
The
even
more
risky.
It is
And
the reason
why it
is
more hazardous
is
is
On
for this
hand
to
against
Far
better, therefore, to
both these
that
left
is
to
when
hand
has already
countering
come
more
If instead of
it is
nothing
left
is
done
is
to
keep the
arm
shown
;
'
in Fig. XIII.
In in-fighting the
therefore be 'round.'
half-arm
and the
face kept
down.
it
used
in hitting, the
shoulder belonging to
made
to
keep
'
i62
upper
cuts,'
and
his
must neces-
be only round-arm
hits.
made
to drive the
heavy half-arm
much
row
and even
man
who keeps his eyes open and delivers a good rib pohsher when there is a fair chance, derives some benefit from it in the
shortness of breath and stiffness of the whole
to the adversary.
'
body which
result
Slogging
'
and hard
mere
object of doing
credit in
but
it is
hard
hit
having
It
its
remains
now
to
They
four
above
several of the
many methods
left
But
it
may be
and
to the
manoeuvres.
Two
sets of
ment
and
accompanied with a
hit,
In
protect his
by putting up
his right-hand
guard.
By
this
means he
an fait
will
come home.
its
After
he
is
pretty well
at this,
when
With
hand goes
Figure XIV.
Right-hand cross-counter
163;
will gently
counter his
man on
the body.
vital
The
leading off he
exposes two
parts, the
it
And
for
some time he
that
will find
By
him
to
keep the
right
arm
in
its
normal place.
he
he must
is
Or,
if
counter
com-
may dodge
same
left
as a counter.
off'
Remember
:
always this
4ead
and a 'counter'
;
in a lead off
it
the
left
foot
must be advanced
in a
counter
need not
but advantage
him within
of the
may be taken of the step-in of the enemy to bring distance. In common parlance, it is usual to speak
countering one another
;
men
but this
it
is
really a mis-
nomer.
When
both
men
If
step in
is
a double lead-off in
both
men
its tell-
although
it
and can
crooked or
hits in a
at
weak or
Raise the
left
if it
arm from
exactly the
same way
as
comes
in con-
it
a turn outwards
'
164
thus be
screwed round
all
right
hand
will
be
utterly
powerless for
purposes of
;
and
be presented
you an
inviting
mark upon
tremendous
w^hich
effect
safety
and
force
of your
their
right-hand
left
blow.
foot
turned
They
little
think, as
lets
who
them knock him about a bit, that with one back-handed turn of his wrist as they come blundering on he could send them spinning, and, as their broadside comes opposite him, could
lay
them
flat
is
little
true story
told of the
in Castle Street
were
many
was
at a race meeting,
where
difficult.
member of one
fistic art,
of the great
good
practical know^-
of the
was working
his
without
much
To
sallow-faced
this
way,
young man,' was the remark of the pigmy to the giant. 'You might feel sorry for it' Goliath was dumb-foundered the by:
Did the
little
mean
really
to insult
him
Did the
little
laughing circle
around him
want
to see
Every feature
:
in
every face
seemed
to say as plainly as
spoken words
'
Go
for him.
Don't
165
And
hands
that
in the
most correct
style,
and leading
hand
had
felled
many
is
a redoubtable athlete.
The
next thing
difficulty
all
that he
remembers
some
round the
left
to
rush on again to the attack, for he was not one to show the
white feather.
little
But the
?
'
oldest^ palest
knot of loafers laid his hand very gently on the big man's
'
arm.
that's
'
'
Why,
left
Nat Langham
on
his heel,
just
enough sense
to turn
and walk
he could.
if
episode than
he had
The
They
fighting
as far as actual
blows.
Com-
which
left,
is
thus delivered
as
it
Watch
for
your man's
left,
and
to the
throw-
body on
At the same
and bring
it
home
head.
with
all
left
The
result of this
manoeuvre
is
arm
for-
leader-off,
coming
ward with
dition
his blow,
on
to the countering
is
(Fig,
XIV.).
So severe
is
the
while the hand and arm of the striker are apt to be badly
jarred,
is
If the
mouth
of the leader-off
at all
more
or less severe,
is
almost
66
sure to follow,
it
will
be matter of
The answer
it is
counterer
and
to
guard against
keep the
arm ready
to parry
may be
will
aimed
often
at the ribs
and
in the case of a
tall,
bulky
man this
be
still
more
effective.
This
man who
hand
too
:
attempts
to
usually far
much
Of
fist
all
the
men who
memory
to
majority have
owed
their misfortune
right-handed cross-
counters coming
home on an
liver or a
haps a disordered
The
other two
The
harm-
head on
is
ducked
and the
left fist
is
brought round
XVL,
mark
;
'
XL
In
is
the
'
happens to be
it
'
hit,
'
the blow
decisive of a
round
takes
the wind
out of the
he cannot breathe
mastered.
And firs t of
'
feinting
'
and drawing.
'
'
Figure
167
make
a fool
'
A beginner
is
Nothing
more
Such
he
is is
him
to
be
'
'
as
he
ground or changing
he must,
it is
his attitude.
his teacher
true, feint
in.
much
best
his step-in
and recovery.
The
of the head or
body
to
is
Retreat-
blow
is
and
then,
when
the
man
make
is
a firm stand
counter.
made and he
effectively
The
in his
will
is
'
to
be found
timing
his
man.
It
be a very long time before the novice knows with any sort
of certainty
will
when he
is
And
it
be
still
when he
on
is
likely to
catch a
foe.
man coming on
a retreating
Allusion has
already
been made
to the extraordinary
But
it is
i68
BOXII^G
AND SPARRING
his
*
The value of
timing
'
up by saying
is
that
as the recipient
is
worth half-a-dozen
is
he
standing quite
and
a dozen w^hen he
in full retreat.
For the benefit of those who have short memories and small
opportunities for taking lessons, a few warnings
and maxims
'
may
little
trite
adage as to
On
may be
placed the
following
them
close together.
Never,
Never,
if
it,
it,
work round
let
to your
left.
if
Never
let
left.
Do
man who
is
retreating in
good
order.
Amongst
remembering
:
affirmative
precepts
worth
Hit with the big knuckles of the hand, and not with the
thumb
or small knuckles.
led-off,
Having
of distance.
If
whether you
stand
still
to
at/ but
do most of the
leading-off.
you are
will tell,
and
and you
will
If
Figure XVI.
Left-hand cross-counter
169
at
him with your whole strength and Having got home a hit, do not
for
weight.
at
it,
careful,
and
You
may do
if
worse.
Always
the other
man
displays
and
attitude.
By
you
word should be
and powers of
There
is
this
unquestionable defect in
kinds,
that
it
For the
rest,
who
attend at
he be
is
to determine.
And
won
the
pro essionals
and
But
their task
and unenviable
arbiters,
in the
extreme
who pretend
be the best
and discharge
who may have been chosen as most competent for the The leading clubs have been very fortunate in, for the office. most part, finding judges who utterly despised these attempts to
persons
bully them,
and continued
to
award the
title
of champion to
men who exhibited most science, men who relied upon brute force to
them the
victory.
It is
I70
much
men
will
for if
once
this
to
enough
and
it is
aspirant to
fistic
honours in the
shapes,
For on the
roll
appear
men
of
all
sizes,
and
builds.
The
tall,
all
had
their
fair
share of victories in
all
The heavy-weight
lightrule,
high.
list
As a
well
and
men.
in the
whole
of winners
at the
most who
can be described as
nor peculiar
to
activity,
be indispensable.
life,
to learn
very late in
and whose
for the
ticular aptitude
science,
and,
The extended
existence of these
and
athletic
clubs,
an
art
out.
The
name
plished
and
it
is
only
fair to
Abe
White (now
retired).
At the
171
olden
Tom
ham.
Numerous
local
first-rate,
London
E. B.
M.
WRESTLING
BY
W.
ARMSTRONG
The Hank
WRESTLING
INTRODUCTION.
One
term.
is
of wrestling, with
some
difficulty as to
modern
writers
it
on the
as
'
subject,
though
becomes
at
once
how much
is
of
him besides
'
his feet
must come
Is
it
lo the
ground before he
considered to be
to
down.'
sufficient
for a
hand
it ?
or an
arm
even
touch the
floor ?
?
Or
must a knee
is
also touch
Or
is
this
not enough
One
landed
at
once amongst a host of different rules and authothat both the shoulders
is
rities,
flat
must come
Then,
down
recognise
much
is,
easier
modes
again, there
maintains that it
Even when he
is
is
he can, throw
off his
forced to cry
Hold enough.'
at
any
176
rate explain,
if it
WRESTLING
does not accurately describe, the manoeuvres
in various countries
employed
will
and
places.
Even
in
England
it
of wrestling, each of which recognises rules and tactics prohibited by the others.
The golden
sister art
of
In
it
and the
victor
not only became a hero amongst his fellow athletes and the
common
and municito
have
He
returned in a sort of
own city
in
privileges
states
and immunities
his
were
decreed to him
and
some
statue
was
Especial
them
earlier
than boxing,
to
show
and grace
The
to us
from the
classical age,
who has
fair
ever visited a
museum
by such a contest for the display of the muscles. None of the victors in this department of athletics was, or is, so
as
famous
six
A curious
Taking
related of the
manner
in
he began by carrying
it
and
as the animal
its
heavier with
and easy
stages
INTRODUCTION
nevertheless able to continue his task until the calf
into a heifer
177
had grown
and the
Some
of the earliest
records
of
the
common
Gods and
demi-
In such
by no
The grand
fight
the river god Acheloiis was (Oh, great shade of Sophocles, forgive
!)
'
rough-and-tumble.'
revived
in the
plays in Greece
and
Italy
when
of
The
less
much
Then came
as twelve oxen,
sented to the loser was only valued at the price of four oxen.
Ajax, the representative of bodily size and brute force,
forward,
and immediately
trickery.
after
him
artfulness
and
;
the occasion
but
it
made use
of
catching hold of
Nor was there any difficulty in one another. The arms were passed right
legs
slantingly
at all
was not
un-
and
as the struggle
went on
on the
ribs
No
progress,
however, was
178
WRESTLING
him by any
stratagem.
matched
me up
bodily, or I will
lift
you
'
And
craft.
at the
same time he
made an attempt
air.
Now
was
As he was borne
and
then, striking
with his heel on the back part of the other man's knee, overthrew
him and
trip
fell
upon him.
In modern phraseology he
hammed
'
had time
to swing
him over
or
him
up.
not so
clear.
When
And
men
lift
up the
off the
giant,
he
little
ground.
doing
so,
one of
his
together.
Then
as they got
up and prepared
'
to
renew the
conflict, the
Do
not compete
sufferings. shall
Both
have an
They appear
to
the offer
and walked
off to
make room
for
other contests.
In the
Roman
The
in
it
appeals
even
in Greece, a
not allowed to be
INTRODUCTION
further attacked.
179
And
it is
rough sport of struggling on the ground, than that it was ended either by the death of the loser, who was occasionally strangled
outright, or
by
his lifting
it
up a
As
for
at all
were
either
its
own
period.
The
application of
oil to
the bodies could hardly have been for any other purpose than
to avoid the
this painful
way
but
fingers
still
more
to
painful to the
it.
skin than
nothing at
all
In com-
athletes
first
attention to
and
loose
'
their style
must therefore
had
'
type.
victor
in early
;
but
five.
In England
is
very remarkable
how
entirely different a
suf-
reason
hundreds
own neighbourhood. Four widely separate schools of wrestling have been known from time immemorial and each had its own persistent votaries, who maintained the superiority of their rules with as much zeal as the players of different football games. Of these the Devonshire
;
and Cornwall
reckoned
in
one category
differ in
but
very improperly
a most
important particular.
Then comes
i8o
WRESTLING
method, which achieved a wider renown, partly
moreland
men
enthusiasm to
its
London
encouragement of
prize
the
mode
is
also
and was
men than any other during all the last century. There are a good many allusions in the literature of England to this common form of the art, which
file
of sporting
has the great advantage of being fettered by few rules and yet
free
brutality.
From
we possess it seems that Saxon times the hold was got with the open hand grasping
body or the tunic of the adversary,
those times a
or else a sort of
either the
scarf,
cock was
;
evi-
dently in
common
it
prize for
the victor
but
practice
ram
may be
seen from
the character of the miller in his Canterbury Tales and from the
description of Sir Thopas, of
whom
Of wrastling there was none his pere, Where any ram shulde stonde.
On
more
^
dignified
and more
all
described in
A
A
A A
full
game
white
bull,
up ypryght
full
bright
INTRODUCTION
A payre of gloves, a red gold A pipe of wine, good faye
:
i8i
ringe,
What man
The
meaning probably
coming from
men
or
different counties of
England.
In London there were certainly in the time of the Plantagenets annual wrestling competitions on different feast days, and
notably on
St.
James'
Day and
St.
Bartholomew's.
In 1222 the
;
and the
ram
easily
and a return
Westminster on the
Lammas
bailiff
Day
following.
But before
of
and a pitched
battle
In a some-
London
St.
wrestlers,
w^as
picturesque account
'
of the proceedings
the
given in Hentzner's
Itinerary
city,
'
:
When
a sceptre (pro-
bably the mace), a sword and a cap are borne before him, and
he
Upon
their
is
mob
them, two
like
at a time.'
The growth
the
fifteenth
of archery
in
London
and
in
century
Stow complains
to the con-
down
to a single afternoon,
82
WRESTLING
less select.
'
He
namely
who
the
men
in
suburbs to wrestle
at
for
against the
to
In France the
The Duke's
wrestler, in
'As You
as
Like
It,'
well as a
may have been an exceptionally skilful performer, man of gigantic weight and strength but he talks
;
of
if
the infliction
common
occurrence.
And
Apollo
effectually, that
who resembled
his prototypes
at the first
life.
throw damaged
him
In relation to the
Shakspearean account of
when
his
their
and
in a similar
w^ay
this
brethren.
in
The account
of
early
matches
stockings on.
at their
famous meeting
France
is
described so differently
it is
by
only a
myth.
In comparatively modern times roguery and rowdyism, which
INTRODUCTION
have been
fatal to so
183
sports,
and
it
was relegated, as
far as the
held
its
fairs in
In an old
'
Spectator
'
is
by the squire
'
as a
falls.'
man was
not accounted
leg
down
until
one of
his shoulders
on the
that in
Carew declares
'
and other
activities
now
plenty of people
rural fairs
now
living
where
local
champions wrestled
for a
though
silver prizes
were not
much
the realm.
At a
fair in
who
fancied
means of communication between town and town and county and county having made
the present century, the improved
it
champions
first
one
another.
Some
of the
real
place in
i84
WRESTLING
to
was unable
county.
is
rivals in the
neighbouring
of England
for
in con-
templation.
its details,
difficulty in arranging
on each
or other
some time
this latitude
of rules (for
it
armed with a
eccentricities,
striking,'
the exclusion of thick soles and the use only of soft slippers.
Eventually, in order that the match might not
fall
through, the
graphic
at
though rather
the time.
class,
It
inartistic
describes both
men
His pluck
blows aimed
at his shins
;
had
to
endure
When
he succeeded
in this his
him
as to prevent
him from
It will
INTRODUCTION
country style
is
185
'
to a large extent
made up
'
of
out-fighting.'
The
w^ell-
men
their
apart,
forming with
two bodies a
roof.'
like the
beams of a
shaped
But
to overbalance their
freely use their legs
opponent and
in the attack.
it
twist or swing
him
over, but
strikes
somewhat
French athletes
while
Another notable
is
altogether
made
of un-
tearable material,
hold as best
seize with
of the jacket behind the shoulder and with the other the sleeve
or
arm of
it.
the
wrestling
little
chance
of using
speedily
'shoddy'
discovered.
here.
'
Loose
style,
wrestling,'
'
can
'
requires
and no
prohibited
and
it is
the
arms
until
or fingers.
In
is
not considered
;
down
but a more
86
WRESTLING
feet,
ending the round when any part of the body except the
knees, or hands touches the ground.
Modern
spectators
do not
much care about the recumbent style of wresthng, in which a man who is really down and underneath struggles, with very
small chances of success, but with laborious and tedious efforts
to
keep
at least
one shoulder
is
off the
ground.
stand facing one another
attitude.
taken the
men
a peculiar
much bent.
;
about, as
a
were, in the
air,
chance
offers
while are held up, and the opponents eye one another keenly,
Now
is
hang
in front
of him.
action.
it is
At length a hold
taken, one
usually
resting
his wrist.
and there
or
no
restriction as
many to how
may be
The
taken, whether
shoulders, or
variation of
to them,
are even
land
'
style.
And
the
falls
are often
cross-buttock,'
when
flat
applied in this
man
on
to turn a
complete somersault in
'
the
air,
descending
his back.
is
The
cross-buttock
'
may
is
also be
INTRODUCTION
In
all
187
form of wrestHng
'
it is
holds, the
head
in chancery.'
Occasionally a
man is thrown
and one near
without being grasped either round the body or round the neck.
His arm
is
arm
is
is
enemy many of
available in the
is
an adept
and get
man.
This species of
encounter, admitting as
other,
does of
tactics
much more variety than the of each man more clearly is much the more amusing
and
who are often immensely diverted by the quaint antics of the men in manoeuvring for a hold. In the German style of wrestling the question is not so much what you can do as what you may do. Almost all the refineintelligible to spectators,
ments of the
it is
adversary or entrap
or legs.
Neither
chips
of
the sort so
much admired
;
permissible
buttock
'
and
'
cross-buttock
'
are
main
is
that
is
acquired
chiefly
The main
'
to obtain
'
full
'
when one arm is below and the other over the shoulder. The hands are not obliged to remain locked, as in the Cumberland style, but may be shifted about so as to
half-hold
'
it is
88
WRESTLING
As
is
fall is
not counted
is
apt to
follow
on the ground
after
one
man
down.
called
swinging
'
belt
and
stout drawers
and
shirt.
The
something
broad
gaiter,
and the
shirt is
similarly rolled
up above
the elbows.
hold
may be
means of swing-
man
the stout
Here, as in most
than the
tall
and
slender
who have
sional wrestlers
and
their
most celebrated
fat
call
enormously
men.
classic
extent,
tests of
and
athletes
who were
heavy con'
liberal allowances
The
for
not to be accounted
The
often those
favour,
i.e.
the school-
do
may
As a matter of fact,
if
a proper
padded
INTRODUCTION
ceedingly
little
189
and the
spirit
of anta-
gonism which
and gymnasts
provoking
of the
might be given
to the
free play in
an encounter which
is less
ancient world,
who had
and
it
is
remove
stiff-
so
common
perhaps
in the
amongst youths
in these days.
Besides
this,
nothing
is
matched bout
by the
wrestling arena.
It
is
and great
offer
make
efforts,
of
in
still
E. B.
M.
I90
WRESTLING
CHAPTER
Why
some
sports
I.
which seem
to
possess
all
districts,
is
impossible to explain.
and there
?
'
which
'
How
's
that,
umpire
quarter
at
many
of which contain
since,
men whose
games and
ling,
Wrest-
moreland
any of the
Such a healthy relic of the good old times deserves the heartiest recognition, and being always reckoned a kind of twin
shire.
sister of
the 'noble
art,'
it
all
advocates
requirements.
In the
last
Westmoreland wore
it
On
191
easy to find a
to boast that
it.
who was
the
as
first
of excellency
^buttocker,'
champion of
his district,
many
Crab Tree
Egremont
in
company with
first
and the
clerk that
There
is
wrestling flourished
as
when
classes
'
and the
'
masses
'
in the
Down
to
to the present
match
when
Tom
Long-
North
to the
in
James
himself.
in his
Had
head
as the
shepherd (who
his foes
in top
modern champions, notwithstanding the example of some ancient heroes and Mr. William Litt) has occasionally introduced wresthng
in his tales
;
192
WRESTLING
is
illustrations
found.
No
made
for giving
an extract
skill in wrestling,
and it having been enacted as a law that he who won in any one contest was obliged to begin the next, Polmood was of course one They all engaged at once by two and two, and of the number. eight of them having been consequently overthrown, the other
eight next
cast,
two couples only remained. Some of the nobles engaged were so expert
exercise,
and opposed to others so equal in strength and agility, that the Some of them contests were exceedingly equal and amusing. It had always could not be cast until completely out of breath. been observed, however, that Polmood and Carmichael threw their
opponents with so much ease, that it appeared doubtful whether these opponents were serious in their exertions, or only making a show wrestle but when it turned out that they two stood the last,
;
all
were convinced that they were superior to the rest, either in strength or skill. This was the last prize on the field, and on the last throw for that prize the victory of the day depended, which each of the two champions was alike vehemently bent to reave from the other. .They eyed each with looks askance, and with visible tokens of jealousy, rested for a minute or two, wiped their Carmichael was extremely hard to please brows, and then closed. of his hold, and caused his antagonist to lose his grip three or four Polmood was, however, highly times and change his position. complaisant, although it appeared to every one beside that Carmichael meant to take him
at a disadvantage.
At length they
fell
and began to move in a circular watching each other's motions with great care. Carmichael direction, ventured the first trip, and struck Polmood on the left heel with It never moved him, but in returning it he considerable dexterity.
quiet, set their joints steadily,
seemingly with as much ease as if he had been a boy. The ladies screamed, and even the rest of the nobles doubted if the knight
193
He, however, jumped lightly up, and pretended his to smile, but the words he uttered were scarcely articulate may be better conceived than expressed. feelings at that moment A squire who waited the King's commands then proclaimed
Hunter, of Polmood, the victor of the day, and consequently entitled, in all sporting parties, to take his place next to the King, until by other competitors deprived of that prerogative.
Norman
This account
is
Hogg was
evidently conscious
that the
uncommon among
own
the Scottish
much
in
Directly
in.
Those
exercises
which
it
their
the rank of
yeoman chose
own
with
land wrestling,'
planation
assailing
rally
may be
of the terms
usually applied
the
methods of
felling
'
him.
Within the
last
made such
obsolete.
of the old
'
chips
'
are
now
Being so well
good
wrestlers use
them
in the
up which considers
and
far superior to
In the ring
at Carlisle
some
moves
o
194
ago, wlien
WRESTLING
Jameson and Wright held the pride of
place.
Few
who
on 20
St.
weight.
The former
is
believed by
some
be the
scarcely
figure
most magnificent
memory.
AVhen
satis-
have
is
as formerly.
The
Cumberland, was
head,
is
men
over his
the talent.
record
'
that they
is
when
a
'
'
liggin
doon
journey
'
ever
much
gurnin'
and haudin'
the spectator
may be
pretty certain
he
is
Jim
air,
buttocked his
'
men
high in the
commercial
'
performer of his
h.
time,
and had
little
men
in
consequence,
is
an expert,
Scott, however,
was con-
and James
Pattison, of Weardale,
men
of his
own
he was a grand
'
men
of his time,
showy
wrestling,
was
195
back-heel the
safest
and
best chip.
'
Laal
'
Tommy
No
still
continue to pursue
same
careful tactics.
attractive wrestler of
modern times
and the
agility
he some-
He
over his fallen foe, but then Wright was a very unsafe
wrestler,
inferiors.
his
The Cumberland and Westmoreland style of wrestling is now known throughout the length and breadth of the land; yet a brief summary of the rules and regulations laid down for the guidance of competitors may not be out of place here. On
taking hold, the wrestlers stand up, chest to chest, each placing
his chin
on
his opponent's
right
shoulder,
his left
When
both
men
;
on
that
man
is,
leaves loose
he
is
accounted the
and
if
either
may still
is
re-
he
is
counted
as beaten.
If the
men
side
by
first
on the ground,
to
it is
what
is
and has
is first
but
if
who
down
under, that
all
in is
Two
Cum-
all
wrestHng communities.
o 2
196
WRESTLING
The
'
Druid,'
a chapter of his
skill,
to a description of the
strength,
names
chips
in
many
other
little
towns
in the
The
treatise
on the same
written
sixty-five
years
ago,
is
The
late
art
and complications.
manner.
97
CHAPTER
'chips/
IL
TPIE BACK-HEEL.
The
back-heel
is
all
wrestling chips, as
it
comes
foot
It is
it is
behind
One
w^ay to elude
;
mode
upon an op-
ponent
is
to
keep
and by
falling apparently
which should
if
Consequently,
a very
hold
is
man
underneath.
The
heel.
when an opponent plies the backyour adversary comes with the back heel, lean your head low down, and throw your right leg
in order that
foot.
as high
up
as
he may be unable
to reach the
larly clean
is
fall,
he
it
is
an unexpected
one
As
is
in
most cases
fatal,
mends
his
has seen
much
when
198
WRESTLING
is
about the
whole cata-
logue,
left
other.
When
his
the
the
to back-heel
man
is
-with
rare.
Hamming
his
an
;
now completely
out of date
man by
to
catching him behind his knee with his heel would very quickly
find himself
on
his back.
be
effective the
stroke
must be plied
in.
ground as
possible,
and
resolutely persevered
THE HANK.
This
is
a barbarous
and
unscientific chip,
its
principal re-
who merely
wards
fall
is
turns his
left
below the
and by pulKng
This
his
man back-
the
men
pleasant thud.
man who
it
is
uppermost
is
sometimes
may be
underneath
*
fare ?
settled
many
a North-country
to
fratch,'
in his hands.
Whenever an opponent
deavour
be pulled backward he
The
it
and
said
was
Buttock
'CHIPS'
199
THE BUTTOCK.
This requires great strength and rapidity of execution.
is
It
and throwing
The manoeuvre
is
more
suitable
assailant's grip
and
It
the buttocker,
his
opponent to
certain to
make
commanding
good
Few move
THE CROSS-BUTTOCK,
though not such a showy chip as the buttock,
one,
is
a very useful
into play
his
when
into difficulties
by allowing
opponent
behind him
is
fail,
there
no help
rule,
Down
he goes, as a
as his
which the
man who
in this wise
in
the
body underneath
for the
his
A much
tighter hold
is
required
it
is
not
be seconded by the arms and upper part of the body, as otherwise the act of throwing the leg across both those of your anta-
20D
gonist
WRESTLING
would end
in disaster.
and defence
fied that a
in buttocking
volume might be
of the
subject only.
The
of wrestling, depends
much upon
may
occur in a contest.
Generally speaking,
quickness in
assault
and promptitude
in judiciously
may be
safest
method of playing
lift
your
him along
and
while. as
Another way
is
to cause your
man
to walk round,
it
he
if
lifting
his re-
ceding
will
foot, to strike
properly executed,
is
The
still
left
outside stroke
the best,
hold, but
because
you
fail
you are
able to keep a
is
good
shrewdness,
of
it,
Bewcastle,
in
but as a promiold-fashioned
is
now thoroughly
extinct.
An
knee outside of
his opponent's,
leg,
and the
knee and
tice,
leg.
common
prac-
when
To
attempt such a
wrestler
move
in the present
his
Inside Loce or
Clice:,
'
'
CHIPS
20I
men
larly
with the
left
frequently
enough
for
the
THE INSIDE
left leg
CLICK.
To
click
an opponent's
left,
very difficult
in
practice.
it
If
is
as he usually falls
Thomas Roper,
of
Lamonby
Dees
at
(the
Edinburgh
his
was the
first
day
it
John Graham, of
Carlisle,
Tom
Kennedy, of Egremont.
THE CROSS
This
that
is
CLICK.
and
However,
the other.
THE OUTSIDE
Generally speaking, this click
to in order to
is
CLICK.
a saving measure resorted
his legs
it
when
in
danger of
being thrown or
and frequently
of his opponent.
man
feel
himself in
jeopardy of being
do
is
and
as near the
ground as possible.
click,
by the way,
is
202
WRESTLING
it is
To
heavy
is
invaluable,
and more
its
men
town,
who used
It
it
of his day.
known
to practise.
None
but those
certain to have
an
unfortunate result.
three times with
it,
Mossop threw Tom Longmire twice out of Dick Chapman, of Patterdale, twice and
;
Cumberland ever produced, was once thrown by Mossop by the Many years subsequently Dick Wright same manoeuvre.
floored
Jameson
in the
all
said afterwards
know how
meet
it.
THE HirE
is
to
the science of
far the
wrestling,
easiest
and by
most
graceful
especially
is
when
successfully
performed.
