Lybrary.comEllis Stanyon (1870-01-08 - 1951-09-02)Lybrary.com Ebook Readers: Sony PRS-505, Sony PRS-700, Amazon Kindle, iRex iLiad, Bookeen Cybook, Astak Mentor
   Top » Catalog » Non-Fiction » History » Renaissance » Fencing: A Renaissance Treatise My Account  |  Cart Contents |  Checkout   
Search
 
Advanced Search
Categories
Chess->
Gambling->
Games->
Juggling
Magic->

Free Ebooks and Articles

Non-Fiction->
  Antiques & Collectibles->
  Architecture->
  Art->
  Bibles->
  Biography & Autobiography->
  Bluegrass->
  Body, Mind & Spirit->
  Business & Economics->
  Computers->
  Cooking->
  Crafts & Hobbies->
  Design
  Drama->
  Education->
  Family & Relationships->
  Foreign Language Study->
  Games->
  Gardening->
  Health & Fitness->
  History->
    Africa->
    Americas (North Central South West Indies)
    Ancient->
    Asia->
    Australia & New Zealand
    Canada
    Caribbean & West Indies->
    Civilization
    Eastern Europe->
    Essays
    Europe->
    Expeditions & Discoveries
    Historical Geography
    Historiography
    Holocaust
    Jewish
    Latin America->
    Maritime History
    Medieval
    Middle East->
    Military->
    Modern->
    Native American
    North American
    Polar Regions
    Reference
    Renaissance
    Revolutionary
    Social History
    Study & Teaching
    United States->
    Western Europe
    World->
  House & Home->
  Humor->
  Juvenile Nonfiction->
  Language Arts & Disciplines->
  Law->
  Literary Collections->
  Literary Criticism->
  Mathematics->
  Medical->
  Music->
  Nature->
  Non-Classifiable
  Performing Arts->
  Periodicals->
  Pets->
  Philosophy->
  Photography->
  Poetry->
  Political Science->
  Psychology->
  Reference->
  Religion->
  Science->
  Self->
  Social Science->
  Software
  Sports & Recreation->
  Study Aids->
  Technology->
  Transportation->
  Travel->
  True Crime->
  Video & DVD Genre->
  -German-
  -Spanish-
Fiction->
Arthur Dailey Photos->
Ernest Hemingway
Numismatics
Navigation Aids
Authors
Publishers
Product List (text only)
Site Map & Catalog PDFs
Author Info
Other products
Featured Ebooks
Card College Lightest
Card College Lightest


Silent Running
Silent Running


Workers Series
Workers Series


Tarbell Course
Tarbell Course


Information
Newsletters
News Blog
FAQ
Tips on Site Usage
Testimonials
Advertisement
Policies
Contact Us
About Us
Reviews more
Write a review on this product!
Shopping Cart more
0 items

Fencing: A Renaissance Treatise

$10.00 
by Camillo Agrippa
What is this?DRM-PDF | by download  
Fencing: A Renaissance Treatise

Camillo Agrippa's widely influential Treatise on the Science of Arms was a turning point in the history of fencing. The author - an engineer by trade and not a professional master of arms - was able to radically re-imagine teaching the art of fencing.

Agrippa's treatise is the fundamental text of Western swordsmanship. Just as earlier swordsmanship can be better understood from Agrippa's critiques, so too was his book the starting point for the rapier era. Every other treatise of the early-modern period had to deal explicitly or implicitly with Agrippa's startling transformation of the art and science of self-defense with the sword. Likewise, all of the fundamental ideas that are still used today - distance, time, line, blade opposition, counterattacks and countertime - are expressed in this paradigm-shifting treatise. This is a work that should be on the bookshelf of anyone interested in the history, practice or teaching of fencing.

His treatise was also a microcosm of sixteenth-century thought. It examines the art, reduces it to its very principles, and reconstructs it according to a way of thinking that incorporated new concepts of art, science and philosophy.

Contained within this handy volume are concrete examples of a new questioning of received wisdom and a turn toward empirical proofs, hallmarks of the Enlightenment. The treatise also presents evidence for a redefinition of elite masculinity in the wake of the military revolution of the sixteenth century. At the same time, is offers suggestive clues to the place of the hermetic tradition in the early-modern intellectual life and its implications for the origins of modern science.

Camillo Agrippa's Treatise on the Science of Arms was first published in Rome in 1553 by the papal printer Antonio Blado. The original treatise was illustrated with 67 engravings that belong to the peak of Renaissance design. They are reproduced here in full.

"Mondschein has at last made available to English-speaking readers one of the most important texts in the history of European martial arts. Agrippa marks a turning point in the intellectual history of these arts... Mondschein's introduction to his work helps the reader understand Agrippa - and the martial practices themselves - as pivotal agents in the evolving cultural and intellectual systems of the sixteenth century.

Above all, Mondschein's translation is refreshingly clean and idiomatic, rendering the systematic clarity of the Italian original into equally clear modern English - evidence of the author's familiarity with modern fencing and understanding of the physical realities that his author is trying to express. Mondschein's contextualization of his topic points the way for future scholarly exploration, and his translation will doubtless be valued by both students of cultural history and practitioners of modern sword arts." - Dr. Jeffrey L. Forgeng, Paul S. Morgan Curator-Higgins Armory Museum, Adj. Assoc. Prof. of Humanities, Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Introduction, glossary, notes, bibliography, 67 illustrations, 234 pp.

Ebook Details
Pages: 234
Size: 11.5 MB
Publisher: Italica Press, Inc.
Date published:  Nov 2009
ISBN: 978-1599101507

DRM Settings
Copying:not allowed
Printing:not allowed
Read Aloud:  not allowed

This product is listed in the following categories:

Non-Fiction > Sports & Recreation > Martial Arts
Non-Fiction > Sports & Recreation > History
Non-Fiction > History > Renaissance

If you find anything wrong with this product listing, perhaps the description is wrong, the author is incorrect, or it is listed in the wrong category, then please contact us. We will promptly address your feedback.
No reviews available. Write Review