The
left
arm him
and
is
under your
opponent's
left,
left
lift
leg hipe
your
you
cannot
left
so high from
miss,
If you
leg
and do
not throw your man, you are liable to get into a slack hold,
The Hipe
'
chips:
203
while he will improve his grip and then you are in his power.
quickly round to
left
and
lift
leg with
your
right, so
if
quently,
must naturally
has
its
on
his back.
it
Although the
:
left
leg hipe
disadvantages
fail
Should your
antagonist
to
over with the hipe you have him in a grand position for the
buttock, as he will probably land on his
to
left
left
foot
all
you have
do
is
your
as rapidly as posis
inevitable, as
your opponent
less.
will
merely ^gather
little
his
known
till
When
it
w^as
counties, a
little
completely revoluall
Among
the hipers of a
past
and
Tom
his
The former
swung
fell
man round
wrestler,
that
his
any
when doing so, although it rarely happens no matter how expert he may be, can throw
Jackson and Pooley were
prowess in
to this circumstance their
man
both very
men, and
As
a rule
it
man
to try to hipe
an
opponent much
than himself.
the best wTCstlers that ever lived, found this out to his cost
when
in their
match
at
Liverpool
leg
204
WRESTLING
THE SWINGING
Swing your opponent
first
HIPE.
is
off the
ground.
it
makes a clean
up
fall
when
it
comes
leg
off.
Turn your
his right
w^hile
left
and your
left
round
on the
as high as
you can,
and
your
left
man
is
standing on his
left after
left
with your
buttock,
and
cross his
fall will
the
manner of the
and a good
be the
result.
THE HOLD.
Finally, the circumstance of taking hold, w^hile
it is
the most
among
wrestlers,
is
at
the
same
difficult for
The
biassed and
and the
w^ell-wishers
judgment of the
umpire
whom
The
wiio
is
we hope,
to
fill
any
man
competent
the
evident the
must possess.
left
forget to
keep your
arm
well
down
through.
if
great deal
with, for
The Hold
'
chips:
at
205
grip you
may
if
it
safely
make play
once with a
it is
man
of your
own
try
:
weight, but
to
better to wait
this in
and
improve
mind
an ace of the
There are
adopt more
easily
skilful wrestler,
;
who
they
art,
knows by
to
practice
whom
2o6
WRESTLING
CHAPTER
HI.
RING REMINISCENCES.
will pro-
when
circle, especi-
first
man can
do
his best
ment, and he
the case
is
be immediately undeceived.
With a stranger
lugging
indeed,
quite altered.
There
is
many
a contest
lost
by a careless and
'
indifferent grip to
cock-sure.'
That
it
requires a certain
amount
an obvious
fact,
and dyke-back
'uns
'
who could
'
fell
owt
at
the
purchase
"
system
'
when confronted by an
first-class
^
antagonist in
'
the arena.
Frequently a
fall
ahint a dyker
has been
in a
known
to
man
is
com-
petition
when
felling
w^as the
If the
seat of
moreland
in the
who
known
RING REMINISCENCES
Without doubt wrestling
is
207
athletic
the
most popular
Carlisle
Among
all
numerous gatherings of
those two rings are looked upon as the spots where immortality
is
men
in the country
assem-
and overwhelming
of
of
stamping
their
names on
an undying page
when
'
his
'
half w^as
^heckling'
him
'
for
attending a
lass,
main
in
company wnth
Professor Wilson,
Howt,
baud same
the gob.
The grand
in regard to
and other
and
in the
December
on the
delivers himself
It
IS
whole northern population in this most rural and muscular amuseFor weeks before the Carlisle great annual contest nothing else is talked of on road, field, flood, foot, or horseback we fear it is thought of even in church, which we regret and condemn and in every little comfortable public within thirty miles diameter the home-brewed quivers in the glasses on the oaken tables to knuckles smiting the board in corroboration of a Graham, a Cass, a Laughlen, Solid yaik,^ a Wilson, or a Weightman [names well, known in the wrestling world at that period]. A political friend of ours, a staunch fellow, in passing through the Lakes last autumn heard of nothing but the contest for the county, which he understood would lie between Lord Lowther (the sitting member) and Lord Brougham. But to his sore perplexity he heard the names of new candidates, to him hitherto unknown, and on meeting us at the
ment.
;
; ' '
'
2o8
best of inns, the
WRESTLING
White Lion, Bowness, he told us, with a downand serious countenance, that Lord Lowther would bs ousted, for that the struggle, as far as he could learn, would ultimately be between Thomas Ford, of Egremont, and William Richardson, of Caldbeck (two celebrated wrestlers), men of no landed property and probably Radicals. It is not easy, even for the most poetical and picturesque imagination, to create for itself a more beautifal
cast
sight than the ring at Carlisle.
there, all gazing anxiously
Down
member, and the agitation of a thousand passions, a suppressed shudder and an undergrowl
is
move
no
savage anger,
no boiling rage of ruined blacklegs, no learing of mercenary swells, but the visible and audible movements of calm, strong, temperate English hearts, free from all fear and ferocity, and swayed for a few moments of sublime pathos by the power of nature working in
victory or defeat.
it
number
at
of powerful
men he
Some
the
Carlisle
and
in the
The
genial
Ambleside with Williams and George Fleming to see the wrestling. It was very good, a man from Cumberland with a white hat and brown shirt threatened to fling everybody and foight them afterwards. The foighting I put He stood till the last, but was thrown by a schoola stop to. master of the name of Robinson, cousin of the imp who used to
I
On Thursday
went
to
'
'
'
'
handsome inscription, From had then a number of single matches, the Professor Wilson.' We best of three throws, and Collinson of Bowness threw Robinson easily, he himself having been previously thrown by the Cumbrian One Dunkey, who had also been thrown for the belt, for the belt. then threw Collinson, and a tailor called Holmes threw Cumberbe
at Ellary,
who won
'
RING REMINISCENCES
land
;
209
little
threw a
man
and
fell
all
his weight.
Holmes
Rowland Long.
The
wrestling on
Ritson, a
how he once
to lick.'
wrestled with
falls,
'
Kit
North
'
but he owned
at
verra
bad 'un
in three
'at
he gat
loike.
Then he
mair.
giddert
up
my granfadder,
Stable, an'
Jwosep
some
Then
rustle
t'
sarra but
Professor
wad
champion
at
t'
t'
spworts
an'
amang them you may be shure. It was mirth amang us as long as Professor Wilson was at
Mr.
Wastd'le Heid.'
The
late
hands with
Christopher North
'
after
one of
his
successes at
to
be the best
honour of winning
his majority.
thirty belts in
when he
visited the
saw
'
Bonnie
'
Longmire and
the final
falls,
when
2[o
WRESTLING
great humourist tells us that
to
'
The
the
champion
"
here,
who
was so good as
show us how
to
'^
take hold
mark
In
the pages of
'
Household Words
'
Dickens described
beautiful surround-
Windermere and
its
There
is
not,
we
believe, a
in all
England
than that afforded from the Ferry ring at Windermere. As we sit on its rude wooden stand, and look straight out to northward, six miles
of the blue lake
lie
immediately beneath
us,
and sprinkled with countless sails afar the able wooded grandeur of the mountain world, and near the beauty of the lake. What more would we of nature ? As for man in this small ring before
islets,
us, the
foreground of the picture there will be seen as splendid specimens of strength and form as Britain boasts of; the vigour of sinew, the shifts of suppleness, can be no further exercised than we The men shake hands before comshall see them used to-day. mencing in token of amity, nor indeed in the thick of the struggle,
while the face of one
is
muscle
is
arrangements
is
to the
honest and
quite exceptional.
Certainly two
men coming from the same place at all, and he who is considered the
for
better
man
'
stands
'
fresh
and ready
more
alien opponents.
human
! '
RING REMINISCENCES
Good
and
often
211
This quiet-looking
often
[Tom
Longmire],
and
will
nearly forty
and more than twelve years past the wrestler's prime has never
in his twenty years' experience once been hurt. He won his first man's belt when a lad of sixteen years old, and in his house across
the lake yonder, a clean neat little inn set in a wilderness of flowers, has no less than one hundred and seventy-four of these wrestling zones. Of all colours they are, and of all descriptions, from the broad
and unornamental town, to the splendid award of Newcastle embossed with the silver towers. It has come to the last round, and our giant friend has got but one foe to deal with, a true son of Anak, as tall if not so big as himself. He has got his work cut out for him, say the old hands, but success tas made him scmewhat overbold. How quietly he suffers those mighty arms to be placed around him, and those strong fingers to feel like one in the dark for a certain hold. Now they have gripped at an advantage and the foe is only w^aiting for him to have hold likewise He has holt he has holt Bonny Robson, Bonny Longsee how they grapple and strain. mire,' so interested this time in the individuals as to call them by their names instead of by the localities from which they come. Three to two on Langmire, two to one five to Langmire's down, Robson's felled him, and indeed it was so, very quiet but
plain,
Manchester-looking
belt,
won
at that matter-of-fact
'
It is
hands to prevent them slipping, reminding us of the preparatory horn practice which the bull indulges himself in on the turf before he charges. This time it is two to one on Robson, who is indeed a very good man, but is felled nevertheless, and the third time he is likewise felled. So our giant friend has won his one hundred and seventy-fifth girdle after all.
in his
Among
it
destroys the
that a
wrestler
when advancing
must necessarily be a
cripple.
On
exercise.
Longmire wrestled
p 2
2 12
WRESTLING
in the
for his
age
it
would
be
difficult to find in
still
Tom,
like a true
sportsman,
may be
Another
summer
as
umpire
many
years.
Chapman
of Patterdale,
is
who took
still
hale
fre-
and
those
hearty.
Since
Chapman's retirement he
also
has
who frequented
'
Druid
informs
^
us, will
remember
his directing
Tarnites,' as
head gamekeeper
to
Sunbeam.
Many
years ago,
of light weights,
when James Scott of Carlisle (the prince 'Bonny Jim,' as he was called), Ben Cooper
Carlisle,
Thomas Davidson
of Castleside,
in their
Howards,
purpose of giving an
Cumber-
who
at
the
display.
back as
at
Those
sport.
fair felling
on the Swifts
and
that
among
Earl
of
Lonsdale,
Lord Lowther,
Sir
James
Graham
(of
RING REMINISCENCES
Netherby), Sir James
213
Graham
Let us
now
when the first recorded wrestling gathering took place in that now celebrated spot. The first prize, a purse with five gold
'
guineas in
'
it,
was contended
September
of Threlkeld.
^Two
purses of gold
men
1
w^ere
feet.'
In
81
Glutton
')
and a severe
Tom
He
man when
the
him
the
mercy of the
hair's
accomphshed
breadth
not only
He
some
w^as
extra atten-
in
Jem
said,
had won
at that
240
belts,
period,
Howard
From
this
somewhat unequal
collection being
in Dumfriesshire,
214
water.
WRESTLING
Cass was a burly, thick-set man, 6
feet
i
him by an inch
in height
and
and won
his falls
'
Belted Will
sixty
grassed him in
ago.
'
first-rate style
'
when
the pair
met
odd years
Geordie
Irving of
5 feet
bairn
*
'
in the
'
Weight-
man, but
Geordie
no man.
with the
He
liked
tight
was unsurpassed.
who was
6 feet 5 inches
in
1828,
nineteen
in
come Martinmas
when he
'
first
off
On
that occasion
Chapman
'
floored
Geordie
'
Irving
of
Bolton Gate,
Man, thee
sel'
Nivver a
man
threw
me
in Carlisle
at Carlisle in
1841-44.
is
almost unsurpassed.
his day,
He
although he was
thrown
match
for
stone.
Jackson stood 6
feet
He
Tom
Longmire, who
him
as
match with
great ease
yet
Long-
RING REMINISCENCES
mire was
a
' ;
215
championship
many
of
years.
Longtown may be
really
particularly
wrestler,
he was
never in
it
superior weight
points.
and
man
at all
Ewbank, however,
He
men
of his
as the
two
hair curling over his forehead, his face glowing with the hues of
health,
and
his
his
in the
Among
light prizes
light-weights
palm must
in the
gib
'
foot,
was
'
terrible
good
at the
click.'
Patterdale,
Carlisle,
he was a
trouble, unlike
Jonathan
Whitehead, Donaldson's
man and
and
'
right
Bonny Jim,' who was in his time the 'prince of light-weights (or, more properly speaking, middle weights), was one of the most finished buttockers of modern times he has already been
2i6
WRESTLING
At Whitehaven he
1864-65.
the ii stone prize nine years in succession, and stood
in the Carhsle ring in
won
second to Jameson
Without
inferior to
wrestler, but
he was
much
WiUiam Rickerby
in a
match
at
Liverpool in 1872.
Rickerby
fully
up
to
in succession.
Ben Cooper
lean rickle
of Carlisle,
banes,'
who was
Pooley's build
all
over,
a lang
the
o'
for
earlier genera-
As regards
of wrestling,
Tom Kennedy
but
In
this brief
summary
it is
who have
figured with
Patteson,
George Sanderson,
Wannop (now
named
comers.
a heavy-weight),
Tom
Kennedy,
By
own
against
all
now claim attention. It is much plored that there are now fewer resident wrestlers than at any former period within the memory of
of wrestling
to
in
be de-
London
the oldest
RING REMINISCENCES
*
217
native
'
of the North
yet
London
fit
to
quarter
of a
century ago,
when
Wrestling
Society stood almost alone, and before the amateur and professional definition existed, the old regulations
were
sufficient
when
the society
is
only one
among
made
The
this
if
exclusion
programmes of
sport as a
Yet
a few of our
skilled
Cumberland
as popular in
become
the South as
it is
in the present
day
in the
Northern counties.
The
origin of the
Society in
London and
uncertain.
little
its
establishment are
somewhat
have existed a
Westmoreland were
in
Common
on Good Friday
The
prizes
competed
awarded
to the
arena,
and a
pair of
many
parts of
Cumberland
and Westmoreland.
In the year 1824 we find the
first
and a
staff
Kenning-
'
2i8
WRESTLING
Common,
Chelsea,
St.
ton
Wood, Hornsey Wood House, Chalk Farm, Highbury Barn, Copenhagen House, Hackney Wick, the Welsh Harp, Agricultural Hall, and during the last fourteen years at Lillie Bridge, West Brompton. From the
John's
first
the wrestling
especially by the
two
at that early
The
first
prize
for a
number
of years
As a racing man few owners had more success than Mr. Graham, as, with the exception of
closely identified with the turf
the
Derby, nearly
looking over the
all
list
the coveted
of wrestlers
prizes
fell
to
his
share.
who have played an important and honourable part in the London ring, we may mention Richard Margetson, also Jos Wills, known as Major
'
On
getson
3Q.
the
rivals
Jemmy Haig
he
with the
who was
whether
fought
Jemmy
floored
used to
the
his
men
swinging hipe,
over
six
and
feet,
Major,
who stood
considerably
In
irresistible
hipe.
We
which
those
first
prize in 1856,
who opposed
sport
it
To add
lustre
to
George Moore,
a
fall
won
or two at
RING REMINISCENCES
the
219
London
first
own
size.
At
and
for a
number
had
Mr.
assumed names.
in
'Jack Foster,'
London and Cumberland. The name of George Moore cannot be found among the wrestling records of the period, but it is only reasonable to assume that when the future merchant prince 'peeled off' in the ring, his modesty prompted him to
assume a
disguise.
Meaburn who figured prominently about 1852, but when he met William Donald
match
1861.
at
of
Dearham
in
Highbury Barn
in
countryman.
By
this
late
appearance
among
the
Sanderson
later,
won
when
and
at the
little
demon
to
'
Tiffin
Cup
badly to take
home
with
him
Cumberland, but
it
and
if
was by proving
t'
his superiority.
'
Thou'll hev to
'
fell
me
thou gets
thee
?
'
cup,'
quoth Sanderson.
'
Whae weighed
first
fall,
'
in for
'
then asks
Tiffin.
Whae
?
'
replies Sanderson.
Jock
'
Ward
of
fa' ?
re-
Jim
fa'
oot
o'
man
at
!'
stal-
220
WRESTLING
Then came
to the
better wrestler
Carlisle.
Graham was an
winning the
1 1
excepstone
his feat of
and
9^^
London
From 1861 up
the
and have,
for the
as a matter of course,
;
London
make but
well
Since John
and
is
certainly
worthy of
being
ranked
John
221
CHAPTER
IV.
Half
counties of
about the time when Abraham Cann was the pride of the
Devonshire
favourite
folks,
and kicking
w^ith
heavy boots
w^as
the
mode
of grassing an
opponent.
Fortunately, the
we hive no
involved challenges
now
like that
whom
Was
To
There
period
is
not the
man
one
Devon wrestling meetings such brutal exhibitions. During Abraham Cann's time, however^ the boot w^as the chief weapon of warfare, and when he met the
made
'
'
is
said to
shoeing
'
and allowing
it
opponent
full liberty.
Another authority
states that
Polkinhorne,
I will
take off
my
may have two of the hardest and heaviest can be made of leather in the county of Cornwall,
222
WRESTLING
shall
and you
to
be allowed to
stuff yourself as
size of a
and
We
are also told that in the actual contest, two falls out of
three,
st.
lbs.
more than
his
oppoas
opposed
Devonshire
took place
at
Morris
Town
the
it
is
on 10,000
people paid for admission to the ring, and quite that number
hills
outside
hide of
Cann was red and raw from the dreadful hug of Cornishman. The two champions did not meet again in But apart from all ring, though Cann issued a challenge.
it
the
this
is
Cann
who
Champion.
himself a
He
rules
superior wrestler
almost
shaken to a
to
by
artfully landing
on
his
keep
his foothold
on the ground,
No amount
up a
set of regulations
under which a
of times by a better
fall
on
the
requisite
number of
'points,'
finally,
all
may resume
the
struggle,
of falling
STYLES AND SYSTEMS
upon
the
his
223
paunch instead of on
his back.
It
would be well
if
and impartial
spirit,
in in
all
meet and
that cavilling
the best,
who
lot,
men
and who
title
is
and of England.
Tom
Sayers's
of
Champion
contrast
to the
On
Devon men
above the
who,
hold
wearisome
arrived
in
at.
manner sometimes
Kicking
stocking
is
men compete
their
feet.
fairly
one hip must be on the ground or two hips and one shoulder,
it
flat
on
his
body touches the earth a decision can be given against him. Hauling and mauling
in Lancashire
on the ground, as
less
and French
expedients
is
extremity
and renew
Directly a
the struggle as
at
on the
flat
of his
paunch
if
Judging
by no means
easy, as a
slippery player
purposes, yet
all
practical
either a hip
224
or shoulder
WRESTLING
and so create the impression
that he has not really
his
man down on
does, give
all
him
is
a slight jerk.
This move
;
is
usually practised
if
when
if
man
i.e.
of course
the
fall
is
under,
An
expert
can
these
liable to
be influenced.
With
any
regard to collaring, a
man must
their
opponent's
back,
bringing the hand over his shoulder and then grasping hold of
the opposite jacket collar, the tightened jacket enabling the
wrestler to hold
on
like
grim death.
it is
In Devonshire
this is
up
to the
present sometimes
permitted.
No
competitor
belt, or
is
opponent's drawers,
handkerchief, but he
may
grasp
back,' or fair
fall.
The
and
'
great
fratching
inseparable
from
West-country
wrestling
traces of Cornwall
and Devon
wrestlers, as a body,
from the
little
metropolis, a circumstance
much
to
be regretted, as a
and a com-
'
uniform
'
of the competitors,
would have
As an
in
suffice.
At a wrestling gathering
225
'
fall.'
Now, under
state that
one
man
the
shall
be
fairly
would have
been defeated
'
very
first
trial,
whereas
lost,
men
ultimately
tossed
up
'
his
verdict.
these fatal
the best of
all
known methods
will
ancient sport,
agree
'first
that a
moment
to lose
'
down
at
command
will
be impossible to
to this
fashion of wrestling.
correct
exists
styles of wrestling
two
sive
is
really
now
West-country wrestling.*
True, there
mode
The Devon
noted
for
style
was
by kicking and
still,
tripping,
hugging and
These distinguishing
now
Devon
up
in the
Cornish
peculiarities.
226
WRESTLING
all
averse to a bout at
same time
their tripping
accomplishments
have always been quite equal to anything their rivals have displayed in that
line.
is
to
'
What
constitutes a
fair
back
fall
'
The
'
fair
back
fall
and
is still
this ancient
and
fall
known,
too, that in
is
matches decided
in
in
is
the
rule
Devonshire
be pitched on
rolled over
if
kept moving, be
on
his back,
fall
decided against
to
him
fair
man
be thrown a
back
must be pitched
*
flatly
stated.
In a
three-point
'
or two hips
time.
one
In
'
Not much
style of
fault
of
counties to
for
draw a
all
227
fall
definition of a
cannot
down
who
are un-
Judging
difficult
this style
of wrestling as
tasks
now
exists
is
and unsatisfactory
an expert manner
inferior
and frequently an
darkness sets
in,
on
this
game
till
or until
make
a draw of a
been reasonable.
when
may be
interesting to
many
Undoubtedly
^.o).
Abraham Cann
is
next
heard of at
the
Golden Eagle, a
defeated
falls,
Subsequently, at the
first
Cann same
his
prize,
and
Among
those
who
competed were
Saunders.
Chappell,
Copp Thorne,
Finney,
Parish,
giant),
elephant
'),
Abraham Cann, James Stone ('the Wrexford, Bolt, and Jordan. Cann and the
'
httle
little
elephant took
'
first
respectively.
In June
for a
22 8
WRESTLING
20/. at
purse of
Road and
;
in the
same
Irish-
a Cornishman,
man
five
back
falls
(without boots),
when
Shortly
Tom
the
The company
numbered
and Talbot
court;
whom
were
Grey
and Walls-
John
Lemon,
Sir J.
Twenty-eight wrestlers
Cumbrian (Henry
John's
Wood)
The double
Cann, Thorne,
Standing, Devon
Pyle,
:
J.
Batstone,
Steers,
Kerslake,
Mossop.
Cocks.
Standing, Cornwall
and
son,
men
;
were
left
in, viz.
Devon Steers,
and Thorne
Cornwall
Oliver,
easily,
who took
the
first prize,
Heenan
in
i860 a
suf-
229
of 20/.
amount was
collected to secure
live
him an annuity
a year.
The famous
old
was buried
at
marks
Devon champion, but ultimately he gave way to Tom Cooper, who for years carried all before him in his own county. W. Pollard, a Cornishman of herculean build, and possessing some science, then appeared on the scene but he could
considered the
;
Cooper attended
all
Sam Rundle,
years
some twenty-one
ago
the
American.
and weight) with the young giant Carkeck must have been a
veritable farce.
The American
is
a splendid wrestler,
and sub-
sequently
Among
in
J.
may be mentioned
S. Oliver,
J.
Slade,
little later
came another
J.
Milton, T. Baker,
F.
Battishill,
W. James, R. Pike, C. Leyman, Drew, S. H. Holman, W. Ford, George Stone, G. Bickle, Hill,
numbers among
Grose, A. Ellis,
J.
its
Cornwall
champions Joe
Menlar,
W. Pucky, M.
Wakeham,
T. Stone, H. Stone,
230
the Kittos (one of
WRESTLING
whom
faced George Lowden, the
Cumbrian
Bassett,
champion,
at
LilHe
giant),
thrown by the
Ham,
W. Hendra, J. H. Tressada, Jack Smith, W. Tressada, (S:c. A great many names have of course been omitted. The principal Cornish and Devon chips
P. Carlyon, E. Williams, J. Carkeck,
The Hipe and Double Nelson are unknown among West-country wrestlers. Formerly, when kicking was
the Back-heel.
fashionable in Devonshire,
it
of leather.
With regard
tion that
it
to Lancashire wrestling
there can be
no ques-
is
and
naked
entertainment, in
comparison.
competitions such as
take place
wall
in
Corn-
in Lancashire, contests
'
there being
gaffer
'
system.
'-
Lancashire wrestling-match
an ugly sight
the
the fierce
struggles of
maddened
bulls,
business which
and knotty
points,
In
all
in stockings or barefooted,
attire.
The
men
231
but the rules state they must not scratch, throttle, pull each
commit any
unfair act.
or
also for-
fray,
tangled with the boundary of the ring, they must draw off and
left
off with.
men must
match
to
be
final,
and the
up accordingly.
one
chosen
in
make
The men
between each
If a wrestler gain a
and neglect or
refuse to continue
;
or in the
Any
the articles, to be
;
settled
by the
referee,
whose decision
final
is
and
as
he
is
invested with
full
power
to act in
any emergency.
On
missed seeing a
interested
especially
fall,
can,
another,
when
disputed
one.
In an open
competence or
inattention,
but
when
fall
is
not disputed
as
if
no
fall
is
The
and
always a
much
easier one,
232
WRESTLING
satisfactory to all parties
more
concerned,
when he
is
assisted
by two umpires.
w^hile a
Wrestling
is
men
and
competition
it.
when
is
a close
fall
takes place, the two competitors crowd round the umpires and
clamour
for a verdict.
folly,
the greatest
imaginable
as
it
consultation,
whereas
if
the
would be of more
better
all
frequent
occurrence, as
contest
generally a
in
'
decision
when a
purposes,
has
resulted
what,
to
intents
and
is
should be recorded a
dog
fall.'
;
Throttling
although forbidden
As
the two
fall
when
up,
is
down
*
for
is
it
Again, a
man on
his
hands and
may
break
fingers, or
arms
either,
satisfied that
unfairly.
The
referee has
power
in regard to throttling,
Generally speaking, a
man on
neck
is
his
hands and
will get
;
on
dislocated from
behind
arm round
throttling.
which
is
233
system
very
round,
is
what
is
called the
'Double Nelson.'
It is
difficult to play,
To
his
his
and
head
forw^ard
till
his
and
brutal of
wrestling.
the
many methods
It is
Double Nelhis
son
'
man, because
same
difficulty,
however,
is
not experienced
The man of
owing
it
to the frightful
occasions.
To
like,
New York
1,000 dols.
The
fall,
could
between
each
fall.
From
to
the
first
the
'
little
demon/
as
Acton was
like a
called^
ball.
went
in
rubber
Such a
bewildering gyration of heads, legs, and arms was never seen out of
Acton belied the adage of Sir Boyle Roach, that no man can be in two places at one time unless he's a bird. He was part and parcel of Bibby's anatomy. Their legs were interlaced, their arms were locked, and their heads bobbed together but, contrary to popular expectation, Bibby was the under dog in the struggle all through. Except for a brief period now and then, Bibby
;
Donnybrook
234
insisted
WRESTLING
upon keeping on all-fours, excepting when he was standing on his head or sprawling flat on the carpet. Bibby tried the 7'6le of the bull in the china-shop, and made an effort to demolish the little
Lancashire
man
made
a double back-
and passed Bibby's bumped form and the platform. Bibby next assumed the attitude of a quadruped, and after that was hardly allowed to stand erect like a man. That first kick was his last.^ There was no kick in Bibby. Acton literally mopped the floor with him. Three successive times was Bibby placed upon his head, and it was only by the exercise of his wonderful acrobatic powers that he saved himself from a fall. The audience were fearfully excited. The men had assumed the elasticity of eels, and the sinuosity of their movements was surprising even to veteran wrestlers. Acton was a veritable old man of the sea, and clagged to Bibby like wax, making him bite the dust first, last, and all the time and after forty minutes of almost ceaseless toil Bibby was planted squarely on his back. After this Bibby was floored in six minutes and properly sat upon, and Acton declared the victor.
action spring
'
'
Fortunate
it is
for the
human race
exponents of
ft.
this
only
5
I T
5 in.
in height
ft.
in.
and
smith,
who was
to the fore in
human
he stood 6
feet
and weighed
on 20
Sam
ease
Quite
Her
Melbourne, between
Miller.
Tom
235
six
and
it
had been
dragged from
position,
and the
With
dogged Lancashire
in,
and
being then
Among
all
the
different
French
strictly
as
the
The
from the
Taking hold of
legs
forbidden.
3.
The
wrestling
is
Clasping hands
their
means
within
one of
hands
round
the
other,
fingers,
own
wrist
body or otherwise.
must have
their hair cut short, also their
The
wrestlers
finger-nails,
socks.
5.
If
fall
on
his knee,
shoulder, or
side,
6.
deemed conquered.
same
time, so as to be
To
be conquered,
it is
Le Boeuf and
the
English
wrestlers
On
236
in the
WRESTLING
Cumberland
style for several
expert
Cumberland
wrestlers.
It will
own style, and the Frenchmen in theirs, and that the latter won the toss for choice of style for the odd fall, and conLuck undoubtedly played the best sequently the match.
in their
won
the toss
As an
the competition
may be The
most sanguine
men
it
was a
downright
failure.
your
nothing
Wright
fair
play,
The Cornish style with its jacket- grasping and its Hhree is child's-play in comparison with the French points down
it.
'
fashion of going to
work
indeed
it
is
only approached in
it
may be
well to
what constitutes a
First
fall
in
some of the
is
styles of
point,
;
the loser in
the
Cumberland and Westmoreland style two shoulders on the ground in the French or Graeco -Roman style any point down
;
in
Lancashire
237
when the arrangement is for four points/ in the Cornwall and Devon style. A great many of the other so-called systems are governed
left
alone.
When
if
the
it
catch-hold
first
down
to lose' style
becomes universal,
ever
on
own
style, as well
as
what he
In
this
whether
for
French mode,
or struggling for
'
three points
like the
men
of Cornwall
and
Devon.
APPENDIX
BY
E.
CASTLE
bibliography
is
efficient
had
to
hunt
On
this plea
own
surmises
or conclusions, which
all
may
or
may
has discovered.
The
panegyric of
It
'
bibliography,' however,
is
not needed in
these times.
and
so,
although devoted to a
may
Soon
prove of interest to
many
of
'
noble
art.'
after the
publication
Schools and
Masters of
Fence
'
from
and
on
volume
to date,
in a separate
form
since then
it
was
'
242
APPENDIX
'
the
fencing
'
volume
in the
Badminton
Library.
The com^
dilettanti
'
of Francisco
in 1474,
Roman, reported to have been printed at down to the latest publications of May 1889.
so to restrict the
it
Seville
meaning of
only to the
more handy
weapons, rapier, small-sword, or sabre, especially when keeping historical considerations in view,
it is
here accepted in
its
is
equally as applicable
German
entails
an obligation
number
for
Tiresome and
prolific as
much
of this literature
is
that devoted
left
to bayonet practice
instance
to
it
out
of account
when we had
on
that
scientific
tossing
'
of
banners which,
in
the
seventeenth
The
tion,
is
strictly
not
There
many reasons
all
collecting
will,
Bibliography
be used
The
chief interest
of old works on
243
to
the strictly
practical
to
fencer.
It was, therefore,
thought more
advantageous
This
is
a mass of
names
all
probably unfamiliar.
of the older treatises are profusely
large
number
and
accompany
and contemporary
interest,
may on
occasions prove of
The important
whenever possible
on
shown by
writers
names
and
and
size.
may be
who
them on the
Carranza, the
art of fence.
'
arms
'
in Spain, in the
Rome and
lists
more
or less copious
remain to
this
and existence
Torre,
Roman, Pedro de
Jayme
Many
of the
244
APPENDIX
cross-references, but in the eighteenth century our only
is
that
'
Among
have
art is
felt
first
an
historical,
known under
data,
the assumed
name some
of Gomard.
fifty
He
collected
often
imperfect,
on
namely,
some
Italian
as materials
later
and one-sided
was
want of accuracy,
by Marchionni (the
practised in
now much
who,
after
chauvinistic'' theories,
authors,
'
and used
it
Trattato di Scherma/
The
J.
A. Embry, and
et
Historiques' on the
by
to
here pour
memoire.
All these
first
bibliography were
followed, with
w^ork of
much
by the well-known
of the Cercle de
TUnion
du Figaro.
known
Moreover, as he considers
artistic Parisian
no clothing
that the
book-
binder can devise too magnificent for the books he loves with
the complicated love of a master, a bibliomaniac
and a
writer,
245
its
his collection
is
quite unique of
kind.
first
work,
La
Bibliographie
de TEscrime Ancienne
et
interest
book-collectors feel
for
their
Unfortunately, this
to the notes of
owing
is
to say
that
many
under
indeed,
so to
into
speak,
;
very
free
translations
French
for the
nearly
by
however,
is
rather a carelessly
on the
it
treatise
Fencing-masters
much
ficial
for
book-lore
the few
names
hitherto
mentioned may
a super-
be said to include
all
those
Among
this
more
whom
work
is
directly indebted
can be noticed
here.
lists
'
Some
of 'Books on Swordplay
given by Mr.
W.
F. Foster in
in
Almi-
rante's
Bibliografia Militar,'in
Mariano d'Ayala's
Bibliografia
246
Italiana Militare/
APPENDIX
and
in
the article
'
Fechtkunst
'
of Meyer's
Cyclopaedia.
Of more
German periodicals on
more
especially the
men and
masters,
Marxbriider,' as well as
several pamphlets
Dr. Wassmannsdorff
owner of a most
to Lieut.-Colonel
in Berlin,
who
MSS.
to
in
relating to fencing
and fencers
to the Cavaliere
Don Manuel
Madrid
;
and^
Dr.
be,
At an
complete and
'
Schools and
felt
of a competent
and
classify
works from
all
countries.
This
Thimm, son
Bibliographia Shakespeariana,'
it
can hardly be
;
assumed
be said
volume
is
exhaustive
of
all
all
that can
that
it
existing biblio-
graphical accounts
on the
subject
of fencing,
and a very
and
catalogues.
247
come
to
this sort
was
lately
made by
know
Temple
'
should
happen
Science
to
'
Noble
same
to the compiler.
E. C.
41
248
APPENDIX
Gheyn
(J.
de).
Wapenhandelinghe
Amsterdam.
117 plates.
Folio.
1650 1671
Thibauld. Ars digladiatoria. Folio. Amsterdam. Bruchius (Johannes-Georgius) [Scherm- ofte Vecht-Meester der
wyd-vermaerde Academic]. Grondige Beschryvinge van de Edele ende Ridderlycke Scherm- ofte Wapen-Konste, &c. Oblong 4to. Leyden. [Portrait of the author by Van Somer, and 143 copperplates,] 1674 Fetter. Worstelkunst m. prachte Radier von Romeyadi Hodghe. Amst. 4to. 1866 Regoor (M.) De Schermkunst voor het volksonderwijs geschikt gemaakt. 8vo. 's Gravenhage. [Schermmeester in de G. Vg. Lycurgus-Achilles en 1887 Hesse (G. Olympia, &c., &c.] Handboek ten gebruike bij het schermonderwijs op den degen en de sabel, ten dienste van liefhebbers, meesttrs en onderwijzers. Opgedragen aan den weledelen zeergeleerden Heer Dr. Johan Georg Mezger. Apeldoorn Laurens Hansma. [42 figures in the text.] 8vo.
Grassi (Giacomodi).
by infallable demonstrations, apt Figures, and perfect Rules the manner and forme how a man, without other Teacher or master may safelie handle all sortes of weapons as well offensive as defensive.. With a treatise of Disceit or Falsinge and with a waie or meane by private Industrie to obtaine Strength, Judgment, and Activitie. First written in Italian by the foresaid Author, and Englished by J. G[eronimo ?] gentleman. 4to. London. His practise, in two bookes the first intreat1595 Saviolo (Vincentio). ing of the use of the Rapier and Dagger, the second of honour and honourable quarrels. 4to. London. Printed by John Wolfe. Dedicated to the Earl of Essex.] [6 woodcuts in the text. [This work is generally believed, and with good reason, to be alluded to by Shakespeare in As you like it.' It is very illustrative of allusions both in Shakespeare and Ben Jonson. Some copies contain eleven leaves
plainlie teaching
:
'
less
The
first
leaf of
sheet
and twelve additional leaves inserted in its place, forming the complete book as in this copy. I'he second leaf of sheet I
cancelled,
was
249
In some copies, both the cancelled leaf and 2. is erroneously marked the additional sheet occur, but the former is certainly out of place, being repeated. There are, therefore, three different kinds of copies, all virtually Between Gg and Hh are also two leaves, the first marked ^|, perfect. forming a chapter of the Duello or Combat.' Quaritch Catalogue of Books. Supplement 1875-77, p. 138.] Paradoxe of Defence, wherein is proved the true 1599 Silver (George). ground of fight to be in the short ancient weapons, and that the Short Sword hath the advantage of the long sword or long rapier, and the weaknesse and imperfection of the rapier fight displayed. Together with an admonition to the noble, ancient, victorious, valiant, and most brave nation of Englishmen, to beware of false teachers of defence, and how they forsake their own naturall tights with a brief commendation of the noble science or exercising of arms. 8vo. London. [Woodcuts in the text.]
'
Gheyn (J. de). [Enghsh translation of his work from the Dutch.] Amsterdam. See Dutch,' 1607. 161 1 Mars His Feild or The Exercise of Armes, wherein in lively figures is shewn the Right use and perfect manner of Handling the Buckler, Sword, and Pike. With the wordes of Command and Brefe instructions correspondent to every Posture. i2mo. London.
1608
Folio.
'
1617 Sv\^ETNAM (Joseph). The Schoole of the Noble and Worthy Science Being the first of any Englishmans invention, which professed of Defence. the sayd Science So plainly described that any man may quickly come to the Then true knowledge of their weapons with small paines and little practise. reade it advisedly, and use the benefit thereof when occasion shall serve, so shalt thou be a good Common-wealth man, live happy to thy selfe and comfortable to thy friend. Also many other good and profitable Precepts for the managing of Quarrels and ordering thy selfe in many other matters. London: 4to. Printed by Nicholas Okes. [Dedicated to Charles, Prince of Wales. 7 woodcuts.] the gentleman's armorie, 1639 Turner (Sir James). Pallas armata wherein the right and genuine use of the rapier and the sword is displaied.
;
No
text.]
i2mo.
1640
London.
(?)
Hales.
[This work
mentioned
in
Walton's
.
'
The compleat
.
Angler,'
ist
1683
Turner
1687
Reid.
The Sword-Man's Vade-Mecum, or a preserva1691 H[ope] (W[illiam]). tive against the surprize of a sudden attaque with Sharps. Being a Reduction of the most essential, necessary, and practical part of Fencing, into a few special Rules. With their Reasons: which all Sword-Men should have in their memories when they are to Engadge but more especially if it be with Sharps. With some other Remarques and Observations, not unfit to be known. By W. H. i2mo. Edinburgh John Reid.
; :
1692 Hope (Sir W., Kt. The fencing-master's advice to his scholar: or, a few directions for the more regular assaulting in schools. Published by way of dialogue for the benefit of all who shall be so far advanced in the art, as to be fit for assaulting. Small 8vo. Edinburgh John Reid.
)
:
1692 Hope (Sir W., Kt.) The compleat Fencing-Master in which is fully Described the whole Guards, Parades, and Lessons, belonging to the Small-Sword, as also the best Rules for Playing against either Artists or others,
:
250
with Blunts or Sharps.
APPENDIX
:
Together with Directions how to behave in a single illustrated with figures Engraven on Copper-plates, 2nd edition. representing the most necessary Postures. 8vo. London
Combat on Horse-back
Printed for
title,
Dorman Newman,
is
at the King's
Arms
in the Poultrey.
'
copperplates, out of the text. This work, with a different in every other respect a reproduction of the Scots Fencing Master.']
[12
2nd edition. 1694 Hope (Sir W. Kt.) Sword-man's Vade Mecum. i2mo. London Printed by J. Tailor. [The title of the second edition only shows a little difference in the
,
spelling.]
The English Fencing Master, or the 1702 and 1705 Blackwell (Henry). Compleat Tutor of the Small-Sword. Wherein the truest Method, after a MatheShewing also how necessary it is for all matical Rule, is plainly laid dow^n. Gentlemen to learn this Noble Art. In a Dialogue between master and Adorn' d with several curious postures. 4to. London. scholar. 24 copperplates, out of the text, folded. [5 woodcuts, in the text. Dedicated to C. Tryon, Esq., of Bullick, Northants.J
1707 Hope (Sir William, of Balcomie, Bart.) [Late Deputy-Governour of the Castle of Edinburgh]. New, Short, and Easy Method of Fencing or the Art of the Broad and Small Sword, Rectified and Compendiz'd, wherein the Practice of these two weapons is reduced to so few and general Rules, that any Person of indifferent Capacity and ordinary Agility of Body, may, in a very short time, attain to, not only a sufficient knowledge of the Theory of this art, but also to a considerable Adroitness in Practice, either for the Defence of his life, upon a just occasion, or preservation of his Reputation and Honour in any Accidental Scuffle, or Trifling Quarrel. 4to. Edinburgh: James Watson. [One large folded sheet, containing 16 figures engraved on copper.]
The English Master of Defence or the Gentleman's 171 1 Wylde (Zach. Al-a-mode Accomphshment. Containing the True Art of Single-Rapier or Small Sword, withal the curious Parres and many more than the vulgar Terms of Art plainly exprest with the names of every particular Pass and the true performance thereof; withal the exquisite Ways of Disarming and Enclosing, and all the Guards at Broad-Sword and Quarter-Staff, perfectly demonstrated; shewing how the Blows, Strokes, Chops, Thro's, Flirts, Slips, and Darts are 8vo. York: Printed by John perform' d with the true Method of Travesing. White, for the Author.
)
; ;
1714
or the
Hope
(Sir
True and Solid Art of Fighting with the Back- Sword, Sheering-Sword, Small-Sword, and Sword and Pistol freed from the Errors of the Schools. 2nd Edition. 4to. Edinburgh Printed by James Watson. 1724 Hope (Sir William, Bart.) A Vindication of the True Art of SelfDefence, with a proposal, to the Honourable Members of Parliament, for erect:
Recommended to all Gentlemen, but ing a Court of Honour in Great Britain. To which is added a Short but very useful particularly to the Soldiery.
memorial for Sword Men. 8vo. Edinburgh: William Brown and Company. [The same plate as that which appears in the work published by Sir W. Hope in 1707, and a frontispiece, representing the badge Gladiatorum ScoHcorum.^ 1725 Hope (Sir William, Bart.) Observations on the Gladiators' StageLondon. Fighting. 8vo.
or the expert sword-Man's companion an account of the Author's life and his transacTo which is annexed the art of gunnerie. tions during the wars with France. i2mo. Glasgow. Printed by James Duncan.
1728
McBane
(Donald).
The
True Art
of self-defence, with
[Portrait of
McBane, and 22
251
1729 Hope (Sir William, Bart.) A Vindication of the True Art of SelfDefence, &c. 2nd edition. 8vo. Printed by W. Meadowes in London. [Same plate and frontispiece. Dedicated to the Right Honourable
Robert Walpole.]
Valdin. The Art of Fencing, as practised by Monsieur Valdin. London Printed by J. Parker. [' Most humbly dedicated to his Grace the duke of Montagu.'] 1730 B[lackwell] (H[enry]). The Gentleman's Tutor for the Small Sword or the Compleat English Fencing Master. Containing the truest and shewing how necessary it is for all plainest rules for learning that noble Art
1729
8vo.
:
gentlemen to understand the same, in thirteen various lessons between Master and Scholar. Adorn'd with several curious postures. Small 4to. London. [6 woodcuts.] 1734 L' Abb AT. The Art of Fencing, or the Use of the Small Sword. Translated from the French of the late celebrated Monsieur L'Abbat (Labat), Master of that Art at the Academy of Toulouse, by Andrew Mahon, Professor i2mo. Dublin Printed by James Hoey. of the small-sword.
The
2nd
edition.
ko..
London
treatise on fencing in the shape of an 1738 (J.) [Captain]. album of fifteen copperplates, engraved by Scotin, with one column of text. Folio.
Miller
true
The use of the Broad Sword. In which is shown the (T. ) fighting with that weapon, as it is now in use among the Highlanders deduc'd from the use of the scymitar, with every throw, cut, guard, and disarm. 8vo, 48 pp. Norwich: M.Chase.
1746
Page
method of
;
1747
Godfrey
(John) [Captain].
Treatise
upon
Defence connecting the Small and Back Sword, and shewing the Affinity between them. Likewise endeavouring to weed the Art of those superfluous, unmeaning Practices which over-run it, and choke the true Principles, by reducing it to a narrow Compass, and supporting it with Mathematical Proofs. Also an Examination into the Performances of the most noted masters of the Back-Sword, who have fought upon the Stage, pointing out their Faults, and 4to. London Printed for the Author by T. allowing their Abilities. Gardner.
:
1750
cing.
(.?)
An album
4to.
Oblong
1763
R.
Angelo.
Dodsley.
cipals attitudes
et positions
concernant I'Escrime.
Oblong
folio.
Londres
&
J.
[Dediee a Leurs Altesses Royales les Princes Guillaume-Henry et Henry-Frederic. Forty-seven copperplates, out of the text.]
1765
Hooi^er.
Angelo.
L'Ecole
des Armes,
&c.
Oblong
folio.
London:
S.
[A second edition of M. Angelo's work containing same plates, but with two columns of text, in French and English.]
dictionary explaining the terms, guards, and 1767 Fergusson (Hary). positions, used in the art of the small sword. 8vo. [No place, no printer's [' Hary name.] is thus on the tide, and at page ii.
'
1771-2 Lonnergan (A.) The Fencer's Guide, being a Series of every branch required to compose a Complete System of Defence, Whereby the Admirers of Fencing are gradually led from the First Rudiments of that Art, through the most complicated Subtilties yet formed by imagination, or applied
2 52
APPENDIX
to practice, until the Lesson, herein many ways varied, also lead them insensibly on to the due Methods of Loose Play, which are here laid down, with every In four parts. Part i and 2 contains Precaution necessary for that Practice.
such a general explanation of the Small Sword as admits of much greater Variety and Novelty than are to be found in any other work of this kind. Part 3 shews, in the Use of the Broad Sword, such an universal knowledge of that Weapon, as may be very applicable to the use of any other that a man can lawPart iv is a compound of the Three former, explaining fully carry in his hand. and teaching the Cut and Thrust, or Spadroon Play, and that in a more subtile and accurate manner than ever appeared in Print. And to these are added Particular Lessons for the Gentlemen of the Horse, Dragoons, and Light Horse, or Hussars, with some necessary Precautions and an Index, explaining every term of that Art throughout the book. The whole being carefully collected from long Experience and Speculation, is calculated as a Vade-mecum for gentlemen of the Army, Navy, Universities, &c. 8vo. London.
Fencing Familiarized, or a new treatise on the Art of Illustrated by Elegant Engravings, representing all the different Attitudes in which the Principles and Grace of the Art depend; painted from 8vo. London. hfe and executed in a most elegant and masterly manner. The text [Facing the above title is its exact translation into French. Frontispiece and eight folded plates, engraved by is in both languages. Ovenden. Olivier was educated at the Royal Academy of Paris, and Professor of Fencing in St. Dunstan's Court, Fleet Street.]
1771-2
Olivier.
Sword
Pjay.
man's Companion
The Army and Navy Gentle(J. )[of the Royal Navy]. or a new and complete treatise on the theory and practice of Fencing, displaying the intricacies of smallsword play, and reducing the Art Illusto the most easy and familiar principles by regular progressive Lessons. trated by mathematical figures and adorned with elegant engravings after paintings from Hfe, executed in the most masterly manner, representing every material Large 410. London James Lavers. attitude of the Art. [Frontispiece engraved by J. Newton from a drawing by Jas. Sowerby, and 8 plates drawn by the Author and engraved by J. Newton.]
17 80-1
: :
McArthur
1780
J.
Olivier.
2nd ed
tion.
8vo.
London:
Bell.
[Dedicated to the Earl of Harrington. Same frontispiece as in first but the plates are different, being drawn by J. Roberts, and engraved by D. Jjnkins, Goldar, W. Blake, andC. Grignon.] 1784 McArthur (J.) The Army and Navy Gentleman's Companion, &c.
edition,
2nd
edition.
[Dedicated to John,
a general expla1787 Translated nation of the principal attitudes and positions pecuUar to the Art.
London J. Murray. Duke of Argyll] Angelo (Domenico). The School of Fencing, with
Plates.
410.
:
'
by Rowlandson. Oblong 4to. London. [This work was translated into French and reproduced, together with the plates, under the head Escrime,' by Diderot and D'Alembert in their
'
Encyclop^die.']
The Art of Fencing, 1787 Underwood (James) [of the Custom House]. or the use of the small sword. Corrected, revised, and enlarged. 8vo. Dublin Printed by T. Byrne. [Dedicated to His Grace, Charles, Duke of Rutland,]
1790
lessons,
Anti-Pugilism, or the science of defence exemphfied in short and easy Whereby for the practice of the Broad Sword and Single Stick. gentlemen may become proficients in die use of these weapons, without the help of a Master, and be enabled to chastise the insolence and temerity, so fre-
quently met with, from those fashionable gentlemen, the Johnsonians, Big bennians, and Mendozians of the present Day a work perhaps, better calcu;
253
lated to ext'rpate this reigning and brutal folly than a whole volume of sermons. By a Highland officer. Illustrated with copperplates. 8vo. London Printed for J, Aitkin. [4 copperplates, drawn by Cruickshank. ]
1796
8vo.
Royal
London.
1797 Leach (Richard) [Sergeant in the Norfolk Rangers]. The words of command and a brief explanation, embellished with engravings, representing 8vo. Newcastle. the various cuts and attitudes of the new sword exercise.
The Art of of the Royal Westminster Volunteers]. 1798 RowoRTH (C. defence on foot with the broad sword and sabre, uniting Scotch and Austrian methods, into one regular system. To which are added remarks on the spa2nd edition. 8vo. London Egerton. [Plates.] droon.
)
I
Treatise on the new broad sword exercise, with 14 divisions of movements as performed at Newmarket. i2mo. [5 plates.] 1798-9 RowLANDSON (T.) Hungarian and Highland broad sword. Twenty-four plates, designed and etched by T. Rowlandson, under the direction of Messrs. H. Angelo and Son, Fencing Masters to the Light Horse Dedicated to Colonel Herries. Voluntee-s of London and Westminster. Oblong folio. London Printed by C. Roworth. 1799 Angelo (Domenico). The school of fencing, &c. Translated by Rowlandson. 2nd edition. 8vo. London. London. [6 engravings.] 1799 Sword Exercise for Cavalry. 8vo. 1800 Sinclair (Capt. of the 42nd Regt.) Cudgel-playing modernised, and improved or the science of defence exemplified in a few short and easy lessons for the practice of the broad sword or single stick on foot. 8vo.
1798
Pepper (W.
[of the
London
1802
J.
Bailey.
(Robert) [of Boston, U.S.] Rules and regulations for the sword exercise of the Cavalry. To which is added the review exercise. The 2nd American from the London Edition. Revised and corrected by Robert Hewes, teacher of the sword exercise for cavalry. 8vo. Philadelphia M. Carey. [28 plates.]
:
Hewes
1804 The art of defence on foot with the broad-sword and sabre. Adapted also for the Spadroon, or cut-and-thrust sword. Improved and augmented with the ten lessons of Mr. John Taylor late Broadsword Ma-ter to the Light Horse Volunteers of London and Westminster. Illustrated with plates by 8vo. London. R. K. Porter, Esqr. [This is a reproduction of Roworth's book (see 1798) with a number of alterations and additions, and fresh drawings.] treatise on the science of defence for the 1805 Gordon (Anthony). sword, bayonet, and pike in close action. 4to. London. [19 plates.]
1805 Mathewson (T.) [Lieutenant and Riding Master in the late Roxbrough Fencible Cavalry]. Fencing familiarised, or a new treatise on the art of the Scotch broad sword, shewing the superiority of that weapon when opposed to anenemy armed with a spear, pike, or gun and bayonet. 8vo. Salford Printed by W. Cowdray, junr. [34. illustrations.] 8vo. 1809 Roland (J.) The amateur of fencing. London: T. Eger-
ton.
t8i2
the cavalry.
Baltimore.
1 8 17 Angelo. A treatise on the utility and advantages of fencing, giving the opinions of the most eminent Authors and Medical Practitioners on the important advantages derived from a knowledge of the Art as a means of self defence, and a promoter of health, illustrated by forty-seven engravings. To which is added a dissertation on the use of the broad sword (with six descrip-
'
254
tive plates).
APPENDIX
Memoirs of the late Mr. Angelo and a bio.^raphical sketch of Foho. London: Published by Mr. Chevalier St. George, with his portrait. Angelo, Bolton Row, and at his fencing academy. Old Bond Street. [Containing the same plates as the Ecole des Amies of the author's father, a portrait of St. George, engraved by W. Ward from a picture of Bronn, and six plates engraved and designed by Rowlandson, under the care of Angelo himself, in 1798-9.]
' '
An improved system of fencing, wherein the use of (C.) rendered perfectly plain and familiar being a clear description and explanation of the various thrusts used, with the safest and best methods of parrying, as practised in the present age. To which is added a
1819
Martellt
is
on the art of attack and defence. 8vo. London J. Bailey. [One folding plate with 12 figures.] 1822 A Self-Instructor of the new system of Cavalry and Infantry Sword Exercise comprehending directions for preparatory motions, assaults, guards, attack and defence, and divisions, as performed on foot, also as performed when mounted, with instructions for the old sword exercise and its attack and defence together with directions and some useful remarks on the Lance Manchester Bancks & Co. 8vo. Exercise. [One large folding plate, coloured, showing target and numerous
treatise
:
figures. ]
fully
(Le sieur Guzman). The modern Art of Fencing, careand augmented with a technical glossary by J. T. Forsyth. [22 coloured plates.] i8mo. London: S. Leigh. System of fencing as arranged and systemati1823 D'EoN (Frederick). In thirty-one sections, for cally taught by Frederick D'Eon, fencing-master.
1822
revised
Rolando
the
first
quarter's tuition.
i2mo.
Boston.
treatise
art
treatise
art
of fencing.
Royal 8vo.
London.
1827
Roland
[5
(George) [Fencing-master
of the
and Military Academy, &c., &c.] Edinburgh. 8vo. fencing by George Roland.
Scottish Naval
An
lithographed platts.]
sic). The Art of fencing, wherein the rules St. Angelo (a pupil of instructions with all the new thrusts and guards which have lately been introduced into the Fencing Schools are in this v/ork, that every one should be competent to meet his antagonist. For of late years our neighbours on the continent have been our superiors in that of all others, the most useful, necessary, and gentlemanly Science. Sm. 8vo. London T. Hughes.
1830
and
[One foldmg
1 83
plate.]
Art of Fencing.
exercise.'
sword
8vo.
London
'
Broad-
Easy and Familiar Rules for attaining the art of attack and defence 1 83 1 on foot with the broadsword, to which are added instructions for using of the London T. Hughes. 8vo. single stick. [One folding plate with 12 figures, being the same as those given in the pamphlet by a pupil of St. Angelo. 1835 Angelo (Henry) [Superintendent of Sword Exercise to the Army]. Instructions for the sword exercise, selected from His Majesty's rules and reguLondon Clowes & 8vo. lations, and expressly adapted for the yeomanry.
:
'
Sons.
1837
plates.
Roland
8vo.
(George).
:
An
With
London
Simpkin, Marshall.
255
1840 Walker (D.) Defensive Exercises, containing Fencing, the Broad[Figures in the text.] i2mo. London H. Bohn. sword, &c.
:
1842
The
Infantry
Sword
Exercise.
Revised edition.
8vo.
London
W.
Clowes
&
Sons.
(23rd April.)
(D. ). Defensive exercise, containing wrestling, boxing, 1842 fencing, the broadsword, &c. New edition. i2mo. London H. G. Bohn.
:
Walker
184.5
(J.
O.)
Reliquiae
antiquae.
8vo.
London.
sword,' from
L, pp. 308, contains a poem 'On fencing with the two-handed MSS. Harleian 3542, of the 15th century, in the British
(Geo.)
Museum. ]
1846 Simpkin.
Roland
Introductory Course of
on
Fencing,
Fencing.
8vo.
London:
on
8vo.
Observations 1846 Wilkinson (Hen-y) [M.R.A.S., Gunmaker]. i2mo. London. 3rd edition. swords, addressed to civihans.
1850
(?)
:
Gribble.
Whittaker.
Treatise
Horsemanship,
&c.
London
The SwoM Exercise 1850 Wayn (Henry C.) [Brevet Major, U. S. Army]. arranged for military instruction. Published by authority of the War Department. 8vo. Washington: Printed by Gideon & Co. [23 plates.] i. Fencing with the small [In two parts with separate title-pages, sword, arranged for instruction in squads or classes. Washington, 1849, pp. 62, II plates. 2. Exercises for the broadsword, sabre, cut and thrust, and stick. Washington, 1849, PP- 43> ^^ plates.] 1852 LocKWOOD (Henry H.) and Seager (E.) Exercises in small arms and field artillery arranged for the naval service under an order of the Bureau of Ordnance and Hydrography of the Navy department. [104 plates. ] Large 8vo. Philadelphia Printed by P. K. and P. G. Collins. [Part iv. pp. 151-168, small and broad sword exercises.]
1853
1854
8vo.
Burton Roland
:
(R. F.)
A system of Bayonet Exercise. 8vo. London. (Geo.) Introduction to Fencing and Ciymnastics. Royal
and Lance
exercise, &c.,
:
London
Simpkin.
1858
&c.
Instructions for the Sword, Carbine, Pistol London J. Parker & Sons. 8vo.
New
i2mo.
i860 Fencing.
1861
and defence
in the Art of
London Clowes & Sons. Berriman (M. W.) Militiaman's Manual and sword-play without
2nd edition. [12 plates.]
i2mo.
a master.
New York
D. van Nostrand.
Foil practice 1861 Chapman (George). with a review of the art of fencing, according to the theories of La Boessiere, Hamon, Gomard, and 8vo. London: Clowes & Sons. Grisier. [4 lith. plates.]
;
1861
exercise,
Stephens (Thomas). A new system of broad and small sword comprising the broad sword exercise for cavalry and artillery, and the
edition.
:
small sword cut and thrust practice for infantry and navy. 2nd Svo. Milwaukee Jermain & Brightman. [62 illustrations.]
1862
attack
Griffiths (T.) Modern Fencer, with the most recent means of and defence. i2mo. London Warne.
:
256
1862
1
APPENDIX
The
Infantry
Swcrd
Exercise.
Revised edition.
i2mo.
London.
862 HuTTON (A. ) [Lieut, her Majesty's Cameron Highlanders]. Swordsmanship. Writtf^n for the members of the Cameron Fencing Club. 8vo. Simla printed at the Simla Advertiser Press.
:
1862 McClellan (George B.) Manual of bayonet exercise: prepared 8vo. for the use of the army of the United States. Philadelphia. 1863
edition.
Militiaman's
:
play.
3rd
New
York.
for the regu-
1863
lation clubs.
Gymnastic Exercises, system of fencing, and exercises Demy i2mo. London Horse Guards.
1864
edition.
i2mo.
'
Berriman (W. M.) Militiaman's Manual and sword New York Van Nostrand.
:
play.
4th
1864
Chapvtan
sequel to
(George). Notes and observations on the art of fencing. Foil Practice.' Part i, No. i. 8vo. London Clowes & Sons.
:
1867 1868
1871
HuTTON (Alfred)
8vo.
(T.)
[Lieut. King's
Dragoon Guards].
Clowes
;
Swordsmanship
and Bayonet-fencing.
Griffiths
of attack and defence.
London
W.
:
&
Sons.
i2mo.
i6mo.
(A. F.)
Warne.
War
Office.
;
Corbester
8vo.
Theory of fencing
new system
of
Washington.
(R. F.)
:
Burton
London
Sword Exercise
Post 8vo.
Clowes.
1880 Lessons
Waite
and
[\A^ith
(T.
M.
in Sabre, Singlestick,
to use a cut
thrust sword.
(R.)
Sabre and Bayonet and Sword Feats 8vo. London Weldon & Co.
of
34 illustrations.]
1882
Castellote
Lock.
Handbook
Fencing.
i8mo.
London
Ward &
1882 HuTTON (Alfred) [late Captain, King's Dragoon Guards]. The Cavalry Swordsman. Bayonet fencing and sword practice. 8vo. London
:
W.
Clowes
1883
:
&
Sons.
(T. A.)
McCarthy
London
1884
Quarter-Staff. A practical manual. 2mo. [With 23 figures.] Castle (Egerton) [M.A., F.S.A.l Schools and Masters of Fence
Sonnenschein
&
Co.
from the middle ages to the i8th century. Illustrated with reproductions of old London: Bell & Son. engravings and carbon plates of ancient swords. 4to. [141 woodcuts in the text. Engraved frontispiece and 6 carbon plates.]
1884 Elliott (Major W. J.) [^ate of H.M. War Department^. The Art of Attack and Defence in use at the present time. Fencing: Sword against Sword Boxing. 8vo. or Bayonet, Singlestick, Bayonet against Sword or Bavonet [With figures.] London Dean & Son.
;
:
1885
Infantry
:
Sword and
Carbine, Sword-Bayonet
Exercise.
32mo.
& Polden. A New Book of Sports. 1885 London R. Bentley & Son.
Chatham
Gale
:
'
1886
[Backsword and Schlager, pp. 137. Rapier and Dagger, pp. 146.] Shakespearian Swordsmanship. [An article in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News,' No.
'
257
New York
(Henry).
Herald,'
December
ECKFORD
[The
'
3.
No. 3
Illustrated Naval and Dec. 4to. London. [With photolithographs.] 1888 Dodge (Theodore C.) [Colonel U.S.A.] Fencing. (Two numbers in Harper's Young People,' April 14 and April 21.) [Numerous cuts in the text.] 1888 HuTTON (Alfred) [late Capt. King's Dragoon Guards]. - Cold Steel a practical Treatise on the sabre, based on the old English backsword play of the eighteenth century, combined with the method of the modern Itahan school. Also on various other weapons of the present day, including the short swordbayonet and the constable's truncheon. Illustrated with numerous figures, and also with reproductions of engravings from masters of bygone years. 8vo.
1888
Barroll
'
and
'
London
W.
Illustrated Naval and Mihtary 1889 Barroll (Dr.) The Sabre. zine,' Feb. April, May. London. [With photolithographs.]
Maga\_n.d.'\
Benard.
Waite
(J.
Eleven plates on Fencing, containing 48 Positions. M.) Sword and Bayonet Exercise.
\n.d.'\
4to.
Manuscripts.
'
On fencing
15th
century,
British
Museum. The names of yo^ Pushes as they British Museum, Additional, No. 5540.
are to be learned gradually. Folios 122-123.] [Date, middle of the 17th century.]
[MS.
FRENCH.
Paris. 1533 (?) La noble science des joueurs d'esp^e. 4to. 1535 La noble science des joueurs d'esp^e. [Ici commence un tres bean livret, contenant la chevaleureuse science des joueurs d'esp^e, pour apprendre a jouer de I'esp^e k deux mains et aultres semblables espies, avec aussi les braquemars et aultres courts cousteaux lesquels Ion use a une main. .] At the end Imprim6 en la ville Dan vers par moy, Guillaume Wosterman, demourant k la licorne d'or. 4to. Antwerp. 1535 (1538?). [Black letter. 14 whole page and 12 half page woodcuts.]
.
.
:
1573 Sainct-Didier (Henry de) [Gentilhomme Proven9al]. Traict^ contenant les secrets du premier livre sur I'esp^e seule, mere de toutes armes, qui sont esp^e, dague, cappe, targue, bouclier, rondelle, I'esp^e^ deux mains et les deux espies, avec ses pourtraictures, ayant les armes au poing pour se deffendre et offencer k un mesme temps des coups qu'on pent tirer, tant en assaillant qu'en deffendant, fort utile et profitable pour adextrer la noblesse et suposts de Mars redig^ par art, ordre et pratique. Dedi6 a la Maiest^ du Roy tres chrestien Charles neufiesme. A Paris, imprim^ par Jean Mettayer et Matthurin Challenge. Avec privilege du Roy. 4 to. Paris. [Portrait of the author, of the King, and 64 woodcuts in the text.] 1588 Polycarpe (de St.) Sonnets contre les escrimeurs et duellistes. Paris Jamet Mattayer. Petit in-4to.
:
258
1596
;
APPENDIX
Arbeau
(Thoinot). OrcMsographie, m^tode
et t^orie
en forme de
discours et tablalure pour apprendre k dancer, battre le tambour, jouer du fifre tirer des amies et escrimer, avec autres honnestes exercices fort conet arigot Jean Tabourot. Lengres par Jehan dez Preyz. venables a la jeunesse. [Woodcuts. ] Lengres. 4to. Traits, ou instruction pour 1609 Cavalcabo (H.) et Patenostrier. tirer des amies, de I'excellent scrimeur Hyeronims Cavalcabo, Bolognois, avec un discours pour tirer del'esp^eseule fait par le deffunt Patenostrier, de Rome. Traduit d'ltalien en fran9ois par le seigneur de Villamont, chevalier de I'ordre
.
.
de Hierusalem et gentilhomme de la chambre du Roy. Chez Claude le Villain. Rouen. i2nio. 1610 Desbordes. Discours de la th^orie, de la pratique et I'excellence Nancy chez Andie. des amies. 4to. 1610 Sauaron (Jean) [Maistre, sieur de Villars, Conseiller du Roy, President & Lieutenant General en la Seneschaussee d'Auvergne, & siege Presidial a Clairmont]. Traicte De I'Espee Fran9oise. Au Roy Tres-Crestien. Paris Adrian Perier. L'art militaire pour I'infanterie, 1615 Wallhausen (Jean-Jacques de). auquel est monstre le maniement du mousquet et de la pique, &c., descrit en langage allemand et traduit en fran9ois. Small 8vo. Franckfort.
[Numerous copperplates.]
618 Breen (A. van). Piques, Espies et Targes
1
Folio.
Escrime nouvelle ou theatre auquel 1619 GiGANTi (Nicolat) [Venetien]. sont representees diverses manieres de parer et de frapper, d'esp^e seul et d'esp^e et poignard ensemble, demontr^es par figures entaill^es en cuivre, public en faveur de ceux qui se delectent en ce tres noble exercice des armes, Apud Ja. de Zeter. Obet traduit en langue fran9oise par Jacques de Zeter. long 4to. Francofurti. [Portrait of the author and 42 copperplates out of the text.]
1628 Thfbault (Girard) [d'AnversJ. Academic del'espee, ou se demonstrent par reigles mathematiques, sur le fondement d'un cercle myst^rieux, la th^orie et pratique des vrais et iusqu'a present incognus secrets du maniement Leyde. des armes, a pied et k cheval.. Folio. [Frontispiece, portrait of Thibauld, 9 plates containing the coats-ofarms of the nine kings and princes who subscribed to this work. 46
copperplates folio
size.]
La Haye.
(Charles) [Breton]. Le maistre d'armes liberal, traittant de la th6orie de l'art et exercice de I'esp^e seule, ou fleuret, et de tout ce qui s'y pent faire et pratiquer de plus subtil, avec les principales figures et postures en taille douce contenant en outre plusieurs moralitez sur ce sujet. Dedi^ a Rennes, chez Nosseigneurs des Estats de la province et duch6 de Bretagne. Rennes. [4 copperplates, out of the text ] 4to. Julien Herbert.
1653
Besnard
A
.
1668
Folio.
Thfbault
Bruxelles.
(Girard).
Acad^mie
de
I'espde.
2nd
edition.
De la Touche [Maistre en fait d'armes a Paris, des pages de la de ceux du due d Orleans]. Les vrays principes de I'esp^e seule^ Paris Fran9ois Muguet. Obi. 4to. dediez au Roy. [Portrait of la Touche, 35 copperplates, out of the text.] Essai sur l'art des armes, opuscule 1672 NoRO WiLLARDS (Comte de). 8vo. Paris, chez Seneuse. d^di^' au mar^chal de Turenne. 1676 Le Perche (Jean-Baptiste) [du Coudray]. L'exercice des armes ou Pour ayder la m^moire de ceux qui sont amateurs le maniement du fleuret. de cet art. Chez N. Bonnard. Oblong 4to. Paris. [35 copperplates.] Le maistre d'armes ou l'exercice de 1686 LiANCOUR (Wernesson de) D^di^ k Monseigneur le due de Bourgogne. I'esp^e senile dans sa perfection.
1670
reine, et
BIBLIOTHECA ARTIS DIMICATORI^
Les attitudes de ce
A. Perelle.
259
livre ont est^ poshes Dar le sieur de Liancour et gravies par Paris. Oblons^ 4to. Paris, chez I'auteur.
text.]
Labat. L'art de I'esp^e. [With copperplates.] 1692 Liancour (Wernesson de). Oblong 4to. Amsterdam. edition.
1690 1696
Le
2nd
Labat
[Maitre en
fait
d'armes de
acad^mie de Toulouse].
;
dedi^ a MonL'art en fait d'armes, ou de I'^p^e seule, avec les attitudes sei^neur le comte d'Armaignac, Grand ecuyer de France, &c. 8vo. Toulouse [12 copperplates, out of the text.] J. Boude.
:
Questions sur 1701 Labat [Maitre d'armes a Toulouse]. d'armes, ou de I'ep^e, dedi^^ Monseigneur le due de Bourgogne. louse G. Robert.
:
l'art
en
fait
4to.
Tou-
De Brye (J.) [Maistre en fait d'armes). L'art de tirer des armes, D^di^ a Monseigneur le marechal due de Villereduit en abr^g^ methodique. Paris C. L. Thibourt. roy. 8vo. [Frontispiece and medallion portrait of the Dauphin.]
1721
:
1721 Beaupr^ (Jean Jamin de) [Maitre en fait d'armes de Son Altesse S. Electorale de Baviere, a la celebre University d'Ingolstadt]. M^thode tres facile pour former la noblesse dans l'art de I'^p^e, faite pour Futility de tous les amateurs de ce bel art. On trouvera en ce livre, ranges en ordre, tous les mouvements g^n^ralement bien expliqu^s qui sont necessaires a bien apprendre et a enseigner a faire des armes, en allemand et en fran9ais, avec 25 planches qui repr^sentent toutes les principales actions, a la derniere perfection. Ce jeu est choisi de I'ltalien, de I'Allemand, de I'Espagnol et du Fran9ais, et compost de mani^re, par sa grande pratique, qu'on peut I'appeller le centre des armes. Dedi^ k Son Altesse Electorale de Baviere. 4to. Ingolstadt. [25 copperplates, out of the text.]
1731
Paris.
De Brye
(J.
L'art de
tirer
des armes.
2nd
edition.
8vo.
De la beauts de I'escrime de I'^p^e, 1732 Basnierres (Chevalier de). 8vo. Paris, chez Thiboust. dedi^ au marechal de Villars.
Nouveau traits 1736-7 GiRARD (P. J. F. )[Ancien officier de Marine]. de la perfection sur le fait des armes, dedi^ au Roi. Enseignant la maniere de combattre, de I'^p^e de pointe seule, toutes les gardes etrangeres, I'espadon, les piques, hallebardes, &c. tels qu'ils se pratiquent aujourd'hui dans l'art militaire de France. Orn^ de figures en taille douce. Obi. 4to. Paris. [Frontispiece and 116 copperplates, out of the text, engraved by Jacques de Favanne.]
,
1737
taille
Le Maistre
1740
[Maistre en fait d'armes de I'acad^mie de Strasbourg]. d'armes, ou I'abr^g^ de I'exercice de I'^p^e. Orn^ de figures en i2mo. Strasbourg. [16 copperplates, out of text.] douce.
Martin
GiRARD
4to.
(P. J. F.)
Nouveau Traits
de
Armes, &c.
I'acad^mie de Lyon]. Les vrays principes de 1742 r^p^e, dediez a Monseigneur le due de Villeroy. 8vo. Amsterdam.
Nouvelles et utiles observations pour bien tirer des 1749 ^AS (Fran9ois). Basle. armes. 8vo. [Dedicated to the Colonels of the Basle troops and MM. J. Bourcard and Abel de Wettstein.J
1750
Le Perche
Oblong
2nd
edition.
4to.
(Jean-Baptiste) [du Coudray]. L'exercice des armes. Paris. [With the addition of 5 plates.]
S 2
26o
1752
edition.
APPENDIX
De Chevigny. Science des personnes de Tome vii. chapter x. i2mo. Amsterdam.
cour
et
d'^p^e.
2nd
[A chapter dedicated to the art of fencing. 8 folded copperplates.] Principes 1754 GORDINE (Gerard) [Capitaine, et maitre en fait d'armes]. Dedi^ a S. A. Jean-Theodore, due des Deuxet quintessence des armes. Bavieres, cardinal de la sainte ^glise romaine, 6veque et prince de Liege, &c. 4to. Liege S. Bourguignon. [20 copperplates, out of text, by Jacob.]
des Armes, avec I'explication g^n6rale des prin-' cipales attitudes et positions concernant TEscrime. Oblong folio. Londres R. & J. Dodsley. [Dediee a Leurs Altesses Royales les Princes Guillaume-Henry et Henry-Fr^d6ric. Forty-seven copperplates, out of the text.]
1763
Angelo. L'Ecole
1763 M^moire pour le sieur Menessiez, Maitre en fait d'armes et maitre des pages de M. le comte de Clermont. Contre la Communaut^ des Maitres en fait d'armes. At the end De I'imprimerie de C. F. Simon, imprimeurs de la Reine, et de I'Archevech^, Rue des Mathurins. 4to. Paris.
:
L'Ecole
text in
2nd
edition.
first
Oblong
folio.
same
plates as the
It
1765 O'SuLLiVAN (Daniel) [Maitre en fait d'armes des academies du Roi]. L'escrime pratique ou principes de la science des armes. 8vo. Paris Se:
bastien Jorry.
[Syndic-garde de la Compagnie des maitres d'armes de la plus certaine de se servir utilement de r^p^e, soit pour attaquer, soit pour se defendre, simplifi^e et demontr^e dans toute son ^tendue et sa perfection, suivant les meilleurs principes de th^orie et de pratique adopt^s actuellem^nt en France. Ouvrage n^cessaire a la jeune noblesse, aux militaires et a ceux qui se destinent au service du Roy, aux personnes me me qui, par la distinction de leur ^tat ou par leurs charges, sont obligees de porter I'^p^e et a ceux qui veulent faire profession des armes. Dedi^ a Son Altesse Monseigneur le prince de Conty. Tome premier. 8vo. Tome second, contenant la refutation des critiques et la suite du meme 1766.
1766-7
Paris].
Danet
traits.
8vo.
*
*
Paris.
*
T767.
[Frontispiece
text.]
de l'art des armes, |La Boessiere]. Observations 1766 pour servir de d(fense ^ la verity des principes enseign^s par les Maitres d'armes * * maitre d'armes des academies du Roi, au nom de sa de Paris par M. compagnie. 8vo. Paris. 3rd edition. L'Ecole des Armes, &c. Oblong folio. 1767 Angelo. Londres. 1770 Battier. La th^orie pratique de l'escrime, pour la pointe seule, i2mo. Paris. avec des remarques pour I'assaut.
sur le traits
"^^
1771-2
London.
veau
St.
NouBell.
traits sur la
and
de
I'ep^e.
Jean
La th^orie pratique de l'escrime pour la pointe [or Battier]. remarques instructives pour I'assaut et les mo\ ens d'y parvenir Paris. par gradation. Dedi^ k S. A. S. le due de Bourbon. 8vo. [One engraving.] 1775 Navarre (C.) [Maitre d'armes de la premiere compagnie de la maison du Roi]. L'art de vaincre par I'^p^e, d^di6 k messieurs les Gardes-du1772
Batier
261
la
compagnie.
I'art
de
tirer
I'art
de
2nd
edition.
8vo.
Leipsig.
1778 Demeuse (Nicolas) [Garde-du-Corps de S.A.S. le Prince Eveque a Nouveau traits de I'art des armes, dans Liege et Maitre en fait d'armes]. lequel on ^tablit les principes certains decet art, et oii Ton enseigne les moyens Ouvrage n^cessaire aux personnes les plus simples de les mettre en pratique. qui se destinent aux armes et utile a celles qui veulent se rappeler les principes i2mo. Liege Desoer. qu'on leur a enseign^s. [4 copperplates, out of text.]
Traits
en raccourci sur
I'art
des
2nd
traits de I'art des armes. [Contains 14 plates.] 1787 Danet [Ecuyer, Syndic-Garde des ordres de la Compagnie des Maitres en fait d'armes des Academies du Roi en la ville et Fauxbourgs de Paris, L'art des armes, oii Ton aujourd'hui directeur de I'Ecole Royale d'Armes]. donne I'application de la th^orie a la pratique de cet art avec les principes m^2nd edition. 2 vols. 8vo. thodiques adopt^s dans nos ^colesroyales d'armes. Paris. [45 copperplates, out of text.]
1786
Demeuse
(Nicolas).
Nouveau
Desoer.
edition.
i2mo.
Liege
1787
(?)
Angelo
is
[This
Escrime [Diderot et D'Alembert's Encyclopedic]. (D.). a reproduction and translation of Angelo's work published in
London
in 1787.]
1795 Planches de L' Encyclopedic M^thodique. Nouvelle edit"on enrichie de remarques. Dedi^e a la serenissime Republique de \'enise. Art Militaire, Folio. Padova. Equitation, Escrime, &c.
L'art des armes Paris, 1799 Freville (Chevalier de). Maximes Leipsig. 8vo. des armes. 3rd edition. 1800 Demeuse (Nicolas). Nouveau trait6
St.
vi]
Danet.
3rd edition.
B^lin, rue
2 vols.
8vo.
de
.
tirer
de l'art des armes Imprimerie de Blocquel. To the original text is added a Dici2mo. Lille and Paris. lionnaire de l'art des armes. [14 copperplates, different from the previous editions.] L'escrime appliqu^e a l'art militaire. 1801 Bertrand [Maitre d'armes].
.
3rd edition.
8vo.
Paris.
1804 SAINT-MARTI^^ (J. de) [Maitre d'armes imperial de 1' Academic Theresienne]. L'art de faire des armes r^duit a ses vrais principes. Contenant tous les principes n^cessaires a cet art, qui y sont expliqu^s d'une maniere claire et intelligible. Cet ouvrage est compost pour la jeune noblesse et pour les personnes qui se destinent au metier de la guerre, ainsi que pour tous ceux qui portent I'^pee. On y a joint un traits de I'espadon, oii Ton trouve les vrais principes de cet art, qui y sont expliqu^s d'une fa9on ais^e, et qui est rempli de d^couvertes vraiment nouvelles. Dddi^ a S.A.R. Monseigneur Tarchiduc Charles. Vienna. 4to. [72 figures.]
Essai sur l'art de l'escrime. 8vo. Nantes. 1815 Moreau. 1815. 1816 MuLLER (A.) Theorie sur l'escrime a cheval, pour se d^fendre avec avantage contre toute espece d'armes blanches. 4to. Paris.
[51 plates.]
1817 Chatelain. Traite d'escrime a pied et a cheval, contenant la demonstration des positions, bottes, parades, feintes, ruses, et gen^rale-
262
ment tous
Maginel.
les
APPENDIX
coups d'armes connus dans
[9
les
Academies.
8vo.
Paris
lithographed plates. 1818 La BoESSifeRE (M.) Traits de I'art des armes k I'usage des profesParis. 4to. seurs et des amateurs.
Chatelain. Trait( d'escrime, k pied et a cheval, contenant la 18 18 demonstration des positions, bottes, parades, feintes, ruses, &c. 2 Edition.
8vo. I.yon.
Avec planches.
Paris.
(Justin).
1820
Lafaugere
[2 folding plates.]
Xiphonomie, ou I'art de I'escrime, 1821 L[homandie] (P. F. poeme didactique en quatre chants par P.-F.-M. L., Amateur, ^leve de feu Texier de la Boessiere. 8vo. Angouleme Imprimerie Broquisse.
; :
Traits M.) La
Traits
le
de
I'art
de
faire
des armes.
8vo.
de
I'art
de
faire
des armes.
8vo.
1826
maniement du
sabre.
I'art
Manuel de gymnastique suivi d'un Traits sur 1827 Hamon (P. G.) [Lithographed plates.] 8vo. Londres. des armes.
1828
FouG^RE. L'art de ne jamais etre tu^ ni bless^ en Duel, sans avoir aucune lefon d'armes, et lors meme qu'on aurait affaire au premier Tireur de I'univers. i2mo. Paris. [A copperplate.] 1828 MuLLER (Al. Th^orie sur I'escrime k cheval, pour se d^fendre avec avantage contre toute espece d'armes blanches. 2^ Edition. Paris Cor[With an atlas of 54 plates.] dier. 1830 (?) DoNON [Ex-Adjudant-Major des ci-devant lanciers polonais], 8vo. L'escrime moderne ou ncuveau traits simp]ifi6 de l'art des armes.
pris
)
1830
Ghersl Traits
8vo.
Paris.
Ecole du tirailleur, ou maniement de la baion1832 PiNETTE (Joseph). i8mo. Paris nette appliqu6 aux exercices et manoeuvres de I'infanterie.
:
Dumaine.
1836
[32 figures.]
De Bast
(B.)
Manuel d'escrime.
8vo.
Bruxelles
H. Dumont.
and a lithographed
1836 MuLLER (Al.) Maniement de la baionnette appliqu6 a I'attaque et Paris. ^ la defense de I'infanterie. 4to. [20 plates.] 1838 Lafaugere (L. J.) Nouveau manuel d'escrime. Nouvelle Edition. [Manuels-Roret.] i2mo. Paris.
1840
natation
(?)
:
de
1'
Encyclopedic
4to.
[16 plates.]
l'art
La
8vo.
Xiphonomie, ou
de I'escrime,
Angouleme
Lefraise.
Selmnitz
[Capitaine de Tarm^e saxonne]. De I'escrime a la ou instruction pour I'emploi du fusil d'infanterie comme arme de defense. Traduit de I'allemand par J.-B.-N. Merjay. i2mo.
n.d.
(J.)
[4 plates
comprising 12 figures.]
Lafaugere
L'Esprit
poeme
didactique.
8vo.
1842
et
les
Escrime k la baionnette (Extrait de I'instruction provis. sur I'exercice manoeuvres des bataillons de chasseurs a pied). 32mo. Strasbourg
:
Levrant.
1842
184.3
Roger
DoNON.
(M.)
Manuel
Principes d'escrime.
:
i2mo.
Paris.
traite simplifie.
i2mo.
Nouveau
263
EscHER
(J.
Baptiste).
La Th^orie de rescrime, en1845 PosSELLiER (A. y. J.) [dit Gomard]. seign^e par une m^thode simple, bas^e sur I'observation de la nature prec^d^e d'une introduction dans laquelle sont r^sum^s tous les principaux ouvrages sur Paris Dumaine. Tescrime qui ont paru jusqu'a ce jour. 8vo.
; :
M^thode d'escrime.
[20 plates.]
8vo.
Fribourg.
1846
PiNETTE
Paris: Dumaine.
et le duel. 8vo. Paris Grisier Gamier. [Engraved portrait of the Chevalier de Saint-Georges, and 10 lithographed plates.] Refutation de I'escrime a la ba'fonnette, de M. 1847 PiNETTE (Joseph). Gomard. 8vo. Paris Dumaine. Th^orie de I'escrime k la baionnette. i8mo. 1847 PiNETTE (Joseph). [16 figures.] Paris Dumaine. L'Escrime a la bai'onnette, ou 1847 POSSELLIER (A. J. J.) [dit Gomard]. Ecole du fantassin pour le maniement du fusil comme arme blanche. 8vo.
1847
Ecole du tirailleur, &c. 8^ Edition. (Joseph). Vide ist edition, 1832.] [32 figures.
:
i8mo.
Paris.
[36 plates.]
Henry. Sur
8vo.
Paris.
1849-50.]
1851 (?) Th^orie pratique sur I'art de la savate (appel^e chausson ou adresse parisienne) et de la canne avec demonstration expliqu^e de la lecon 8vo. Paris. par un amateur, eieve de Michel, dit Pisseux, Professeur.
. .
1855
sur le
ROBAGLIA
(A.
Escrime-pointe.
i6mo.
maniement de rep^e.
Metz
Verronnais.
[8 plates.]
I'art
1856 Embry (J. A.) Dictionnaire raisonn^ d'escrime, ou Principes de des armes d'apres la m^thode enseign^e par les premiers professeurs de France, pr^c^d^ de I'histoire de I'escrime et de I'analyse de Thistoire de France dans ses rapports avec le duel, i*"*^ et 2 parties. In-8, avec 8 pl. Toulouse. [L'ouvrage, compose d'environ 700 pages, sera divise en 4 parties, et paraitra en 2 series: i^' serie, comprenant I'histoire de I'escrime; I'analyse de I'histoire de France, dans ses rapports avec I'escrime etL e Une nouvelle edition de cette V^ sene a ete annoncee en 1859, duel. en vente a Paris chez M. Bohin de Corday, 18, quai de la Megiseerie. La 2" serie, qui sera publiee en deux parties, renfermera un Traite theorique sur I'art des armes et le Dictionnaire raisonne d'escrime.]
[Professeur d'escrime et de canne]. ornee de 60 figures, indiquant les poses et Paris [chez I'auteur, passage VerdeauJ. [Portrait of the author and 4 plates.]
1856
Larribeau
Nouvelle
les
theorie
du jeu de
la canne,
coups.
i2mo.
(A1.) Traite d'education physique, comprenant la natak la baionnette, la boxe fran9aise, I'escrime a I'epee, la gymnasGand. [With an atlas of 56 plates. ] Gr. in-8. tique. 1859 D'AzEMAR. Combats k la baionnette. Theorie adoptee en 1859 P^^ I'armee d'ltalie commandee par I'Empereur Napoleon IH. i6mo. Torino.
1857
Lemoine
tion, I'escrime
SiEVERBRUCK
a I'espadon.
(J.)
4to.
(le
1862
Paris
:
BazancourT-
Theorie pratique de I'escrime simplifiee pour Londres Nissen Parker. Manuel pour I'etude des regies de I'escrime au Paris Tanera. baron Cesar Les Secrets de 8vo.
:
et
de).
I'epee.
Amyot.
;
1862 Blot (Jacques Antoine).L'Ecole de I'escrime 32mo. Paris Marpon. tique k I'usage de I'armee.
:
petit
manuel pra-
264
1862
i'aisaut.
APPENDIX
CoRDELOis
Gr. 8vo.
[Professeur d'escrinie]. Le9ons d'armes. Du duel et de Paris Tanera. [28 plates comprising 42 figures.]
:
1862
Lozfes (Bertrand).
'^
i8mo.
Paris
Dumaine.
1863 Grisier (Augustin). Les armes et le duel. Preface anecdotique par Alexandre Dumas. Notice sur I'auteur par Roger de Beauvoir. Epitre * * et du comte d'l * * *. en vers de M^ry. Lettres du comte d'H 3^ Edition, revue, corrig^e et augment^e. Gr. in-8. Paris Dentu. [Portrait of the author by Lassalle and drawings of E. de Beaumont.]
:
1864
Paris.
Grisier (Augustin).
Les
armes
et
le
duel.
2^ Edition.
8vo.
1864
1864
MiLLOTTE.
Traits d'escrime,
(A.)
Pomte.
i8mo.
Paris
Dumaine.
ment de
Theories sur le maniearmes, simplifi^ et d^montr^ suivant tous les principes th^oriques et pratiques pr^c^d^ de quelques notices et de recueils histoiiques. i2mo. Paris Fontenay.
I'^p^e
RoBAGLiA
ou
Cours
:
complet d'escrime.
;
I'Art
de
faire des
manuel complet d'escrime, ou Traits Nouvelle Edition, entierement refondue et orn^e de vignettes intercal^es dans le texte. i8mo. Paris Roret.
1865
(J.)
Lafaugere'
faire des
Nouveau
de
I'art
de
armes.
[Woodcuts
:
in the text.]
1866 Instruction pour I'enseignement pr^paratoire de I'escrime k I'^p^e. i8mo. Pans Dumame. [9 lithographed plates.] 1866 Notice biographique sur Jean-Louis et son Ecole. 8vo. Montpeiller
:
D
:
a pupil of Jean-Louis.
fait
Lithographed
la ville
portrait.]
et
1867 Statuts et reglemens faits par les maitres en fauxbourgs de Paris, 1644. Paris Henri Daressy.
1869
d'armes de
Bonaparte
Le maniement de I'ep^e
In
121110.
r6-
Paris
Impri-
merie Aubry.
1869
1872
I'escrime.
1872
Lemons d'armes. 4to. Lyon. colonel]. Annotations m^thodiques succinctes de K. de) 8vo. Paris L^autey. Lemerre. Legouve (Ernest). Un tournoi au XIX 4to.
Campenon
(C.
(le
[le
et
siecle.
1872 Trait^s du duel judiciaire, relations de pas d'armes et tournois par Olivier de la Marche, Jean de Vilhers, seigneur de T Isle-Adam, Hardouin de La Jaille, &c. Publics par Bernard Prost. 8vo. Paris L. Willem.
;
:
CoRDELOis. Lecons d'armes. complete sur I'art de Fescrime. 2 Edition. [Portrait and 28
1873
Du
plates.]
Reflexions techniques et historiques sur Tescrime, 1874 Terwangue. Lille Meriaux. par un ancien amateur. 8vo. L'dcole de I'escrime, &c. i2mo. Paris. 1875 Blot (Jacques-Antoine).
:
L'escrime rendue facile et classique. Traits 1875 GiLLET (x^uguste). th^orique et pratique a 1' usage de I'enseignement et des amateurs d'apres les i8mo. Paris Dumaine. [With figures.] lefons de M. Lacrette.
:
1875 Instruction pour I'enseignement pr^paratoire de I'escrime a Tep^e, suivie du reglement provisoire pour 1' organisation de I'enseignement gratuit et obligatoire de I'escrime dans I'arm^e, 28 avril 1872, modifie par la circulaire du 7 d^cembre 1872. i8mo. Paris: J. Dumaine. [With plates.] 1875
la
265
Paris
:
i8mo.
J.
Damaine.
:
[With numerous
figures.
Les salles d'armes de Paris. 1875 Saint-Albin (A. de). [With copperplates.] Glady freres. Paris
1876
Paris
:
Roy. Bvo.
8vo.
^p^ei bris^es
(Bertrand et
Robert).
1877 RoBAGLiA (A.) De I'escrime d'apres les regies et les principes de nos meilleurs professeurs La Boessiere, Gomard, Lhomandie, Jean-Louis, Lafaugere et Grisier, pr^c^dee d'une notice historique sur le fleuret et les salles Paris: F. Vernay. d'escrime. 8vo. [16 plates.]
:
1878
Paris
:
le
ministre de la guerre.
32mo.
Dumaine.
[40 figures.]
et
1879
gymnas-
tique appliqu^e, natation, boxe franfaise, baton et canne) i8mo. Paris le Ministre de la guerre, le 26 juillet 1877.
[With numerous
1881
figures.]
Manuel
i8mo.
mai
1877.
1882
1882
1882 1882
8vo.
Andre
(Emile).
R. (P. de).
Paris.
8vo.
Geneve.
Vaux
(Baron
(F.
)
de).
8vo.
Paris.
[42 portraits
and copperplates.]
et
ViGEANT
:
Paris
1883
La bibliographic de I'escrime ancienne [Witn 5 woodcuts.] M^RIGNAC (Emile). Histoire de I'escrime dans tous
Motteroz.
Gr. 8vo.
moderne,
les
temps
et
dans
tOLis les
Paris
Rouquette.
tion.
Un maitre d'armes sous la Restaura1883 ViGEANT [maitre d'armes]. Small 8vo. Paris. [With etched frontispiece (portrait of Jean-Louis) and vignettes.]
1884 Brunet (Romuald). Traits d'escrime pointe, et cont e-pointe. i2mo. Paris Rouveyre. [5 drawings by E. Chaperon, and 27 plates.] 1884 Lafaugere (L. J.) Nouveau manuel complet d'escrime. Nouyelle Edition, entierement refondue. i8mo. Paris Roret. [With figures in the text.] 1884 La Marche (Claude). Traitd de I'dp^e. 8vo. Paris Marpon et Flammarion. [Illustrated.] Guide du duelliste ind^hcat. 8vo. Paris Fressc. 1884 Leroy (Charles).
:
1884 Dejey.
RoBAGLiA [Le
Capitaine].
de).
L'escrime
et le duel.
i2mo.
Paris
1884
Vaux
(Baron
Les
duels c^lebres.
Preface par A.
Scholl.
Grand
Paris.
8vo, illustre.
Paris
Rouveyre.
1884
ViGEANT
[maitre d'armes].
Duels de
maitres d'armes.
Small 4to.
[With frontispiece
1885
pentier.
(portrait of Bertrand)
and a few
vignettes.]
I'escrime.
i2mo.
Paiis
Char-
1885
poraine.
CORTHEY (A.) Le
8vo.
fleuret et I'^p^e.
Paris
(le
Giraud.
capitaine).
1885
DfiRUE
Paris
:
Nouvelle
[Illustrated.]
m^thode d'escrime
i2mo.
Lahure.
266
1885
ix.
APPENDIX
Lagrange
[J.
(F.)
L'escrime
pp. 133-139.]
Scholl.
et
Le duel et rescrime. (Paris lUustr^, No. 31 [i juin 1885].) Tavernier (Adolphe). L'art du duel. Preface par Aur^lien Nouvelle Edition. i2mo, illustr^. Paris Marpon et Flammarion.
1885
1885
:
t886
MfiRiGNAC
[Illustrated.]
(E.
Histoire de
Gr. in
8.
Tome IL
Paris
les
temps
dans
1886 Provost (C.) Th^orie pratique de Tescrime. Avec la biographie Paris de Provost pere, par A. Tavernier. Gr. in-8. De Brunhoff.
:
[With
1886
plates.]
Pans
Tavernier (A.) Amateurs et salles d'armes de Paris. Marpon et Flammarion. [Illustrated ] Le jeu de I'ep^e. Le9ons de Jules Jacob 1887 Jacob (Jules).
:
i2mo.
r^dig^es
par Emile Andr^, suivies du duel au sabre et du duel au pistolet et de conseils aux t^moins. Prefaces de MM. P. de Cassagnac, A. Ranc et A. de la Forge. 8vo. Paris Paul Ollendorff. 1887 Robert (Georges) [professeur d'escrime au Lyc^e Henri IV et au college Sainte-Barbe], La science des armes, I'assaut et les assauts publics, le duel et la lefon de duel. Avec une notice sur Robert aine par M. Ernest Legouv^ de 1' Academic fran9aise, et une lettre deM. H^brard de Villeneuve, president de la Societe d'encouragement de l'escrime. Paris Garnier. 4to. [Portrait of Robert the Elder, vignettes, 57 figures, and 8 folding
:
analytical tables.]
1887
Saint-Albin
preface de Vigeant.
une
1888 1888
Blot
suivi
(J.
A.)
L'ecole de l'escrime.
duel.
de I'arm^e,
et les
du code du
32mo.
Paris
Marpon
Castle (Egerton) [membre du London Fencing Club]. L'escrime escrimeurs, clepuis le moyen age jusqu'au i8me siecle. Traduit de I'anglais par Albert Fierlants. 4to. Ollendorff. Paris [Frontispiece, 160 illustrations, 6 carbon plates.]
:
Desmedt (Eugene). La science de l'escrime. Avec une preface Waller, un Dictionnaire de I'epee et un Guide des escrimeurs. 8vo. Bruxelles. [15 phototypes.] 1888 Daressy (Henri) [membre honoraire de I'Acad^aiie d'armes]. Archives des maitres d'armes de Paris. 8vo. Quantin. Paris
1888
de
Max
[Illustrated.]
1888 Le salut des armes. (Issued under the authority of the Academic d'armes, attributed to Vigeant.) 8vo. Paris: Paul Schmidt.
d'armes k
8vo.
Paris].
:
L'almanach
de
l'escrime.
Redacteur en chef, Emile Andrd 1889 (periodical) L'Escrime fran9aise. (Bi-monthly review devoted to the interests of French swordsmanship, 60 centimes.) Paris, 12 Rue de la Grange 4to. Bateliere.
:
(?)
Mauroy
(Victor).
Memento
de I'escrimeur.
(D^di6
aux profes-
seurs bretons.)
Manuscript.
Sloanian.
No. 1198, folio 40, 23 lines, in the British Museum. [About the end of the 17th century.]
GERMAN.
1799 BuRGMATER (Hans). Weiss Kunig. Suite de 237 planches grave^es Folio. sur bois d'apres les de-sins et sous la conduite de Hans Burgmaier. Vienne. [Plates No. 37, 38, 39, and 56 interest the fencer. J
1516
Paurnfeindt (Andrae)
ritterlicher
Ergrundung
Oesterreich].
The following four works, which show hut slight differeiices (in arrangement especially ), were printed between 1530 and 1558.
title a?id
Mit sampt verborgenen 1531 (?) Der altenn Fechter anfengliche Kunst. heymlicheytten, Kampffens, Ringens, Wertlens. &c. Figiirli h llirgemalet. Bisher nie an tag kommen. Zu Frankfurt am Meyn Chr. Egen. 46 pages. [Woodcut on title-page. At the end Zu Franckfurt am Meyn, bei Christian Egenolph.]
:
Der
lichten, Kampffens, Ringens, Werffens, &c. Figiirlich fiirgemalet. Bisher nie an tag koiTien. 48 pages. [Woodcut on title-page.]
Fechtbuch Die Ritterlicbe, manliche Kunst und handarbeyt Fechtens und Kempffens. Auswarem ursprunglichen grund der Alten, mit sampt heymlichen Geschwindigkeyten, in leibs noten sich dts Feinds trosthch gemalt. Zu Franckfort am Meyn, bei Chr. Egenolff. 46 pages. [Woodcut on title-page.] Die Ritterliche, MannHche Kunst und handarbeyt 1558 Fechtbuch. Fechtens und Kempffens, &c. Zu Franckfurt am Meyn, bei Chri. Egen. Erben. [At the end
:
MDLVIII.]
1570
Meyer
bung der Freyen, Ritterlichen und Adelichen Kunst der Fechtens in allerley gebreuchlichen Wehren, mit vil schonen und niitzlichen Figuren gezieret und furgesteliet. Oblong 4to. Strasburg.
[Getruckt zu Strasburg bey Thiebolt Berger Treubel. Numerous woodcuts.]
1579
1610
GUNTERRODT
(A.)
De
veris
principiis
artis
Wittemberg.
Meyer
Griindliche BeschreiLeipzig.
2nd edition. Oblong 4to. Augspurg. [Getruckt zu Augspurg bey Michael Mauger, in verlegung Eliae
73 woodcuts.]
(C. von).
1611
161
Bononien
HuNDT
Fechten und
im Rappier zum
1612 SuTORiUM (Jacob) [Freyfechter von Baden]. New Kunstliches Fechtbuch, das ist aussfiihrhche Deschription der Freyen Adelichen und Ritterlichen Kunst dess Fechtens in den gebreuch lichsten Wehren, als Schwerdt, Diisacken, Rappier, S:c. &c. Franckfurt Wilhelm Hoffmans. 4to. [Gedruckt zu Franckfurt am Mayn durch Johann Bringern. Woodcuts.] 1612 Cavalcabo (Hieronimo). Neues Kunstliches Fechtbuch des Weitberiimten und viel erfahrnen Ttalienischen Fechtmeister Hieronimo Cavalcabo, von Bononien Stievorn, aus dem geschrieben welchem Exemplar durch Monsieur de Villamont, Ritter des Ordens zu Jerusalem, &c. (S:c. in franzosische Sprache transferirt. Nun aber alien Loblichen Fechtkunst Liebhabern zu gefallen aus gemelter franzosischer Sprach verdenselt durch Conrad von
, :
Einsidell.
Oblong
4to.
Jena.
268
1617
APPENDIX
Wallhausen
Folio.
/J.
F. von).
Darin-
nen
Schrifftlich
und
gelernt wird.
Garzonius.
Allgemeiner Schauplatz.
) Cours
v. d.
KOPPEN
Joach.
Fechtkunst.
Small
folio.
Magde-
1619 Fabris (S.) Der Kunstreichen imd weitberiimeten Fechtmeisters Leyden. Fabris Italianische Fechtkunst. Folio, [Printed by Isaack Elzevier, and dedicated by the same to Gustavus Adolphus. The copperplates of the first edition are replaced by woodcuts (192).]
1619 K5PPEN (Joach. ) Newer diskurs von der rittermassigen und weitberiihmten Kunst des Fechtens, u.s.w. Small foho. Magdeburg.
1620 SCHOFFER (Hans Wilhelm) [von Dietz, Fechtmeister in Marpurg]. Grundtliche und eigentliche Beschreibung der freyen Adelichen und Ritterlichen Fecht-Kunst im einfachen Rappir und im Rappir und Dolch, nach Italianischer Manir und Art, in zwey underschiedene Biicher ferfast, und mit 670 schoenen und nothwendigen Kupfferstucken gezieret und for Augen gestellt. Oblong 4to. Marpurg Johan Saurn.
:
1622
GiGANTi's Theatre (see Italian, 1606 French, 1619). Obi. 4to. [An edition appeared as a French and German translation in Franck;
furth.]
berg].
(Sebastian) [Kriegsmann und Freyfechter von NiirnKunstlich Fechtbuch zum dritten mal auffgelegt und mit vielen schoenen Stucken verbessert. Als des Sig. Salvator Fabris de Padua und Sig. Rud. Capo di Ferro, wie auch anderer Italienischen und Franzosischen Fechter. Niirnberg Simon Halbmayerr. Obi. 4to.
1630
Neu
Heussler
Kriegsiibung u.s.w. den frischanfahenden Fechtern und 1637 Salgen. Soldaten fiir erst nutzlich und nothig zu wissen.
Kurze Unterrichtung belangend die Pique, die 1657 Pascha[ll] (J. G. Fahne, den Jagerstock. Das Voltesiren, das Ringen, das Fechten auf den Wittenberg. 8vo. Stoss und Hieb, und endUch das Trincieren verferrtigts.
)
1659 Pasche (J. G.) Kurtze doch Grlindliche Unterrichtung der Pique, den Trillens in der Pique, der Fahne des Jagerstocks, Trincierens, Fechtens auf den Stoss und auf den Hieb, <&c. Mit Kpf. Osnabruck.
1659 Pascha[ll] (J. G.) Kurze doch Grlindliche Unterrichtung den Pique, den Trillens in der Pique, die Fahne, den Jagerstock, Trincieren, Fechtens auf den Stoss und auf den Hieb, <S:c. 8vo. Osnabruck.
1660
Meyer
Griindliche BeschreiAugsburg.
Oblong
4:0.
Paschen (Johann
Georg).
Kurze, jedoch
Deutliche und Grlindliche Erkla1664 L'Ange (J. D.) [Fechtmeister], rung der AdeHchen und Ritterlichen freyen Fechtkunst. Oblong 8vo. Heidel[Portrait of Daniel L'Ange, by Metzger, and 61 copperplates.] berg.
Kurze, jedoch deutliche Beschreibung 1664 Paschen (Johann Georg). handelnd vom Fechten auf den Stoss und Hieb. 2te Aufl. Foho. Halle in
Sachsen.
1664
1665
Triegler (Jo. Ge.). Neues Kiinstliches Fechtbuch. 4to. Leipsig. Heussler (Sebastian). Kiinstliches Abprobirtes und Niitzliches
269
Fecht-Buch von Einfachen und doppelten Degen Fechten, damit ein ieder Nurnberg.
Paschen
Paschen
(J.
G.) VoUstandige
G.)
Fecht-, Ring-
und Volligier-Kunst.
Small
Small
folio.
Leipsig.
(J.
1673 1677
folio.
d' arme di Salvatore Fabris, Herrn Salvatore Fabris, Obersten des Ritter-Orders der Sieben Hertzen, Italianische Fechtkunst. Von Johann Joachim Hynitzchen, Exercitien Meister. 4to. Leipsig. [German translation parallel with the Italian text. The plates are the same as in the original edition, with the addition of one representing the monument erected to Fabris's memory in Padua, his native town, and of a portrait of a certain Heinrich, who seems to have patronised this repro-
Capo
Das
ist
duction of the great master's work.l Der Kunstliche Fechter, oder Beschreibung 1679 Verolinus (Theodor), 4to. Wurzburg. des Fechtens im Rappier, Dlisacken, und Schwerdt.
Der adelichen gemiithen wohlerfahrne 1683 Paschen (Joh. Georg). Exercitien-Meister, d.i. VoUstandige Fecht-, Ring- und Voltigier-Kunst. Small Franckfurt und Leipsig. foho.
1706
Uffenbach.
Fechten England. Wien Lenz. [A second edition of the Italian and German
in
(?)
:
re-
171 3 Schmidt (Johann Andreas) [des H. Rom. Reichs Freyen Stadt Niirnberg, bestellter Fecht- und Exercitien-Me'ster], Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz bietende Fecht-Kunst, oder leichte und getreue Anweisung auf Nebst einem curieusen UnterStoss und Hieb zierlich und sicher zu fechten. Obi. 8vo. Nurnberg Weigel. richt vom Voltigiren und Ringen.
own
text.]
Doyle
(Alexander).
Neue
Alamodische
Fecht-
und
Schirm-Kunst. Das ist Wahre und nach neuester Franzosischer Manier eingerichtete Unterweisung wie man sich in Fechten und Schirmen perfectioniren und Denen respectiven Herren Liebhaberen zu besserer Erleuterung verhalten soUe. rait 60 hierzu deutlichen Figuren herausge^eben von Alexander Doyle, aus Irrland geburtig. (i) Ihrer Churfurstl. Gnaden zu Maintz verordneten Hof~ Fechtmeistern. Obi. 4to. Nurnberg.
1715 Fecht-Boden (der geoffnete) auf welchen durch kurtz gefasste Regeln gute Anleit. z. rechten Fundament der Fecht-Kunst gegeben wird. Mit 8 Kupfertaf. 8vo. Hamburg.
Doyle
darinnen 54
Fecht- und
Schirm-Kunst.
2te Aufl.
Niirnberg.
(Anthon Friedrich) [Fechtme'ster auf der Georgius Augus1739 Anfangsgriinde der Fechtkunst nebst einer tus Universitat zu Goettingen]. Vorrede von dem Nutzem der Fechtkunst und den Fortzligen dieser Anweisung. Goettingen. 4to. [Portrait of Kahn and 25 copperplates, out of the text, engraved by F. Fritsch.]
Kahn
1749 1750
[Fecht-
und
Exercitien-Meister.]
8vo.
Schmidt (Johann
Andreas).
Nurnberg. Fecht-Kunst.
Nurnberg.
1750.
270
1760 Christfels Schwabach Enderes.
:
APPENDIX
(P.
E.) Jiidische
Fechtschule.
8vo.
Onoldst
und
:
1760
Stein.
Schmidt
(Joh. Andre).
8vo.
&c.,
4to.
Nurnberg
&c.
1761
Aufl.
Kahn
e.
(A.
F.)
Anfangsgriinde
Kunst, auf
Neue
Mit
Anh.
iiber d.
Hieb zu
Helmstadt
Weygand.
[25 copperplates.]
Uebungen auf den furstlichen 1764 Weischner (S. ) [Hauptmann]. Sachsischen Hof und Fechtboden zu Weimar. Verb, und verm. Aufl. 8vo.
Weimar
1765
Hoffman.
Weischner
(S.)
[Hauptmann].
2te Aufl.
F.)
Uebungen
Bvo.
:
Hof
Weimar
Hoffman.
Weischner
(C.
Ritterliche
4to.
Geschicklichkeit
im
Fechten
Weimar
Hoffmann.
[30 copperplates.] Ranis (Heinrich Christoph). Konigl. Commissarrii und FechtmeisAnweisung zur Fechtkunst fiir Lehrer und Lernende. Bvo. Berlin Mylius. [Copperplates.]
Temlich.
:
Anfangsgriinde der Fecht-Kunst. 8vo. Halle. Vester (E. F. W.) Einleitung zur adehchen Fechtkunst. 8vo. Korn. Schmidt (Joh. Andr.) Fechtkunst, oder Anweisung in Stoss und
zum Ringen und
Voltigiren.
i2mo.
Nurnberg
8vo.
Schneider
W.
1780 1780
'
Schmidt.
Leipzig.
Will's Historisch-dinlomatisches Magazin fiir das Vaterland. [Bd. H. iiber die Fechtschulen zu Niirnberg,' also Seite 264, iiber die Marxbriider.']
Systematische Abhandlune: von 1783 Haspelmacher (Jh. Geo. Hnr.). den schadlichen Folgen einer nicht auf sicheren Regeln gegriindeten FechtGr. Bvo. kunst, nebst einer Anweisung wie man solche vermeiden kann. Helmstadt Fleckeisen. Versuch iiber das Contrafechten auf der rechten 1786 Roux (Heinrich). und linken Handnach Kreuzler'schen Grundsatzen. 4to. Jena Croker.
:
Bemerkungen iiber die verschiedene 1792 Behr (Fr. Art zu fechten einiger Universitaten, von einem fleissigen Beobachter. Bvo. Halle Dost. ViETH (G. U. A.) Versuch einer Encyklopadie der Leibesiibungen. 1791;
:
L.) Fliichtige
2 Theile.
Bvo.
Berlin.
[A short
article
on fencing
in vol.
ii.,
1796 TiMLiCH (K.) Griindliche Abhandlung der Fechtkunst auf den Hieb zu Fuss und zu Pferde. Wien. ite Theil, oder Lehrbuch Lehrschule der Fechtkunst. 1797 Schmidt. 4to. Berhn fiir die Cavalerie zum vortheilhaften Gebrauche des Sabels. [8 copperplates. Maurer. 1798 Roux (J. Ad. K.') Griindhche und vollstandige Anweisung in der deutschen Fechtkunst auf Sloss und Hieb aus ihren innersten Geheimnissen wissenschafdich erlautert, u.s.w. 4to. Jena Wolfg. Stahl. [Copperplates.]
p. 496.]
1799 HOYER (G. V.) Gottingen. 1799 Roux (J. A. K.) 2te Aufl. Jena.
Geschichte Grundrisz
der Kriegskunst
d.
(Fechten).
Bd.
271
bung
betrachtet.
1802
der Fechtkunst als gymnastischer UeJena. Kothen Aue. Die Fechtkunst auf Universitaten. Bvo. [Copperplates.]
(J.
Roux
Ad.
K.) Grundriss
Gr. 8vo.
1802 Venturini (G.) Die Fechtkunst auf Stosz und Hieb, in systemat. Uebersicht fiir Offiziere, und zum Gebrauch in Kriegsschulen. 8vo. Braun[Copperplates.] schweig.
1803
fechten,
e.
Roux
(J.
Ad. K.)
f.
Theoretisch-practische
'
Leitfaden
d.
miindl. Unterricht.
Gr. 8vo.
fiir
1804
Roux
(J.
A. C.)
2teAufl.
1807 Roux (J. W.) Anleitnng zur Fechtkunst nach mathemat.-physikal. Grund-atzen. 4t(). Jena: Hennings. [10 copperplates.] Die Fechtkunst auf den Stosz. 1807 TiMLiCH (Karl). i2mo. Wien Copperplates. ] Tendler. 1809 Venturini (G.) Die Fechtkunst auf Stosz und Hieb, &c., &c.
2te Aufl.
8vo.
1816
Berlin
:
Jahn
(F. L.)
Gr. 8vo.
Reimer. [Contains a
(J.
z.
of
'
altera Fechtbiicher.'
2 copperplates.]
Die deutsche Fechtkunst, enthalthe theoret.Gr. 8vo. Jena. Stoszfechten, &c. Ad. K.) Grundriss der Fechtkunst als gymnastischer 1817 Roux Leipzig Barth. Uebung betrachtet. Gr. 8vo. Jena Fr.) Griindl. Anweisung zur deutschen Fechtkunst Schmidt 1817 auf Stosz und Hieb. 4to. Dresden Arnold. 1818 Eiselen (E. W. B.) Das deutsche Hiebfechten der Berliner Turn1817 Roux prakt. Anweisg.
A. K.)
(J.
u.
(Jh.
schule.
8vo.
Berlin
Diimmler.
Theorie der Fechtkunst, eine analytische Darstellung sammtlicher Nach dem Traits d'escnme par Chatelain, Stellungen, Stosse Paraden, u.s.w. Leipzig. nebst einer Anleitung iiber das Hiebfechten. 4to.
1819
1820 LuPSCHER (Ant.) und Gommel (Fr.) Theorie der Fechtkunst. Eine analytische Abhandlung sammtl. Stellungen, Stosze, Paraden, Finten u.s.w., iiberhaupt aller Bewegungen im Angriffe u.d. Vertheidung. Nach der Traits d'escrime par le Chevalier Chatelain frei bearbeitet. Nebst einer Anleit. Wien Tendler. 8vo. iiber das Hiebfechten.
:
plates.]
PoLLNiTZ
(G.
:
L. von).
Das
Hiebfechten zu
Halberstadt
Briiggemann.
1822
Qu.
4to.
PoNiTZ (Karl Eduard). Die Fechtkunst auf den Stoss Grund-atzen des Herrn von Selmnitz. 8vo. Dresden Arnold.
1822
1823
8vo.
:
nach den
In'anterie.
Bajonet-Fechtlehre
fiir
die Grossherzogliche
badensche
Mannheim.
1824 Werner (J. A. L.) Versuch einer theoretischen Anweisung zur Fechtkunst im Hiebe. Qu. 4to. Leipzig Lehnhold.
:
[20 copperplates.]
Aufl.
Das Hiebfechten zu Fuss und Pferde. 1825 PoLLNiTZ (G. L. von). Halberstadt Briiggemann. Gr. 8vo.
:
Neue
1825
Selmnitz
272
APPENDIX
des Verhaltens mit d. Infanterie-Gewehre als Angriffs-und Vertheidigungswaffe. Dresden. ler Theil. Gr. 8vo. [lo folio copperplates and one vignette.]
1826
stadt
:
Thierry.
4to.
Hermann-
1826 EiSELEN (E. W. B.) Abrisz des deutschen Stoszfechtens, nach 8vo. Berlin Diimmler. Kreuszlers Grundsatzen dargestellt.
:
1826 WiELAND (Jh.) Anleit. zum Gebrauch des Bajonets oder kurzer Unterricht des Wesenthchsten dieser Fechtkunst. 8vo. Basel Schweighauser.
:
Die Fechtkunst 9uf den Stoss nach den 1828 PONITZ (Karl Eduard). Neue wohl. Ausg. 8vo. Dresden Grundsatzen des Herrn von Selmnitz.
:
Arnold.
1829 Die Anwendung des Bajonets gegen Infanterie und Kavallerie in konigl.-Danischen Armee (aus d. Danischen iibertragen von den Kapitan i2mo. Braunschweig Vieweg. Jensen).
:
d.
v.
Die Kunst, aus jedem Zweikampfe 1829 FoUGERE (J.) [Fechtmeister]. lebend und unverwundet zurlickzukehren, selbst wenn man niemals Unterricht im Fechten gehabt, und es auch mit dem groszten Schlager oder Schiitzen der Welt zu thun hatte. In loVorlesungen. Aus dem Franzosischen. 8vo. Leipzig
:
Rein.
Ueberdie thiiring. Fechterfamilien Kreussler. (Prof.) Thliringer Volksfrcund.' 1829, Nr. 43, Seite 345.] Selmn'itz (Ed. von) [Ritter]. Die Bajonettfechtkunst. (Vorrede zur ];.83i Leipzig. 2teAufl.) 8vo. 1832 Selmnitz (Ed. von) [Ritter]. Die Bajonettfechtkunst. 2te Aufl. Mittler. [10 copperplates.] Berlin
1829 [Vide
'
GoTTLiNG
p.
L.).
Die
Gr. 8vo.
1834
RiEMANN
Kreussler' s
1834 Segers (J.) Anleitung zum Hiebfechten mit Korbrappier, Sabel und Pallasch, zum Selbstunterricht auf deutschen Universitaten undmit besonBonn Habicht. 8vo. derer Riicksicht auf das Militar herausg.
:
[38 figures.]
1835 Praktischer Unterricht in der Bajonetfechtkunst, der schweizerischen 8vo. Bern. [52 figures.] Infanterie ge\Aidmet. ^^ 18^6 Bajoneiir-Reglement fiir die Groszherz. Hessische Infanterie. Lex.
8vo.
Darmstadt
Leske.
(J.)
1836
Segers
Anleitung
[55 lithographs
zum
1837
NovALi
(K. von).
Germanisches Turnbuch,
und Fechtkunst, nach den neuesten Grundsatzen dargestellt. Ein Hand- und Hausbuch fiir Ritterguts-Besitzer, Offiziere, Forstbeamte, Akademiker, &c. Augsburg Jenisch u. Stage. Gr. 8vo. 1837 Segers (J.) Anleitung zum Hiebfechten mit Korbrappier, Sabel und Pallasch, zum Selbstunterricht auf deutschen Universitaten und mit 2te verm. Aufl. 8vo. Bonn be~ond. Riicksicht auf das Militar herausg.
:
Habicht.
Ls^ figures.]
1838 Christmann(F. C.) und Pfeffinger (Dr. G.) Theoreti^ch-praktische Anleitung des Hau-Stossfechtens und des Schwadronhauens, nach einer
Verhalten des Degen- oder Sabelganz neuen Methode, nebst einem Anhange Offenbach a. M. 8vo. fiihrenden gegen der Bajonnetisten,' &c., &.
:
'
273
Thalhofer (Karl) und Isnardi (Mich.)Theoret.-prakt. Anzur Fechtkunst a la Contrepointe. Nebst e. Anleitung zur Vertheidigung leitung mit d. Sabel oder Degen den Bajonnetisten von Tallhofer. Mit i Heft figuren.
Theoretisch-praktische Anleitung zur Fecht[80 lithographed Pesth. Qu. kunst. Jagd1839 NovALi (K. von^. Germanisches Turnbuch, oder die Stage. und Fechtkunst, &c. 2te Aufl. 8vo. Augsburg Jenisch Bagel. 8vo. Wesel von). Das Bajonetfechten. 1840 Rhein
1839
4to.
Gr. 8vo.
Reit-,
u.
(A.
[8
lithographed plates.]
(K.)
1840
terricht
ROHNE
Quedlinburg
Basse.
1840 Roux (W.) Anweisung zum Hiebfechten mit ^raden und krummen Nebst einer Einleitung vom Prof. Dr. K. H. Scheidler. Qu. gr. 8vo. Klingen. [36 plates.] Jena Mauke. 1840 Seidler (E. F.) [Stallmeister]. Anleitunor zum Fechten mH dem Sabel und dem Kiirassierdegen, zuvorderst dem Unterrichte in KavallerieAbtheilungen angeeignet, nebst Bemerkungen flir den ernstlichen Kampf zu Fuss u. zu Pferde. 8vo. Berhn. [i copperplate.]
:
1840
liber
Scheidler
(K.
H.) Ueber
184T
KOTHE
MuLLER
Roux
(Fried.)
Das
W.
Roux, 1840^
Lehrbuch
(Bd.
I.
die Fechtkunst in ihren verschiedenen Zweigen grlindhch zu erlernen. das Stossfechten, m. Fig.) 8vo. Nordhausen.
(Frz.)
T841
Fecht-Unterrcht
Prag
:
mit
dem Feuer-Gewehre,
eigent-
lich Bajonetfechten.
Haase Sohne.
das Verhaltniss der deutschen Fechtkunst Alls'emeinen, als auch fiir Universitaten insbesonAuf besondere, mit Berticksichtigung der Mittel die Duelle zuverhiiten, S:c. deres Verlangen des nun mehr verstorb. Verfassers z. Druck be^ordert u. vollendet von W. Roux. 8vo. Erfurt Hennings u. Hopf.
1841 A.
K.) Ueber
d.
Grossh. badenschen
31 Inf.
8vo.
fiir
das K. Preuss.
Sachs.
Dresden
u.
Anleitung Leipzig
zum
:
Floretfechten Arnold.
fiir
die R.
Infanterie.
1843 SCHETDLER (Dr. K. H.) Nochmalige Erorterune der Frage Hieb oder Stoss ? Eine hode^etische Vorlesung. 8vo. Jena Frommann. Anleitung zum Fechten mit dem 1843 Seidler (F. F.) Stallmeister]. Berlin Gr. 8vo. Sabel u. dem Kiirassierdegen, &c., &c. 2te verm. Aufl.
:
:
|
Mittler.
[i copperplate.]
1844
Ballassa
(C.
K. K.) [Maiorl
Fechtmethode.
'
Eine
rationell^,
vereinfachte und schnell faszhche Fechtiibung des Sabel s gee^n den Sabel, und dieses gegen das Bajonet und die Picke. zum Hauen, Stephen und Pariren. Eigens fiir die Cavallerie, nach den aus der Feld- u. Friedens-Praxis geschopften Grundsatzen in 25 Tabellen, nebst einem kleinen Anhang Ueber das KunstQu. gr. 4to. Pest. fechten.' [19 figures. ]
1844
Rhein
(A.
von\ Das
Wesel: Bagel.
274
1844
(?)
APPENDIX
Schneider
u.
(H.) Fechtkunst. Gruber's Encyklopadie, ite Sec, Bd. 42, S. 204 u. ff.] 1845 Franckenberg-Ludwigsdorff (M. von). Das Bajonetfechten. Nach den Grundsatzen der neutren Zeit umgeandert. 8vo. Munster Wundermann. [6 copperplates.]
[Vide Ersch
1845
ster
:
Franckenberg-Ludwigsdorff
f.
d.
(M. von). Das Fleurettiren oder Hiebfechten und Bajonettiren. 8vo. Mun-
Wundermann.
[3 plates of figures.]
1845 Vorschriften fiir den Unterricht im Fechten u. Voltigiren der konigl. i6mo. Straubing Schorner. bayer. Kavalerie.
:
1847
1849
JAHN
L.) Deutsche Turi>kunst. Gr. 8vo. Berlin: G. Reimer. [Seite 281 Ordnung der Fechtschulen.'] Bottcher (A. M.) Die reine, deutsche Stoszfechtschule nach E. W.
(F.
'
Gr. 8vo.
GorLtz
Heinze
&
Co.
[25 figures.]
1849
Roux
(F.
A.
krummen
Klingen.
graden und
]
Jena
Mauke.
[36 figures.
[Einleitende Bemerk. liber die Geschichte der Fechtkunst, namentlich auf unsern deutschtn Universitaten, Seite 22.]
1849 Roux (F. A. W. L.) Die Kreussler'sche Stossfechtschule, zum Gebrauch f. Academieen u. Militarschulen, nach mathemat. Grundsatzen. Imp. 4to. Jena Mauke. [Portrait of the author and 120 figures drawn from nature, litho:
graphed. ] Ausfiihrliche 1849 SuTOR (J.) New kiinsiliches Fechtbuch, das ist Deschription der Freyen Adelichen und Ritterlichen Kunst des Fechtens in den gebrauchlichsten Wehren, als Schwerdt, Dusacken, Rappier, &c,, &c. Neu herausgegeben wort- und bildgetreu nach dem Original. 4to. Stuttgart [89 woodcuts.] J. Scheible.
Auszug aus
:
Erste Anleitung des Soldaten in der eigentHchen zerstreuten Fechtart. d. Werke des Obersten Grafen v. Waldersee, Die Methode zur Kriegsgemassen-Ausbildung der Infanterie f. das zerstreute Gefecht.' 8vo. MaiiiZ V. v. Zabern.
1850
'
1850
Reihenfolge der
Kommandsworter
Gr. i6mo.
f.
:
Miinchen
1850 Arnold.
1851
Werner
Fehn
:
(J.
A.
L.) Mihtar-Gymnastik,
Leipzig
(A.)
Hannover
1851
zig
:
Riimpler.
Heinze
(A.
Weber.
la 1851 Ott (Jos.) pointe f. den Stosz und Hieb. Zum Unterricht in Fechtschulen sowic zur Selbstbildg. nebst den Verhaltgn. im Zweikampfe, General-assaut, Duell od. Wettkampf, m. Rechts-Links-Kunst- und Naturfechten, u. e. Arb. Geschichte Olmiitz Holzel. Gr. 8vo. d. Duells.' 3 Blicher. [i Buch des Stossfechten, 192 S. mit 47 lith. Taf. in qu. 4to.]
' :
Die Fechtkunst mit Stosz- und Hiebwaffen. Gr. 8vo. [34 Leip8vo. C.) Katechismus der Bajonetfechtkunst. contre[Unterlieut.] Das System der Fechtkunst a
figures. ]
1851
zig.
Pinette
(J.)
Katechismus
der Bayonnetfechtkunst.
8vo.
Leip-
[16 figures.]
Neue illustrirte Fechtschule. Nach 1851 ToLLiN (F.) [Fechtmeister]. der neuen und naturgemaszen Methode des Prof. Heinr. Ling dargestellt u. m. zahlreichen, nach der Natur gez. lllustr (in Holzschn. ) versehen. 8vo. Grimma Verlags Compt.
:
1852
B** (Dr.)
Anleitung
275
zu erlernen, nebst einem Anhange iiber die steile Auslage und das Sabel8vo. Bonn Henry A. Cohen. [With figures.] schlagen.
Bajonettfechten. Leicht faszliche Darstellung, dasselbe in kurzer wie solches ohne Zeit griindlich zu erlernen, nebst kurzer Auseinandersetzg. hohe Kosten in der Schweiz einzufiihren. Bvo. Chur Hitz. 1852. [6 figures. ]
1852
Das
1853 ROTHSTEIN (H.) Das Bajonetfechten nach dem System P. H. Berlin Schroeder. 8vo. Ling's reglementarisch dargestellt. [2 lithographs, comprising 32 figures.] ite u. 2te un1853 RoTHSTEiN (H.) Anleitung zum Bajonetfechten. 8vo. Berlin Schroeder. verand. Abdr. [One lithograph containing 11 figures.]
:
1854 Leitfaden fiir den Unterricht im Stockfechten zum Gebrauche der K. K. Mihtar-Bildungs-Anstalten. 8vo. Wien.
1854
1855
Eiselen.
Vorschriften
zum Gewehrfechten.
M.)
8vo.
Schwerin.
Stossfechtschule
BoTTCHER
2te Aufl.
(A. 8vo.
Die
:
reine,
deutsche
nach
Gorlitz
Heyn.
:
von Ferdinand 1856 Fehn (A.) Die Fechtkunst mit Stoss- und Hiebwaffen. 2te Aufl. 8vo, Hannover C. Meyer. [34 figures.] 1856 Ott (Jos.) Das System der Fechtkunst a la contrepointe den Stosz und Hieb. Holzel. 2te Aufl. Olmiitz den Unterricht im Sabelfechten. 8vo. 1857 Dierkes (A.) Leitfaden Prag Hess. 8vo. Berhn 1857 RoTHSTEiN (H.) Anleitung zur Bajonetfechten. Schroeder. [3 figures.] Mauke. 1857. 1857 Roux. Deutsches Paukbuch. 410. Jena [6 photolithographed 1858 GORNE (von), SCHERFF (von), und Mertens. Die Gymnastik und die Fechtkunst in der Armee. 8vo. Ferlin Mittler. 1859 Hermann (A.) Grundziige einer Anleitung zum Sabelfechten. i6mo. Pest Geibel. 1859 Meyer (Oscar). Das Fechten des Cavalleristen mit dem blanken
1856 Liebsch.
Fehn
f.
fiir
figures.
Mit Zeichnungen.
i860 D'AZEMAR (Baron) [Obst.] Theorie der Kampfe mit dem Bajonett, angenommen im J. 1859 von der italien. Armee unter Napoleon HI. aus (des
verf.)
System der neueren Kriegfiihrg. In's Deutsche iibertragen von Lieut. Breslau Kern. Gr. 8vo. i860 Ballasa (C.) [Major]. Die militarische Fechtkunst vor dem Feinde. Eine Darstellg. der im Kriege vorkommenden Fechtarten d. Bajonets gegen das Bajonet, d. Sabels gegen den Sabel, u. der Lanze gegen die Lanze, m. Beseitigg. aller beim Kunstfechten vorkommenden, vor dem Feinde abernicht fiiglich anwendbaren Stiche, Hiebe u. Paraden zum Gebrauche f. Infanterie u. Kavallerie, m. 26 (Hth.) Abbildgn, nebst e. Anh. iiber das Kunstfechten m. dem Sabel. Qu. gr. 4to. Pest Geibel. [One Hthograph containing 16 figures.] i860 ROTHSTEIN (H.) Das Bajonetfechten nach dem Systeme Ling's.
Rich. Stein.
:
2te Aufl.
8vo.
Berlin
Schroeder.
Armee.
Anleitung zur Betrieb der Gymnastik und der Fechtkunst in der v. Decker. Berlin Dargestellt nach den 1861 Die zerstreute Fechtart der K. K. Cavallerie. allerhochsten Bestimmgn. v. e. K. K. Officier. i6mo. Wien Pichler's Wwe. und Sohn. T 2
1861
8vo.
:
:
276
1861
APPENDIX
Franckenberg-Ludwigsdorff (Hauptm.
von).
Betrachtung-en
den bisherigen Betrieb desselben in der Armee. Ein Vortrag gehalten zur Anregg. der Besprechung im Officier-Corps. 8vo. Berlin Mittler u. Sohn.
:
1861 Hermann (A. ) Schliissel zur Kunst des Rapieri6mo. Linz Banner. a la contrepointe.
:
und Sabelfechtens
1861
Berlin
:
Strantz
Springer.
(Gust.) [Prem. Lieut.] Leitfaden zum Stoszfechten, fiir die konigl. Militar-Reitschule zu Schwedt. Gr. 8vo.
Theorie der Fechtkunst, nebst e. Anleit. zum 1862 Albanesi (Carl). Hiebfecbten und zum prakt. Unterrichte. Gr. 8vo. Wien Pichler's Wwe. u. Sohn. [3 folio plates photographed, containing 12 sketches.]
:
1862 Stocken (Hauptm.) Uebungs-Tabellen fiir den systematischen Betrieb der Gymnastik und des Bajonnetfechtens bei der Infanterie. ite u. 2te Berlin Schroeder. Aufl.
:
1863 Grlindliche Bajonnet-Fechtschule zur Ausbildung der Lehrer und Cassel Gr. 8vo. Feyschmidt. Vorfechter in der Armee.
:
[With
T863
Sabel.
figures.]
Stoss-
und
und
Berlin: Schroeder.
[40 figures.]
1864 Bergauer (Josef) [Lieut, ite Klasse des k. Regt.] Methodischer Leitfaden fiir das Sabelfechter. i plate.] [Selbstverlag des Verfassers.
38 Linien Infanterie
i2mo.
8vo.
1864
Metz
(A. E. von).
Fechtbuch
fiir
die Prim-Auslage.
Wien:
ti-
Braumiiller.
Die Grundsatze der zerstreuten Fecht^rt in ihrer prak 1864 E. V. S. i6mo. Wien Seidel u. Sohn. schen Anwendung naher beleuchtet. [3 lithographed plates. ]
:
1864
:
fiir
den systematischen
Infanterie.
3te
Au fl.
1865 Abanderungen zur Instruktion fiir den Betrieb der Gymnastik und Gr. 8vo. Berlin des Bajonetfechtens bei der Infanterie vom 19 Octobr. i860. v. Decker. [14 woodcuts in the text.]
:
1865
1865
3te Aufl.
und Handbuch der deutschen Fechtkunst. 1865 Frankfurt a. d. Oder Harnecker. Svo. [3 lithographs and 7 tables.] 1865 RiJCKER (Prem. Lieut.) Vergleichung der Bajonnettfechtens der i6mo. Luxemburg: Heintze. preuszischen und franzosischen Armee. [9 lithographed plates.] 1865 Unterrichts-Plan fiir den Betrieb des gymnastichen Unterrichts auf den koniglichen Kriegsschulen, unter zu Grundlegg. der allerhochst genehmigten Abandergn. und Zusatze zur Instruction fiir den Betrieb der Gymnastik und Gr. Svo. Berlin des Bajonettfechtens bei der Infanterie vom 19 Octb. i860. V. Decker. 1866 QuEHL (Fr. W.) Anweisung zum Fechten auf Stosz und Hieb, mit einer Anleitung zum Unterricht groszerer Abtheilungen im Fechten ins besondere i6mo. Erlangen Besold. [26 plates.] in Turnvereinen.
:
Leipzig
Weber.
iS33
Qyetii.(F.
8vo.
Berlin.
277
1867 Roux. Deutsches Paukbuch. 2te Aufl. Fol. Jena: Mauke. 1867 Stocken (Hauptm.) Lectionsgang fiir den Unterricht im Stoszund Hiebfechten als AnhaU fiir den Lehrer. 8vo. Berlin Schroeder.
1867
fiir
Betrieb der
bei
einem kurzen Lection sgange fiir den Unterricht im Stosz und Hiebfechten. 4te Aufl. BerHn Schroeder. 8vo. 1868-9 Di^ geschlossene und zerstreute Fechtart [das Exerciren und PlanLindemann. kehi] der Infanterie. 8vo. 1-3 Abth. Stuttgart 1868 MoNTAG (J. B.) Neue praktische Fechtschule auf Hieb und 8vo. Erfurt Stoss, sowie auch Stoss gegen Hieb und Hieb gegen Stoss. Bartholomaus. [30 figures.] 1869 HoRNSTEiN (L.) Die Fechtkunst auf den Hieb. Fine Skizze. QuerMiinchen J. A. Finsterlin. [38 figures.] folio. 1870 S. (v.) Hiilfsbuch zum Betriebe der Gymnastik u. d. Bajonetfech:
und
32mo.
1870
Wassmannsdorff
(Karl).
Sechs
Fechtschulen
(d.
i.
Schau- und
;
Preisfechten) der Marxbriider und Federfechter aus den Jahren 1573 bis 1614 Niirnberger P^echtschulreime v. J. 1579 und Rosener's Gedicht Enrentitelund Lobspruch der Fechtkunst v. J. 1589. Fine Vorarbeit zur einer Geschichte Heidelberg Karl Groos. der Marxbriider und P'ederfechter. 8vo.
: :
8vo.
Berlin:
P.
1872 RoTHSTEiN (H.) Das Bajonetfechten nach dem System Ling's reglem. dargest. 8vo. Berlin Schroeder. 2te Aufl.
:
H.
Sebetic (Raimund). Theoretisch-praktische Anleitung zum Unterim Sabelfechten. Zum Gebrauche fiir Truppenschulen sowie zur Selbstbildimg leichtfasslich und voUstandig nach der k. k. osterreich. Armee eingefiihrten Fecht-Methode bearb. Gr. 8vo. Wien Gerold's Sohn.
1873
richte
:
[2
1874
terie
z.
Gebrauch
fechten.
Unterofliziere d. preuss. Infanf. Ofliziere u. bei Ausbildg. d. Mannschaft in d. Gymnastik u. im Bajonet5te Aufl. i6mo. Potsdam Doring.
Hiilfs:
und Handbuch
1874
Kl. 8vo.
Praktische Anleitung zum Unterricht im Stossfechten. Berlin Schroeder. [Figures in the text.]
:
2te Aufl.
1874
fechtens
32mo.
1875
fechten.
Hiilfsbuch zum Betriebe d. Gymnastik u. d. BajonettOfticiereund Unterofticiere d. preuss. -norddeut. Infanterie. 7te Aufl. Nordhausen Eich.
S. (von).
f.
:
Chalaupka
Fiir
(Lieut. Frz.)
[i
Leitfaden
Armee.
zum
8vo.
Truppenschulen der
k. k.
Teschen
Unterricht im SabelProchaska.
:
lithographed plate.]
Bajonettfechten der
Infanterie.
1876
Berlin
:
Gr.
8vo.
1877 Happel (J.) Das Gerathfechten. Das Sto:k-, Stab-, SabelSchwertfechten. 8vo. Antwerpen. [51 figures in the text.]
und
1877-8
fanterie fechten.
Hiilfs- und Handbuch fiir Offiziere und Unteroffiziere d. preuss. Inzum Gebrauch bei Ausbildg. d. Mannschaft im Turnen u. Bajonetts Nach den allerhochsten Vorschriften vom 6 April 1876 in tabellar.
v. e.
Form
f.
bearb.
preusz. Offizier.
8te Aufl.
i6mo.
d.
Potsdam
d.
Doring.
1877
S. (von).
Turnensu.
Bajonettfechtens
Offiziere
u.
und
Unteroffiziere d. deut.
Infanterie.
8te Aufl.
Nordhausen
Eick
H.
278
APPENDIX
1878 Bluth (Prem. Lieut.) Praktische Anleitung zum Unterricbt im Kieblecnten. Nach der bei der konigl. Central -Turnanstalt eingefuhrten Lehrmethode bearbeitet. 8vo. Berlin Schroeder. [18 woodcuts in the text.]
:
1878
pier-
Effenberger
Sabelfechtens.
und
Rap-
1878
tens.
Fehn
8vo.
Heidelberg
d.
Manschettfechs
1878
Hulsbuch zum
Betriebe d.
Turnens
u.
d.
Bajonettfechtens der
Zusammengestellt nach den neuesten Vorschriften zum prakt. Gebrauch und zum Anhalt v. B. i6mo. Torgau Jacob.
Infanterie.
:
Anleitung zur AusbilBajonetfechtklasse. Nach den Vorschriften iiber das Bajonetfechten der Infanterie aus dem J. 1876 und eigenen Erfahrgn.
(Jul.)
1878
Lancke
[Prem. Lieut.]
Praktische
Mainz
V. von Zabern.
Nach der 1879 Praktische Anleitung zUiH Unterricht im Stossfechten. bei der konigl. Ceatral-Turninstalt eingefuhrten Lehrmethode. 3teverb. Aufl. Berlin Schroeder. [Figures in the text.] 8vo.
:
(B.) Anleitung zum Betriebe d. Stosz- und Hiebfechtens und Turnanstalten, wie auch zum Selbstunterricht f. Liebhiber der Fechtkunst zusammengestellt u. bearb. 24mo. Wiesbaden: Limbarth.
1879
Weiland
BolgA*^
Fiir Militarschulen
1880
pest.
(Frz. von)
8vo.
Buda-
d.
Arleitung fur Officiere und Unterofficiere beim Ertheilen 1881 B. (von). i6mo. Hannover Unterrichts im Turnen und Bajonettiren. Helwing.
:
Bericht iiber den Fechtbetrieb von Ende 1877 bis Anfang 1881 im markischen Turngau im VIII. Kreise (Rheinlandund Westfalen) der deutschen Die Hiebfcchtlehre. Kl. 8vo. Iserlohn. Turnerschaft. Hierbei ein Anhang.
1881
1 88 1
Eiselen
(E.
W. B.) Das
J.
net
v.
dessen Schiiler G. im
1825.
8vo.
Sabelfechten. Berlin
Manuscript, ausgezeichLenz.
8vo.
188 1
Hergsell
(Gustav).
Die
Fechtkunst.
Wien
3te
Hartleben.
[22 plates.]
1881
Aufl.
Duell-Regeln.
unverand.
i2mo.
Csathy.
1881 Lenz (G. F.) Zusammenstellung von Schriften iiber Leibesubungen[Turnen, Heilgymnastik, Ringen, Spiele, Turnlieder, Schwimmen, Eislauf, Fechten und Turniere.] Herausgegeben von G. F. Lenz, unter Mitwirkg. von E. Angerstein, N. J. Cup^rus, G. Eckler, &c. 4te stark verm. Aufl. Gr. Lenz. Berlin Svo. 1882 Anleitung zum Gewehrfechten. 8vo. Dresden Meinhold u. Sohn.
:
:
1882
schulen.
Eiselen
(G.
W.
B.)
TurnBott-
und mit Abbildgn. versehen von Turnlehr. A. W. Lahr Schauenburg. 8vo. cher und Dr. K. Wassmannsdorff.
Neu
bearb.
Leitfaden zum Unterrichte im Rappier-, 1882 Feldmann (Jos.) [Major]. Gr. 8vo. Wiener-Neustadt Lentner. Sabel-, Bajonet-und Stockfechten.
:
1882 Lion (J. C.) Das Stossfechten, zur Lehreund Hof Grau u. Co. Bild dargestellt. Gr. Svo.
:
[26
woodcuts
in the text.]
MONTAG
(J.
B.) Neue
und
Stoss,
[Plates.]
279
(Hauptmann
von).
Anleitun^
:
zum Kontrabajonettfechten im
fiir
Anschusz an den Ent vurf der provisorischen Vorschriften ten der Infanterie. i2mo. Berlin Liebel.
1882 Vorschriften Mittler u. Sohn. 1883
fiir
das Bajonettfech:
Anleitung
zum
Unterricht im Hieb-
fechten. Nach der bei konigl. Militar-Turnanstalt eingefiihrten b arb. 2te verb. Aufl. 8vo. Berlin Mittler u. Sohn. [18 vi^oodcuts in the text.]
Lehrmethode
1883 Auslage.
1883.
Metz
(Alex.
Hrsg. im
J.
:
8vo.
Wien
Edler von) [Gen. Major]. Fechtbuch fiir die Prim1863, nach genauer Durchsicht neu aufgelegt im J. Seidel u. Sohn.
Betriebe
d.
1883
tens
f.
S. (von).
Hiilfsbuch zum
Turnens und
d.
Bajonettfech:
Unteroffiziere der deutschen Infanterie. iite nach den neuesten Vorschriften voUstandig ungeand. Aufl. 32mo. Nordhausen EigenOffiziere u.
dorf.
Die Fechtkunst mit dem krum[Univ. Fechtmeister]. Praktische Anleitung zum Mihtarfechten (Hieb und Strich) und zum deutschen kommentmaszigen Studentenfechten. Gr. 8vo. Straszburg i. E. R. Schultz & Comp. [22 plates from photographs.]
1884
B. (von).
men
Sabel.
1884
Aufl.
8vo.
1884 bildung der Mannschaft im Turnen und Bajonettfechten. Zusammengestellt nach den bis 9 Nov. 1882 ergangenen Bestimmgn. ite u. 2te Aufl. 24mo. Potsdam Doring.
:
BoLGAR (Frz. von) [Oberlieut.] Die Regeln d. Duells. 2te verm. Wien Seidel u. Sohn. Hiilfsbuch fiir den Infanterie-Unteroffizier zum Gebrauch bei Aus:
1884
tens
f.
Hiilfsbuch zum Betriebe d. Turnens und d. BajonettfechS. (von). Offiziere und Unteroffiziere der deutschen Infanterie. i2te Aufl. 32mo.
:
Nordhausen
1884
Eigendorf.
fiir
Vorschriften
Vorschriften
Gr. 8vo.
Berlin
Mittler u. Sohn.
:
1884
1885
richts
fiir
Gr. 8vo.
Berlin
Mittler u. Sohn.
Officiere und Unterofficiere beim Ertheilen d. UnterRajonettiren. 2te nach den allerhochsten und neuesten Vorschriften bearb. Aufl. von v. B. i6mo. Hannover Helwing.
Anleitung
fiir
im Turnen und
und Unterofficiere beim Ertheilen im Turnen und Bajonettiren. 2te nach den allerhochsten und neuesten Vorschriften bearb. Aufl. i6mo. Hannover Helwing.
1885
)
Fehn (W.
Anleitung
)
fiir
Officiere
d. Unterri( hts
Das kommentmaszige Fechten 1885 Fehn (W. [Univ. Fechtmeister]. mit dem deutschen Haurappier Rechts und Links. Gr. 8vo. Straszburg i. E. Schultz & Comp. [24 plates from photographs.]
8vo.
1885 Fehn (W. ) Entwurf einer Instruction fiir deutsche Hiebfechtschulen. Straszburg i. E. Schultz & Comp. [With photographic plates.]
:
1885 Roux Eine Anleitung zum Lehren und Erlernen des Hiebfechtens aus der verhangenen und steilen Auslage mit Beriicksichtigung des akad. Comments. Gr. Svo. [100 tinted Hthographic figures.] Jena Pohle.
:
Unterricht im Sabelfechten. Gr. 8vo. Wien (Ludwig Caesar) [Univ. Fechtmeister]. Die Hiebfechtkunst.
Die Fechtkunst mit dem Haurapier unter 1885 SCHULZE (Friedrich). besonderer Beriicksichtigung des Linksfechtens, mit Uebungsbeispielen. Gr. Heidelberg Bangel u. Schmitt. [5 photographs.] 8vo.
:
1885
WiELAND
(B.
fiir
Truppen-
28o
schulen,
APPENDIX
:
Militarbildungsanstalten, Turnschulen und Fechtvereine, sowie Freunde und Liebhaber der Fechtkunst. Gr. 8vo. Wiesbaden R. Bechtold
& Comp.
Lose Worte liber die Bestimmungsmensuren der deut1885 RiELECH (F. schen Couleurstudenten. 8vo. Breslau V. Zimmer.
)
:
1886
Feldmann
Hergsell
(Jos.) [Major].
Leitfaden
2te Aufl.
u.
Sohn.
1887
hofer's
(Gustav)
d.
[Hauptmann
Large
Landesfechtmeister].
Tal-
Fechtbuch aus
410.
Prag
Calve.
Fechtbuch aus dem Jahre 1467, gerichtliche und 1887 Talhoffer. andere Zweykampfe darstellend. Herausgegeben von G. Hergsell. 4to. [With 268 plates.] Prag. 1887 Wassmannsdorff (Dr. Karl). Aufschliisse iiber Fechthandschriften und gedruckte Fechtbiicher des 16 und 17 Jahrhunderts in einer Basprechung von G. Hergsell Taihoffers Fechtbuch aus d.^m Jahre 1467. 8vo.
Berhn
Gaertner.
'
Monatsschrift
fiir
das Turnwesen.']
Manuscripts.
Mair
Bibl.
(Conrad).
Ein Fechtbuch.
MSS. Kgl.
Bibl.
Dresden.
in the Konigl. Dresden. [Contains numerous well-drawn coloured illustrations of Fencing.] Kreussler. Fechtschule. MSS. Kgl. Bibl. Dresden.
Paulsen (Hector
MSS.
GREEK
1872 Pyrgos (N. Pyrgu, Didaskalu en
S.
tei
(Modern).
Xiphaski'a kai Spathaskia
) Hoplomachetik^
arith. 178.
stratiotikei scholei.
En
Ath^nais
hypo N. Typographeion
K.
Blastu,
hodos Hermu.
8vo.
1876 Pyrgos (N.) Encheiridion praktikes spathaskias. Meros proton. Askesis kata xiphon hypo N. Pyrgu, Didaskalu tes hoplomachetikes en tei scholei ton euelpidon kai tu ekpaideutiku lochu. Athenesi (timatai drachm es).
8vo.
ITALIAN.
1509 1532 1531
nova, dove sono tutti documenti e vantaggi che si ponno havere nel mestier de I'armi d'ogni sorte, novemente correcta ei stampata. i6mo. Vinegia Per N. d'Aristotile, detto Zappino. [A few woodcuts, unconnected with the text. Maestro generale de 1' arte de 1536 Marozzo (Achille) [Bolognese. Mutinae, in sedibus venerabilis D. Antonii Berr armi.] Opera nova. 4to.
li
:
MoNCio (Pietro). Opere di scherma. LuCA (Guido Antonio di). (?) .... Manciolino (Antonio) [Bolognese]. Opera
XXHL
Idus Mail.
[82 woodcuts.]
BIBLIOTHECA ARTIS DIMICATORI^
1550
edition.
281
.
Marozzo
410.
(Achille)
:
Venetia
&c.
2nd
de
instantia
Marchior Sessa.
15^3 giornate
1553
Le tre (Marc' Antonio) [gentil'huomo napolitano]. al intorno alia disciplina dell' Arme, espezialmente della spada duca di Sessa. 8vo. Napoli.
d'
:
Pagano
Agrtppa
(Camillo)
4to.
[Milanese].
:
un dialogo
1560
di filosofia.
Roma
Obi. 24mo. di metter mano alia Spada. [42 plates of Fencing, the text also engraved.]
Modi
Arte dell' Armi. Ricorretto, et 1568 Marozzo (Achille) [Bolognese]. ornato di nuove figure in rame. 4to. Venetia Appresso Antonio Pinargenti. [Copperplates in the text.
:
1568
1568
(?)
Marozzo
4to.
(Achille).
Aggripa
(Camillo).
Trattato
:
Opera Nova
di
&c.
3rd edition.
et
410.
Scienza
d'
arme
un dialogo
in
detta materia.
text.]
1569
tratta di
Mora
di) [da Modena. Some copies bear da Corregio ']. adoprar sicuramente 1' arme si da offesa come da difesa con un trattato dell' inganno et con un modo di esercitarsi da se stesso per acquistare Venetia Appresso Giorgio de' Cavalli. 4to. forza, giudicio et prestezza. [Some copies bear the indication appresso Giordano Ziletti. Portrait
1570
Grassi (Giacomo
Ragione
di
'
'
of Grassi
and copperplates
in the text.]
Del Arte di scrimia (M. Giovanni dall') [Bolognese]. Ne' quali brevemente si tratta dello Schermire, della Giostra, del1' ordinar battaglie. Opera necessaria a Capitani, Soldati et a qual si voglia Gentil'huomo. 4to. Venetia Appresso G. Tamborino.
1572
libri tre.
:
Agocchie
Lo Schermo. Nel quale, per 1575 ViGGlANi (Angelo) [Bolognese]. via di dialogo si discorre intorno all' eccelenza dell' Armi et delle lettere, et intorno all' offesa et difesa. Et insegna uno Schermo di Spada sola sicuro e Venetia singolare con una tavola copiosissima. 4to. Appresso Giorgio Angelieri. [9 copperplates in the text.]
:
1584
Fallopia
et
Nuovo
Ventura. 1587
1588
breve
modo
(Alfonso) [Lucchese. Alfiere nella fortezza di Bergamo]. Bergamo 4to. Appresso Comin di schermire.
:
Ghisliero
(Federico)
[da Alessandria].
Regole
. .
di molti
cava-
gliereschi esercitii.
giani, 15751. vezzi. 4to.
4to.
Parma.
Viz AN I (Angelo) [Bolognese]. Lo wSchermo &c. (see Vig2nd edition. All' illustrissimo signore, il sig. conte Pirro MalBologna Gio. Rossi. [The text is slightly altered from the ist edition, and a portrait of the author added to the plates.] 1601 DocciOLTNi (Marco) [Florentino]. Trattato in materia di scherma. Nel quale si contiene il modo e regola d' adoperar la spada cosi sola come accompagnata. 4to. Firenze Nella stamperia di Michelangiolo Serniatelli.
.
:
1603
Kssercitio Militare,
Spada
edition.
et dell'
[di Frasinello di Monserrato]. quale dispone 1' huomo a vera cognitione del Scrimire di ordinare 1' Essercito a battagha &c, &c. 4to. Napoli.
. .
. ,
1604
Agripa
4to.
(Camillo). Venetia.
Trattato
di Scienza d'
Arme
&c.
Third
282
APPENDIX
1606 Fabrts (Salvator) [Capo del ordine dei sette cori]. De lo Schermo, Fol. overo scienza d' arme. Copenhassen Henrico Waltkirch.
:
IV.
of
Denmark and
of the
tate diverse
;
(Nicoletto) [Vinitiano]. Teatro nel qual sono rappresenmaniere e modi di parare et di ferire di spada sola, e di spada e dove ogni studioso potra essercitarsi e farsi prattico nella proflessione pusrnale Venetia Appresso Gio. Ant. et G. de Franceschi. Obi. 4to. deir Armi. [Frontispiece with the Medici arms, portrait of the master, and 42
t6o6
Giganti
&c.
2nd
edition.
Obi. 4to.
1609
si
dialogonel quale
discorre a' ogni scienza e del modo d' imparare a schermir con spada bianca, 8vo. Viterbo. e d fendersi senz' armi.
"da Cagli. Maestro dell' eccelsa natione Siena Gran simulacro dell' arte e dell' uso della Dedicato al serenissimo Sig. don Federigo Feltrio della Rovere, scherma. principe dello stato d' Urbino. Obi. 4to. Siena Apresso Saluestro Marchetti e Camillo Turi.
1610
Capo Ferro
(Ridolfo)
alemanna
[Portraits of the
Duke
d*
13 copperplates
out of text.]
Trattato
dell'
imprese
E.
et inventioni cavaleresche.
d').
Napoli.
Alessandri (Torquato
1613 BoTCCio (G. ) [Edited by Antonio Quintino]. Gioelo di sapienza, nel quale si contengono mirabili secreti e necessarii avertimenti per difendersi dagli huomini e da molti animali &c. Nuovamente dato in luce da me Antonio Quintino, ad Instanza d' ogni spirito gentile. i2mo. Stampata in Milano et ristampata in Genova per Pandolfo Malatesta.
. .
Bvo.
Roma.
and 15 woodcuts
dell'
in the text.]
. .
16 r5
Verona. 1618
4to. Arte Armi &c. 5th edition. contenLoMBARDELLi (Orazio). Giocello di sapienza, nel quale
Marozzo
(Achille).
si
gono
arme, con 1' inclinazione dei dodici segni celesti et 8vo. Firenze, alle scale di Badia. deir arte del puntar gli scritti. [8 woodcuts.]
gli av'si d'
il
memorial
1619 1619
Gaiani Gaiani
(A.
G. B.
Discorso
4to. la
Genova.
(Gio.
maneggiar
Spada a
1-oano
:
4to.
1621
Sienna.
PiSTOFiLO (Bonaventura).
&c. si Oplomachia, nePa quale maneggio e dell' uso delle armi. 4to.
.
1624
Fabris
Opera
Per
il
di Salvator Fabris.
Delia vera practica e scienza d' armi (Salvator). Folio. Padova Per Pietro Paolo Tozzi.
:
&c.
1627
1628
Ferrone.
PiSTOFiLO (Bonaventura) [Ferrarese]. II Torneo. ^to. Bologna [Frontispiece and 114 copperplates, no text.]
(Nicoletto).
Giganti
Teatro
&c.
2nd
d'
edition.
Obi. 4to.
Padua
1628
arme
dell' illustrissima
283
:
di Picca. 8vo. Parma. and copperplates.] 1640 Alfieri (Francesco) [Maestro d' arme dell' ill'"''^ accademia Delia in Padova]. La Scherma. Dove con nuove Ragioni e con Figure, si mostra arme e il sito, possa il la perfezione di quest' arte, e in che modo secondo Padova Per Seb. Sardi. Cavaliere restar al suo nemico superiore. Obi. 40. [Portrait of author and 37 copperplates.]
1628
410.
Padova
Presso S.
[Numerous copperplates.]
[Portrait
1'
L' esercizio 1641 Cere>A (Terenziano) [Parmegiano, detto 1' Eremita]. della spada regulato con la perfetta idea della scherma. Opera utile e necessiria a chiunque desidera usjire vittorioso dalli colpi della spada nemica. 4to. Ancona M. Salvioni.
:
maneggio delle armi. 8vo Alfieri (Antonio). Quesiti del cavaliero instrutto 8va. Padova. con risposte del suo maestro. Alfieri (Francesco). La Scherma &c. 2nd
II
(?).
Bologna
le
edition.
4to.
Ancona.
1653
4to.
Alfieri
(F.)
si
Lo Spadone.
Padova:
1653
Dove
[Maestro d'arme dell' ill^f^ academiaDel ain Padova]. mostra per via di figura il maneggio e 1' uso di esse.
S. Sardi.
[Numerous copperplates.]
Alfieri (Francesco).
L' arte
di
ben maneggiare
la
spada.
4to.
Padova.
[Copperplates.]
Compendio del giuoco mo1654 Jacobilli (Frances :o) [da Foligno]. derno di ben maneggiare la spada. 8vo. Padova. Pentateuco politico, owero cinque 1655 Alferi (Antonio) [da Aquila]. d'singanni spada, tamburo, piffero, scudo, tromba al duca di Guisa per r invasione del regno di Napoli 1' anno 1654. 4to. Aquila. [Published under the anagrammatic pseudonym, Arenif Atonoli.]
1660
Senesio (Alessandro)
Folio.
[gentil'
huomo
Bolognese].
II
vero maneggio
della spada.
Bologna: L'Herede
di Benacci.
1664
1668
8vo.
scherma.
8vo.
Padova.
Bresciani (Marin) [maestro d' armi Ferrarese]. Li trastulli guerrieri. [With figures.] Delia scherma napoletana, discorso 1669 Mattei (Francesco Antonio). prlmo, dove, sotto il titolo dell' impossibile possibile, si prova che la scherma sia scienza e non arte si danno le vere norme di spada e pugnale discor o secondo, dove si danno le vere norme di spada sola. 4to. Foggia Novelio de
Brescia.
Bonis.
1670
tano].
La
Pallavijini (G useppe Morsicato) [Maestro di scherma PalermiScherma illustrata, per la di cui teorica e prattica si puo arriva'^e
con facilt^ alia difesa ed offesa necessaria nel occasion! d' assalti nemici. Opera utilissima alle persone che si dilettanodi questa professione, con le figure della scienza prattica dichiarate coi 1 )ro discorsi. Folio. Palermo Domenico Frontispiece and 31 copperplates.] d' Ansel mo.
:
|
1671
Gessi
cavaleresche.
1672
I.
4to.
I.
cavaleresche.
8vo.
Milano.
(Fr.) [Bresciano].
1673
Marzioli
[Numerous
Bologna.
284
1673
APPENDIX
illustrata,
Pallavicini (Giuseppe Morsicato). La seconda parte della scherma ove si dimostra il vero maneggio della spada e pugnale et anco il modo come si adopera la cappa, il brochiero e la rotelladi notte, le quali regole non sono state intese da nessuno autore. Folio. Palermo Domenico d' Anselmo. [Frontispiece and 36 copperplates.]
:
(Giuseppe). Trattato di scherma Siciliana, ove si seconda intentione, con mia linea retta difendersi di qual si voglia operatione di resolutione, che operata per ferire a qualnnque, o di punta, o taglio, che accadesse in accidente di questionarsi. Con expressione di tutte le regole che nascono di seconda operatione. i2mo. Palermo Carlo Adamo.
1673
ViLLARDiTA
monstra
di
1678
d'
4to.
1680
4to.
Monica
(Francesco
della).
La
Parma.
1682 GoRio (Gio. Pietro) [Milanese]. Arte di adoprar la spada per sicuramente ferire e perfettamente diffendersi. Dedicata e consegrata al noma Conte Pirro Visconti Borromeo Aresi. bvo. e merito dell' illustriss"^^ Sig Milano Federico Francesco Maietta. [Portrait of the author.]
:
1683
Alfieri (Francesco).
Obi. 4to.
2nd
edition.
Arte Padova.
di
ben maneggiare
la
Spada
&c.
1686 Marcelli (Francesco Antonio) [Maestro di scherma in Roma]. Regole della scherma insegnate da Lelio e Titta Marcelli, scritte da Francesco Antonio Marcelli, figlio e nipote, e maestro di scherma in Roma. Opera non meno utile che necessaria a chiunque desidera far profitto in questa professione. Dedicata alia sacra real Maesta di Christina Alessandra regina di Suetia. Regole della scherma. Parte seconda Parte prima Regole della spada sola. Nella quale si spiegano le regole della spada e del pugnale insegnate da Titta Marcelli con le regole di maneggiar la Spada col brochiere, targa, rotella, In 2 parts. cappa, lanterna col moHo di giocar la spada contro la sciabola.
:
4to.
Roma.
i6d8
[Frontispiece.
Copperplates in the
text.]
Vezzani
(Antonio).
di)
1696
Mazo
(Bondi
L' Esercizio Accademicodi Picca. 8vo. Libro [da Venetia]. La spada maestra.
Parma.
dove
si
trattano i vantaggi della nobilissima professione della scherma, si del caminare, Venetia girare e ritirarsi, come del ferire sicuramente e difendersi. Obi. 4to. Dominico Lovisa. [80 copperplates. ]
171 1
Giuseppe
Napoli.
d'
Alessandro (Giuseppe d'). Pietra paragone de' Cavalieri di D. Alessandro Duca di Pescolanciano, divisain cinque hbri. 8vo (?).
(Costantino) [detto 1' Anghiel maestro di scherma Mesprattica necessaria all' huomo overo modo per superare la parte prima. 4to. Roma Luca Antonio fo! za coir uso regolato della spada [Portraits, woodcuts in the text.] Chracas.
1714
sine>e].
Scienza
Calarone
1758 1759
1761
Marco Marco
(Alessandro
di) [pro'essore di
scherma Napoletano].
8vo.
Ragiotratta
all'
Napoli.
si
(Alessandro di). Discorsi instruttivi ne' quaU Napoli. 8vo. all' arte della scherma.
in
Marco (Alessandro di) [professore di scherma napoletano, maestro due coUegj Capece e Macedonio e d' altri cavalieri]. Riflessioni fisiche e geometriche circa la misura del tempo ed equilibrio di quello e della natural disposizione ed agilta dei competitori in materia di scherma e regolamenti essenziah per saggiamente munirsi da ogni inconsiderato periglio sul cimento i2mo. Napoli. della spada nuda.
de'
285
Bremond
nonche
(A. Picard).
de' professori
de' dilettanti
Milano.
suHa scherma, aggiunta la notizia distinguono in quest' arte medesima Europa, trad, dalla franc, nella lingua toscana. 8vo. [Portrait of Saint-Georges.]
che
si
Trattato
Mangano (Guido Antonio del) [Pavese]. Riflessioni filosofiche 178 sopra r arte della scherma. 8vo. Pavia. Trat tatosuUa scherma traduzione 1782 Bremond (Picard Alessandro).
hngua toscana.
(Nicola
di)
8yo.
Milano
Pirola.
1783
della
Gennaro
MiCHELi
[dottore awoccato].
II.
(?).
:
Compnnimento
di
I.
scherma e de' Gladiatori. Componimento suUa lode della scherma e de' gladiatori, &c. 8vo
1798
aggiunta
al
primo,
Venezia.
(Michele). Trattato in lode della nobile e cavalleresca arte della scherma. Diretto ai nobili e cittadini Toscani. 8vo. Firenze
:
1800
Bertelli
(Paolo).
Trattato
di
Scherma.
8vo.
;
Bologna.
1803 Rossaroll (Scorza) [capitano de' zappatori] [capitano di artiglieria]. La scienza della scherma. 4to.
Grisetti
Milano.
(Pietro)
i8ti &c.
.
Rossaroll
2nd
(Scorza) e
4to.
Grisetti
(Pietro).
edition.
Napoli.
Trattato della spadancia o della spada 1818 Rossaroll (Scorza). Scherma della baionetta astata. 8vo. Napoli. 1820 FroRio (Blasco). Di risposta ad alcune dimande scherma, lettere &c. 8vo. Catania. Blasco Florio della scherma. 4to, Messina: 1825 Florio (Blasco). Discorso G. Fiumara. della scherma. 1828 Florio (Blasco). Discorso 2nd edition. Catania. 4to. 1829 Weiss (Giuseppe). Istruzione sulla scherma a cavallo. Napoli.
di
di
sull' utilita
sull' utilita
1830
1835
Weiss
,
(Giuseppe).
Scherma
della baionetta.
4to.
Napoli.
MuLLER
.
(Alessandro).
.
II
con 53
(conte
figure.
maneggio
1837
Gambogi
Michele).
Trattato
4to.
sulla
:
scherma.
Adorna
di
figure incise
Milano
R. Fanfani.
1840 Maneggio della sciabola per uso della brigata lancieri, redatta di una guardia di ufficiali della stessa arma. Napoli. 1842 Bertolini (Bartolomeo). Trattato di sciabola, con 10 tavole. 8vo.
Trieste
1844
1846
La scienza della scherma. Catania. Abbondati (Niccolo). Istituzione di arte ginnastica per
Florio
(Blasco).
le
truppe
di fanteria di wS. M. Sicilia.na, compilata sulle teorie de' piu accurati scrittori Napoli. antichi e moderni. 2 vols. 8vo.
di
1847 Marchionni (Alberto). Trattato di scherma sopra il nuovo sistema giuoco misto di scuola italiana e francese. 8vo. Firenze. [5 lithographed folding plates and woodcuts in the text.]
1850 1850
Ferrara.
Blengini (Cristoforo). Teoria della soherma. Giuliani (Bolognini Giuseppe). Sul maneggio
della
sciabola.
286
APPENDIX
sulla
11 bersagliere in campagna ed istruzione 1851 Spinazzi (Pietro). scherma della baionetta, corrtdato di tavole dimostrative. Geneva.
1852
ScALZi (Paolo
ScALZi (Paolo
[30 plates.]
de'). de').
1853
in lezioni.
Svo.
Genova.
8vo.
Genova.
1853 Caccia (Ma-similiano).Trattatodi scherma ad uso del R. esercito. jWith plates.] Torino. Svo. 1856 Giuliani (Bolognini Giuseppe). Teorie sulla sciabola per una Ferrara. scuola di contropunta di genere misto.
1856
lata 8vo.
'
Florio (Blasco). Osservazioni critico-apologetiche all' opera intitoIstituzione di arte ginnastica,' dirette aiprofessori di scherma in Napoh. Florio
(Blasco).
Catania.
1858
1861
sciabola.
Blasco Florio
ai professori di
scherma.
Catania.
1862
1864
Trattato teorico-pratico della scherma per Tambormm (Carlo). Trattato di scherma alia sciabola. Genova. Blengini (Cesare Alberto). Trattato teorico-pratico di spada e
Cerri
(Giuseppe). Milano.
Istruzione per la scherma del bastone ad uso dei bersaglieri.
sciabola, e varie paratedi quest' ult.mo contro la baionetta e la lancia. Operetta Svo. Bologna. illustiata da 30 figure incise, con ritratto dell' autore.
1864
Livorno.
alia
Brcve
trattato di
scherma
La scuola della spada. 1868 ScALZi (Paolo de'). [With figures.] Firenze. Svo. aggiunte.
1868
alia scuola
Manuale della scherma di sciabola. i2mo. With plates.] Parma. 868 Ferrero (Gio. Battista). Traitato di scherma sul maneggio della Torino. sciabola. 1868 Radaelli (Giuseppe). Istruzione pel maneggio della sciabola, Firenze. del Frate. pubblicata dal capitano Cerri (Giuseppe). Trattato teorico-pratico della scherma di bas186S
normale
di fanteria
7
Mendieti a-Maglioco
(Salvatore) [Furiere
maestro di
scherma
S.
tone, col
modo
armi
sia di
punta che
di taglia
Milano.
La scherma della sciabola o del bastone a due 1S70 Falciani (Alberto). Pisa. mani, brevemente insegnata nella lingua del popolo. i2mo.
1870
Strada
(Viitorio) [Maestro d' ?rmi]. Trattato di scherma 1870 teorico-pratico illustrato della moderna scuola italiana di spada e sciabola. Svo. [Frontispiece and 29 hthographed plates.] Bologna.
LaviBERTINI
Scherma e
tiro.
Napoli.
1871 Enrichetti (Cesare) [Maestro-capo e direttore di scherma alia Trattato elementare teorico-practico di scherma. scuola centrale di Parma]. Paima. [6 hthographs.] Svo.
1874
Cesar ANO
Doux. Roma. Radaelli
(Federico)
[di
Napoli].
di
Trattato
i
teorico-pratico
di
tutti
regolamenti cavallereschi
il
Milano.
1875-6
Radaelli.
II
maneggio
metodo
di
scherma
Istruzione per la scherma di sciabola e di (Giuseppe). 1876 spada del Prof. Giuseppe RadaeUi, scritta d' ordine del Ministero della Guerra Milano. 4to. [lo folded lithographs.] dal Capitano S. del Frate.
287
Gandolfi
tvo.
(Giovanni).
:
Metodo
teorico-pratico
per la scuola di
della
Torino
Borgarelii.
1S77
secondo
il
sul
maneggio
sciabola
1878 Perez (G.) II sistema di spada Radaelli, giudicato scherma. 4to. Verona Tip. di Gaetano Franchini. [7 folded lithographed plates.]
:
dall' arte
della
Sul metodo scherma Radaelh, sul sistema 1880 Pagliuca (Giovanni). Cenni scherma Radaelh. Torino. 1881 RosARi [con Cariolato e Belmonte]. Torneo internazionale tenuto in Milano. Napoli Ferrante. 8vo. 1884 Parise (Masaniello). Trattato teorico-pratico della scherma di
1878
Forte
(capitano Luigi).
di
lettere
critica.
Catania.
di
critica
di
spada
8vo.
e sciabola.
Roma.
[Numerous
1885
di
Frate
Istruzione per
la
scherma
di
punta
scherma
di
Milano.
1885
pratico, duello.
Milano.
1888
lini.
maneggio
1888
bola.
Resurrtctio. Critica alle osservazioni sul (Cavaliere Jacopo). della sciabola secondo il metodo Radaelli dtl Generale Achille Ange8vo. Firenze Tipografia Niccolai.
:
Gelli
Masiello
Firenze
8vo.
(Ferdinando). G. Cjioelli.
:
La
and
scherma
italiana di
spada
e di scia-
[Numerous
plates
Giornale di scherma, ginnastica &c. 1888 (periodical) Cappa e spada. diretto da Luigi Sertini. (Monthly review chiefly devoted to the interests of Firenze, Via Nazionale 14. Italian swordsmanship.) 4to.
La scherma collettiva quale mezzo di educa1889 Gelli (J.) [Cavaliere]. zione fisica. Con 32 tavole dimostrative. 8vo. Tipografia Niccolai. [Figures in the text.]
Manuscripts.
Monomachia ovvero arte di 1550 (?) Altoni (PVancesco di Lorenzo). scherma, cui segue un trattato del Giuoco della spada sola. Firenze.
1590
(?)
;
Scherma
4to.
[Bolognese]. Discorso
e neccssaria a chi
si
sopra
1'
arte della
diletta d'
Arme.
Ob:.
[42 drawings in red cha^k, imitated from the plates of Agrippa's work. In M. Vigeant's collection, Paris.]
Fiore Furlan [de Civida]. [Vellum MS. with pen and ink and gold
Series V., vol.
iv.
sketches.
See N. and Q.
p. 414.]
LoviNO (Giovanni Antonio) [Milanese]. Opera into: no alia Practica e Theoria del ben adoperare tutte le sorti di arme overo la Scienza dell' Arme. 4to. Vellum. [In the Bibhotheque Nationale, Paris.]
;
British
Italian.
Museum.
folios.
47
on
fencing
in
APPENDIX
1678 (?) Texedo (Don Pedro) [de Taruel. Sicilia]. Escuela en la berdadera destreza de las armas. (Dedicated to Don Fern. Joach. Faxardo de Requesens y Zuniga.) Sm. 4to. Palermo (?)
[Portrait of the author,
and
figures.]
LATIN.
1579
tus brevis.
GUNTERRODT
4to.
(Henri Witebergae.
a).
De veris principiis
Ivsti Lipsi SaturnaHvm sermonum libri duo 1604 LiPSius (Justus). qui de Gladiatoribus. Editio ultima et castigatissima. Cum aeneis Figuris. Antverpias, ex officina Plantiniana, apud Joannem Moretum. 4to.
;
Manuscript.
DtJRER (Albert). Oplodidaskalia, sive armorum tractandorum meditatio. [MS. in the Magdalenenbibliothek, Breslau. Quoted by Lenz in his Zusammenstellung v. Schriften liber Leibesiibungen.']
'
PORTUGUESE.
1685
I.uis (Thomas).
Tratado
com que hao de usar os jugadores della. Foho, 29 pag. i lamina. Lisboa. Espada firme o firme. Tractado para o 1744 Martins Firmr (Manuel)
jogo de espada preta e branca. Bvo, fol. xxxvi-86. Evora. Resumo breve do jogo de florete em 1804 Carvalho (Rodriguez de). dialogo para qualquer curioso se applicar ao serio estudio desta brilhante arte. Traduzido dos melhores auctores Franceses. 8vo. Lisboa. Instruc9ao do jogo 183Q Mello Pacheco de Resende (Jos6 de). d'espada a pe e a cavallo para ser posto em pratica na eschola militar, e nos corpos de cavallaria e artilheria montada do exercito do Brasil. Rio de Janeiro
Brasileira.
1842
1.
se ensina por principios o manejo Large 8vo. Lisboa Typ. se usa hoje.
em que
RUSSIAN.
1817 Valville. Traits sur la contre-pointe. Obi. 4to. St. Petersbourg: In French and in Russian.] [24 copperplates. Charles Kray. 1843 Nachertarich Pravil Fechtovaljnavo iskoostva risoonkami v pyakti Fekhtovaljnavo Sochinenich Pomoshtchnika glavnavo. tchnactyahkh. Ootchitelyah Otdyailjnavo Gvardeickavo Korpoosa. 4to. Sanktpeterboorg Sokolova.
:
SPANISH.
1474
1474
Pons
(?)
[or
or Jacobus].
treatise
on the
art
of the sword.
Perpinan.
Torre (Pedro de la) [Petrus de Turri]. [Mentioned by Narvaez, Pallavicini, and MarceUi, but without sufficient
data.l
289
410
(?).
Roman
Bartolome Perez.
De la
4to.
filosofia
de
las
armas, de su destreza
Luciferi
1582 Carranza (Jeronimo de). Libro que trata de la filosofia de las armas y de su destreza y de la agresion y defension Christiana. 410. Lisbon and San Lucar de Barrameda. [Portrait of Carranza.] T599-1600 NarvAEZ (D. Luis Pacheco de). Libro de las grandezas de a Espada, en que se declaran muchos secretos del que compuso el comendador Geronimo de Carranza. En el cual cada uno ?e podra licionar y deprender a solas, sin tener necesidad de maestro que lo ensefie. 4to (80 pliegos). Madrid
J.
Iniquez de Lequerica. [Portrait of Don Luis, 2 figures and 155 diagram woodcuts in the
text.]
1600
Carranza
4to.
2nd
edition.
(Jeronimo Madrid.
de).
De
la filosofia
de las armas
&'C.
1608 Narvaez (D. Luis Pacheco de). Cien conclusiones, o formas de saber, de la verdadera destreza. fundada en ciencia, y diez y ocho contradicFolio. clones a las de la comun. Madrid Luis Sanchez,
:
1602
Narvaez (Don
destreza de las
Luis Pacheco de). Compendio de la filosofia y armas de Geronimo de Carran9a. 4to. Madrid Luis Sanchez,
:
t6i6
mihtar.
la disciplina
Madrid.
t6i8 Narvaez (Don Luis Pacheco). Carta al pnrecer acerca del libro de Geronimo de Carranfa. Mayo. 8vo. Madrid. 1623
Duque de Cea
De Madrid
diciendo su en quatro de
PizARRO
libro
Defensa del
Apologia de
8vo.
:
la destreza
de las armas.
Trujillo.
Modo facil v 1625 Narvaez (Don Luis Pacheco de) [Maestro del Rey]. nuevo para examinarse los Maestros en la destreza de las armas ventender sus cien conclusiones o formas de saber. Madrid Luis Sanchez. 8vo.
En?ai1o y desengaiio de los errores armas. Madrid. que se han querido introducir en destreza de Engano y desengano de los errores 1636 ToBAR (Don Pedro Mexia armas. Madrid. en dest'-eza de Advertencias para ensenanza 1639 Narvaez (Don Luis Pacheco de armas, destreza de a pie como a cavallo. 4to. Madrid. Epitome de ensenanza de 1639 Vfedma (Diaz y destreza
163c;
Narvaez
(D. Luis
Pacheco
la
de).
las
4to.
de).
la
las
4to.
de).
la
la
las
asi
de).
la
la filosofia
matematica de
1640 1642
4to.
las
armas.
(Luis
8vo.
Cadiz.
de).
Carmona
Cala
Mend^z
Compendio en defensa de
de).
:
la doctrina
y destreza de Carranza.
Cadiz.
4to.
Sevilla.
1658
Src.
Narvaez
edition, to
often added Adicion a la filosofia de las armas. Las diez y ocho contradicciones de la comun destreza, por el mismo autor. Ano M.DC.LX. 8vo. Zarago9a Pedro Lanaja.
2nd
which
is
de
en
las
de).
Defensa de
:
la doctrina
y destreza
1667
el
PoRRES
la
(D.
Gomez
Arrias de).
4to.
Resumen
manejo de
Espada.
Salamanca
290
1672
APPENDIX
Narvaez
de
(D. Luis
Nueva ciencia
8vo.
iilosofia
la destreza
de
Madrid.
1672 Mendoza y Quixada (Don Miguel Perez de). Principles de los cinco sujetos principales de que se compone la filosofia y matematica de las Pamplona. armas, practica y especulativa. 8vo.
Miguel Perez de) [Maestro de la desde la verdadera destreza de las armas, en treinta y ocho asserciones resumidas y advertidas con demonstraciones practicas, deducidas de las obras principales que tiene. 4to. Madrid.
1675
treza].
Resumen
Cornucopia numerosa. Alfabeto 1675 Lara (D. Caspar Agostin de). breve de principios de la verdadera destreza y filosofia de las armas colegidos de las obras de Luis Pacheco de Narvaez. 4to. Madrid.
Francisco Antonio) [Cavallero del Orden de la verdadera destreza y filosofia de las armas. Dedicado a la Sacra y Real Magestad del Rey Nuestro Sefior Don Carlos Segundo, Monarca de E'>pana y de las Indias. 4to. Madrid Antonio de Zafra. [16 copperplates.]
1675
Calitrava].
Ettenhard (Don
To the above is generally found a smaller w^ork entitled Siguese el papel de Juan Caro, en que impugna la obra con Quince Oiepciones, y la respuesta de el Autor a ellos. [i copperplate,]
:
1688 Aranda y Morentin (Antonio Arrieta). Resumen de la verdadera destreza para saber los caminos verdaderos de la batalla. 8vo. Pamplona.
Rada (Lorenz de). Respuesta filosofica y matematica en la cual se a los argumentos y proposiciones que a los profesores de la verdadera destreza y filosofia de las armas se han propuesto por un papel expedido sin
1695
satisfece
nombre
1697
d'autor.
4to.
Madrid
ano y Espanol.
Francisco Antonio de). Diestro ItaliExplican sus doctrinas con evidencias mathematicas conforme a los preceptos de la verdadera destreza y filosofia de las armas. 4to. Madrid Manuel Ruiz de Murga. [4 copperplates.]
:
1697
8vo.
Sylva
(D.
Diego Rejon
Orihuela.
la 1732 Cruzada y esgrima de espada, y con armas dobles, que aprobo don Luis Pacheco de Narvaez. y las oposieiones que dispuso en verdadera destreza de ella. 4to. Zara-
la
las
goza.
Nobleza de la espada, cuyo resplendor se 1705 Rada (Lorenz de), expresa en tres libros, segun ciencia, arte y experiencia. Folio. Madr d Diego Martinez, Abad. [16 copperplates.]
:
llustracion de la destreza Indiana (Santos de). epistola Maestro de campo Don F. Lorenz de Rada &c. &c. sobre varios discursos publica'ios por el en la que intitulo defensa de la verdadera Sacola a luz el Capitan Diego Rodriguez de Guzman destreza de las armas. Lima. 4to. &c.
1712
La Paz
oficiosa al
Carta, de la destreza de las 1724 Aznar de Polanco (Juan Claudio). &c. 4to. Madrid. armas, respuesta a un papel de titulo destreza vulgar
:
de
las
Crisol
especulativo de la destreza
1758 Perinat (D. Juan Nicolas) [Maestro de esgrima en la real academia de Cavalleros Guardias Marinas]. Arte de esgrimir florete y sable por los
principios
mas
Oblong
4to.
Cadix.
291
Principios universales y reglas 1805 Brea (Don Manuel Antonio de). generales de la verdadera destreza del espadin, segun la doctrina mixta de irancesa, italiana y espanola. Madrid Imp. Real. 4to. [18 plates.]
:
Manejo del sable. Coleccion de cuarenta disenos 1819 P. (J. V. M. de). que representan las diversas posiciones de este exercicio a caballo. Once cuad.
[40 figures
by Horace Vernet.]
1823 Thomase (Eudaldo). Tratado de esgrima d pi^ y a caballo, en que se ensena por principios el manejo del florete, 6 el juego de la espada que se usa en el dia, adornado con diez y seis laminas grabadas en cobre. 4to. Barcelona N. Dorca. [16 plates.]
:
Rolando (Guzman) [de la academia de armas]. Nuevo arte de esgrima. conforme a la practica de los mejores maestros de Europa. Aumentado y corregido por J. S. Forsyth, y traducido del ingles por un Militar Espanol.
1826
i2mo.
1830
1832
Londres
Ackermann.
la
Esgrima de
Milicias Provinciales.
Madrid
4to.
bayoneta armada, trad, del italiano pon un Oficial de Leon Amarita. 8vo.
:
Esgrima,
6 sea
la destreza
del florete.
1832
4to.
Angel).
Habana.
1832
ingles.
4to.
(F.)
del sable,
traducido del
1841
Laffargere
[Lafaugere,
compuesto por
:
celebre profesor maestro Mr. F. L. adoptado ultimamente en Francia, y traducido al Espanol por el profesor D. Antonio Marin. 8vo. Madrid Alegria y Chastain.
1849 Manual del baratero 6 arte de manejar la navaja, el cuchillo y la 8vo. iv. 54. Madrid. [Engravings in the text.] tijera de los gitanos.
El palo y el sable, 6 teori'a para el perfec1851 CoRxfis (Don Balbino). cionamiento del manejo del sable por la esgrima del palo corto en 25 lecciones. Madrid (Publicidad). [37 lithographs.] Obi. i2mo.
1854 Cucala y Brun ^ (D. Jos^) [Caballero Teniente Mayor del Reino y examinador en la ciencia filos6fica y matematica de la destreza de las armas en Tratado de esgrima. Comprende la esgrima todos los dominios de Espafia]. &c. &c. 4to. Madrid": del florete, tres guardias de sable de in^anteria
J.
Pena.
[24 plates.]
Esgrima
de la bayoneta.
8vo.
Merelo y Casademunt
colegio de infanteria].
Tratado
armados de bayoneta. 4to. Esgrima a la bayoneta, 6 manejo de dicha 1859 Marin (Don Antonio). armaaplicado a los ejercicios y maniobras de la infanteria aprobado por S. M.
(D. Jaime) [Profesor de esgrima en el de la verdadera esgrima del fusil 6 carabina Toledo: J. Lopez Fando. [2 plates.]
mandado
I'raducido
la
1862 Merelo y Casademunt (Don Jaime). Tratado completo de esgrima del sable espailol. Toledo Lopez Fando. 8vo.
:
1864
Heraud y Clavijo
que se i2mo.
trata de la Paris.
Manual de esgrima, en el (D. A., di Soria). esgrima de la espada, espada y daga, del sable y del florete, [A few figures in the text.]
fusil
1865
instruir al
soldado de infanteria en la verdadera destreza del armados de bayoneta. Toledo Fando. 8vo. [i plate.]
292
1877
del sable.
APPENDIX
Gerona
8vo.
1878 Merelo y CasaDemunt (D. Jose) [Profesor de esgrima]. Manual de esgrima, recapitulacion de las tretas mas principales que^onStituyen la verdadera esgrima del sable espaiiol y del florete. Oblong 8vo, Madrid R.
:
Labajos.
1
88 1
infanteria].
i832 la). y temas de armas blancas seguido de algunas consideraciones sobre el mismo asunto por Martinez (D. Guillermo). 4to. Madrid Gregorio Hernan.
:
DuenAS
(D.
1885
La espada.
Apuntes para su
historia
en Espana.
E, Rasco.
(Francisco). Uso de la espada en todas las naciones. SosA (Don Manuel). ^Nueva ciencia de la destreza de las armas. Labra (Rafael M.) Las armas en Madrid observaciones sobre
(?)
MiLLA
la
esgrma.
[See
'
La
ii.
p. 81.]
Manuscripts,
[T7th century.]
Ejercicios de las armas.
[i6th century.
(iv.
Garcia
(F.
Francisco).
Verdadera
a. 23)].
Los cinco libros sobre la ley de la (Jeronimo Sanchez de). de palabra 6 de obra, en que ss incluyen las verdaderas resoluciones de la honra, y los medios con que se satrsfacen las afrentas. |to. Sevilla, p. 300, 1616 Carranza (G. S. de). Discurso de armas yletras, sobre las pa^abras del proemio de la instituta del Emperador Justiniano &c, 4to, p. 28.
Carranza
Sevilla.
SiLVA (Gonzalvo
las
armas.
4to.
1750-60 (?) A. C. O. [' Un afficionado ']. Libro de armas y doctrina para resguardo de los afficionados de dicha ciencia con contras y explicaciones de toda la arte que se encierra en la espada, hecho por un afficionado. [No date or place, bound 8vo form, with engraved title-pages and 12 copperplates by A. Sant Croos. In the possession of Captain A. Hutton.J Historia de la esgrima y de los desafios 1837 Oliver (don Antonio). [In the library of D, Joaquin Maria Bover.] MS. 4to.
el
SWEDISH
1693
PoR ATH
(Diederich). Palaestra Suecana, eller den adelige FachtareFolio. Stockholm. [24 copperplates in the text.]
1843 Mentzer (T. a. v.). Svenska Kavalleriets faktning, enligt Gene8vo. Stockholm. ralen m. m. Grefve G. Lowenhjelm's method. 1843 Faktning.
!
M. ) Handbok uti Gymnastik och Bajonett Stockholm. 1857 Stromborg(N.) Gymhastik-lara, efter P. H. Ling och G. Branting 8vo. Stockholm Ostlund & Berlingska. Haftet, Faktlara.
StjerNSVARD
2
pi.
(G.
24mo.
293
:
Balck
(V.)
Nybl^.us
:
8vo.
Stockholm
figuren.
8vo.
Stockholm
1882
ur 1882
Norstedt
&
Soner.
Handbok
Instruktioni faktning och gymnastik for svenskakavaleriet. lor Kavaleriet. ] Stockholm Norstedt & Soner. 8vo,
:
[Utdrag
ToRNGREN
& Soner. ToRNGREN
(L.
M.)
Reglemente
kongk
flottan. Enligt
Tillaggsblad for reglemente i bajonett och (L. M.). [Omslagstitel Supplement for Atlas till gymnastik reglemente Stockholm Norstedt & Soner. for kongl flottan.] Folio. 6 pi.
sabelfaktning.
:
Norstedt 1882
INDEX
AMA
Amateur Athletic
its
BOX
Club,
encouragement of glove146
fighting,
*
Hode,' on wrestling, 180 quoted, Angelo, quoted, 1 1, 20, 23, 24 Appel, the, 41, 102
Assault, the, in fencing, 103
A MeryGeste of Robyn
48
the
disengage, 48;
in
to disengage
pri-
49
to
coupe or cut-over, 49
the coupe, 49
;
120; neceses-
make
the
to
counter -disengage,
49;
120
wrestling
1
counter-disengage on a change
in conjunction with,
classical
20- 122
pressure,
52
the beat,
52
125 130
the
in
caestus
or
and
to parry, 54
to parry the
at-
flanconnade,
tacks, 88
tions,
;
54; false
attacks on prepara-
middle ages, 133 ; Missot's account of its popularity in the time of George I., 133 the old
glove,
the
89
renewed attack, 90
school, 135;
listic battles,
number of
pugi-
Attitude in fencing, 2
Authorities on fencing, see
Ap-
pendix
betting in
century,
;96
INDEX
BOX
EXT
deaths
in
;
137
rarity
of
prizefights,
137
duration of
battles, 137 ; the silver age of the prize ring, 138 ; Lord
Byron's
the
proficiency,
139
Tom
no
method,
pugilism,
140
143
and decadence of
skill,
for
London
Steel'
wrestlers, 181
145
Beranger's verse,
of
;
'Cold
Cornish
(Captain
184,
Hut185,
146
in
influence
146, 147
:
amateur
clubs,
instructions
wrestling,
the art
;
use
of the feet,
148
Counter - disengage,
fencing,
the,
in
position
150;
49
methods of defence : the stop by countering, 152 ; the retreat in good order, 153 ;
ducking, 153
slipping,
;
guard w^ith the arm, 155 ; methods of attack the lead-off with the
154;
;
137
left,
157-160;
;
leading
;
off
in-light-
DilVELOPPEMENT,
ing,
the, in fenc-
combinations of
and defence, 162 ; difference between a lead-off and a counter, 163 ; a device
attack
39 Devonshire wrestling, 184, 185, 221, 225, 230 Dickens, Charles, quoted, on
wrestling, 209
with a telling
effect,
163
the
ham,
ing,
164
;
cross-counters,
165, i66
feinting
book
166
judging
on boxing, 148
*
and timing, 167 ; warnings and maxims for those with short memories and small
opportunities, 168
duties of judges
;
196
Ducking,
in
boxing, 153
the,
important
referees,
and
Engagement,
43
;
in fencing,
169 170
amateur competitions,
change
of,
Extension, the,
INDEX
297
FEI
Feints, 54
Fencers, celebrated
:
FEN
Fencing,
development
of,
of the introduction
;
of
firearms, 4
Italian
pre-eminence of
defects
7
;
men, 6
the rapier, 6
value
of
'
the
Capo Ferro,
Chiefe, 18
Ridolfo,
1
1
10
Cordelois, 28
punta sopramano,' 10; the lunge, ii rise of the French school, 12 the riposte de pied ferme,' 13 ; use of the left hand, 13 ; the German and Spanish schools,
point,
Viggiani's
'
15, 16
land,
lian
17
treatment
of Ita-
De
Liancourt, 13
Docciolini, 11
temps and
practical
cotip (Tarret^
28
:
Giganti, Nicoletto, 11
instructions
in
28
explanation
terms,
of
technical
Labat, 13
Legouve, 26, 30
Manciolino, Antonio, 9 Marozzo, Achille, 9, 31
Meyer, 10 Moncio, Pietro, 8, 243 Pacheco de Narvaez, Luis, 16 Pona de Majorca, Jayme, 8 Possellier (Gomard), 28, 244 Prevost, Pierre, 26, 28 Rocko, 17 Rocko, Jeronymo, 18
Francisco, 8, 243 St. Didier, 12
Saviolo, Vincentio, 11, 18
Silver,
Silver,
lines,
simple parries, 44
48
simple
50
51
finger-
play or doigte,
attacks
feints,
;
54
Roman,
reversed
counter-parries
poses),
(contre-op-
Toby, 18
M., 112
and
61
;
meet
these
attacks,
Viggiani, 10
how
to nullify or avoid
;
Waite,
J.
298
INDEX
FEN
LUN
Godfrey, Captain, quoted, iii,
parry
in
the
upper
lines,
63 64
40
fying
two
simple
parries,
Hamming,
Heenan,
198
66
defences
;
against
these
attacks, 68
various ways of
nullifying
parries,
reversed
;
counter-
69
modes of meet-
192
Sir William, quoted,
Hope,
meet;
71
the
Judges
of boxing, 169
Lancashire
*
wrestling,
230-
false attack,
88
attacks
'
91
time;
thrusts, 91
time-parries, 93
Left-handed fencers, 108 Legouve, M., quoted, 26, 30 Les Secrets de I'Epee,' Bazan' '
remise,
95
redoubling,
97
the
salute,
;
98
also
the
assault,
fencers,
103 108 ;
left-handed
see
under
Liement d'octave, 53
Lines, the, in fencing, 43
Litt,
Finger play, 51 Flanconnade, the, 53, 54, ^% Foil, the, how to hold, 36
William,
his
treatise
on
wrestling, 196
217
the, in fencing, 37, 40,
Lo Schermo,' 10
53
Lunge,
Glove-fighting, 144
INDEX
299
MAS
Masks, 23, 24 Milo of Croton, 176
Missot, quoted, 133
PAR
how
to frustrate
a change of
engagement,
simple
lines
;
and
avoid
the
parry in
upper
Opposition,
in fencing,
36
Paradoxe
17
:
of
Defence,' the,
the
Parries
four
;
eight simple, 44
:
which may be abandoned, 45 manner in which the four essential are made from engagement in quarte, tierce, and seconde, 46 in septime,
engaged in quarte, engaged in tierce, 63 ; how to meet these attacks : quarte, engaged in 64 ; engaged in tierce, 64 to frustrate a double engage and avoid a simple parry, 64 to frustrate a change from one high line to the other, and
63
;
;
;
nullify a
counter-parry, 64
engaged
and
47
attacks,
50
counter,
engaged
in quarte to nullify
;
parry in quarte, 59
from en;
gagement in quarte, 59 from engagement in tierce, 60 from engagement in seconde, 60 from engagement in septime, 60 ; for meeting attacks described with engagement in quarte, 61 engaged in
;
;
;
and seconde, 65 ; to avoid septime and seconde from septime, 65 ; how to meet from engagethese attacks ment in quarte to meet onetwo-three, 66 ; from engagefrom ment in tierce, 66 seconde and septime, 66 methods of nullifying a counter engaged and simple parry engaged in in quarte, 66
:
tierce,
67
defence against
these
attacks
;
quarte, 68
68
ways of
nullifying
:
re-
versed
counter-parries
in quarte,
en-
gaged
in
tierce,
61
in
how
to nullify or
:
tierce,
69
69 ; engaged methods of
:
avoid
counter-parries
enavoid
gaged
in
quarte
;
to
counter-quarte, 62
tierce
engaged
counter-
to
;
avoid
to
tierce,
62
:
how
meet these
in quarte,
tierce,
attacks
engaged
quarte,
70
;
62
engaged in
62
tierce,
71
how
engaged engaged in
:
to
meet
^PO POS
these
attacks
;
:
INDEX
PUG
in
engaged
:
Pugilists
qiiarte, 71
engaged
in tierce,
72
first,
on, 89
and wrestlers: Cocks, 228 Cooper, Ben, of Carlisle, 194, 212, 216 Cooper, Tom, 229 Copp, 227, 228 Coulthard, Richard, 220
Cribb,
Pronation, in fencing, 35
Pugilists
Tom, 139
and wrestlers
Atkinson,
(Sleagill
214
Davidson, Thomas, of Castleside, 212 Dees, 201 Dixon, John, of King's Meaburn, 219 Donald, William, 219 Donaldson, George, of Patterdale, .215
William,
Solport
Elliot,
Mill, 194
227 Broome, Harry, 140 Broughton, Jack, 135, 138 Brown, Rev. Abraham, of Egremont, 191
Bolt,
208
Jack (Mr. Tinniswood), 219 Gaffney, 227, 228 Goss, Joe, 144
Foster,
George
Cann,
Abraham,
221,
222,
Graham, John,
201, 220, 225
of
Carlisle,
227 Cann, James, 227, 228 Cannon, Tom, 235 Carkeck, 229 Carmichael, 192 Cass, William, of Loweswater,
213, 214 Caunt, Ben, 140 Chapman, Dick, of Patterdale,
202, 212, 214 Chappell, 227, 229
Haig, Jemmy, 218 Hawksworth, of Shap, 191 Heenan, 141-143, 155 Sam (Staleybridge Hurst,
Infant), 143,
Irving,-
234
of
Geordie,
Bolton
Gate, 214
Irving, John,
Clargoe, 227
220
INDEX
301
PUG
Pugilists
PUG
:
Carlisle,
Pugilists
and wrestlers
Pearce (the
Game
Chicken),
138
Perrins, 137 Perry, 228
138,
140
Pettit,
136
Pipes, 135
W., 229
"
Kennedy, Tom, of Egremont, 195, 201, 216 Kerslake, 228 Kitto, 230 Langham, Nat, 164
Polmood, 192
Pooley,
203
Pyle, 227, 228
Le
Boeuf, 235
Littledale, Rev.
Osborne, of
191,
Buttermere, 191
Longmire,
Tom,
202,
195,
216
Ridley (the Glutton), 213 Ritson, 209 Robinson, John, of Cockermouth, 201, 216
Lowden, George,
215, 230
194,
Mace, Jem, 1 43 McLauchlin, 214 Margetson, Mr. Richard, 209, 218 Mendoza, 138
Miller, 235
Rowntree, Robert, 213 Rundle, Sam, 229 Sanderson, George, 219, 220 Saunders, George, 227, 228
Sayers,
Tom,
138,
140-144,
194,
194
3o:
INDEX
PUG
:
Pugilists
and wrestlers Steadman, George, 194, 195, 200, 215 Steers, 228
TWr
ripostes,
77
ripostes with a
change of
79 80 82
line, or
with a feint
or other previous
;
movement,
quarte,
tierce,
after a parry in
after
a parry in
84 84
ripostes
with
pause
;
(ripostes a
Sabre,
*
the, 112
Saturday Review
'
on boxing,
Wormald, 143
Wrexford, 227 Wright, Dick, of Longtown,
191,
194,
195,
202,
215,
{See also
see
Appendix
QuARTE, meaning
of the word,
Sparring, 146
Stop-thrust, the, 91
35 Queensberry, Marquess
Quitting blades, 88
of,
his
Rapiers, 6
Redoubling, in fencing, 97 Remise, the, in fencing, 95 Reprise d'attaque, 90 Ripostes: the direct riposte, 75 the Bertrand riposte (tacthe au-tac) from quarte, 75
Tac-au-tac,
*
the,
75-78
;
Theorie de I'Escrime,' 28
see
Appendix
Thrust, the straight, 48 Tierce, explanation ofthe term, 35
Time-parries, 93 Time-thrusts, 91 * Tom Brown's Schooldays,'
same,
after
parryipig
tierce,
in
76
77 77
-^d
method
of meeting these
'
INDEX
USE
UsET^UL Science of Defence
(Captain Godfrey's), III
--
303
WRE
186;
falls,
buttock,
fashion,
ing,'
187
;
Swiss
'
swing-
188
Waite,
J.
188
localisation of, in
;
Eng-
Waster, the, no, in Wilson, Professor, quoted, on wrestling, 207, 208 ; his encounter with Ritson, 209
land,
popularity in the
Works on
Dutch, 248 English and American, 248 German, 267 French, 257 Italian, 280 Greek, 280 Latin, 288 Portuguese, 288 Russian, 288 ; Spanish, 288
fencing
;
Cumberland and Westmoreland style, 195 ; chips : the back-heel, 197 ; the hank,
Swedish, 292
Wrestlers
;
198
the buttock,
199
;
the
see
under Pugilists
cross-buttock,
stroke,
199
201
outside
and wrestlers
Wrestling Society, the, 217
Wrestling,
term,
definition
;
200
cross
click,
outside
;
of
ihe
click,
201
176 176
the swinging
hitch
over,
204
the
the
204
hold,
204
Proof
Milo of Croton, 176 account of the Homer's match between Ajax and
; ;
fessor
Wilson's
207, 208
account
Amblehis en-
and
Ulysses, 177
in the
;
Roman
early
counter
with
Ritson,
209
amphitheatre,
modes
prizes
in
178 England,
given,
usually
179 180
211
healthfulness
of
re-
competitions in
181
181,
London
in
the sport,
21
the
at
first
corded gathering
Carlisle,
matches
182;
at
Clerkenwell,
in
France,
*
182,
183
the contest in
It,'
As You
182;
213
Like
its
182
an anecdote
o.t
in connection therewith,
the
decadence, 183
fairs,
wakes
and
the
or
183
the revival of
art,
183
West-country
;
the loose,
217-220 establishment of Cumberland and Westmoreland Society in London, its rules and places of 217 meeting, 218; near assimilation of Devon and Cornwall match between styles, 221
;
;
185
304
INDEX
WRE
WRE
methods,
a
Western
223
;
Counties
description of the
results of unsatisfactory
;
what
fall,
constitutes
fair
back
226
;
the
Nelson, 233 and Bibby's contest in New York, 233 rules of the French
;
lists
of
system,
renowned Western wrestlers, the principal Cor229, 230 nish and Devon chips, 230
;
of
fall,
first
down
to
lose
'
style,
237
SPOTTISWOQDE AND
LONDON
DATE DUE
I
iM
;^ .
JK!v
nfC,
1 6 1981
l-tiji ^ 1991
^rf p
2 8
1
992
199?
mR
'
^;
igi
APR T
,ii
flj
i
^ual
FEy Q 1
CC
.>)
li 01
'>
DEMCO
38-29 7
l'^
^j ^}^m
5^V
,.^,
fiih
Tfci^;
it
-f^l H^^
;!??
mm-