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== Additional Resources ==
 
== Additional Resources ==
  
* [[Roberto Gotti|Gotti, Roberto]], Daniel Jaquet. "Two late flying prints informing on the artist involved in the Opera Nova of Achille Marozzo and on the date of an original (lost) edition?" ''[[Acta Periodica Duellatorum]]'' '''4'''(1): 213-220. 2016. {{doi|10.1515/apd-2016-0007}}.
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* [[Roberto Gotti|Gotti, Roberto]], Daniel Jaquet. "Two late flying prints informing on the artist involved in the Opera Nova of Achille Marozzo and on the date of an original (lost) edition?" ''[[Acta Periodica Duellatorum]]'' '''4'''(1): 213-220. 2016. {{doi|10.1515/apd-2016-0007}}
* [[Achille Marozzo|Marozzo, Achille]] and Rapisardi, Giovanni (in Italian). ''Achille Marozzo, Opera Nova dell'Arte delle Armi''. Padova, Italy: Gladiatoria, 1999.
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* Leoni, Tom. ''Marozzo Book 1''. Lulu Press, 2018.
* [[Achille Marozzo|Marozzo, Achille]]. ''Opera nova dell'Arte delle armi''. Rome: [[Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali]], [no date].
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* Rapisardi, Giovanni (in Italian). ''Achille Marozzo, Opera Nova dell'Arte delle Armi''. Padova, Italy: Gladiatoria, 1999.
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* [[W. Jherek Swanger|Swanger, W. Jherek]]. ''The Duel, or the Flower of Arms for Single Combat, Both Offensive and Defensive, by Achille Marozzo''. Lulu Press, 2018.
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
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Revision as of 20:49, 18 May 2021

Achille Marozzo
Born 1484
San Giovanni in Persiceto, Italy
Died 1553
Bologna, Italy
Relative(s)
  • Lodovico Marozzo (father)
  • Sebastiano Marozzo (son)
Occupation Fencing master
Patron Count Guido Rangoni
Movement Dardi School
Influences
Influenced
Genres Fencing manual
Language Italian
Notable work(s) Opera Nova (1536)
Concordance by Michael Chidester
Translations

Achille Marozzo (1484-1553) was a 16th century Italian fencing master. He was born in San Giovanni in Persiceto (a possession of Bologna) to Lodovico Marozzo in 1484.[1] After moving to the city, he studied fencing after the Dardi style in the school of the great Bolognese master Guido Antonio di Luca,[2] and may thus have been an acquaintance of fellow student—and later, fellow master—Antonio Manciolino.

As a teacher, Marozzo maintained a fencing school in Bologna near the Abbey of Saints Naborre and Felice.[3] He may also have been attached to the court of the Count Guido Rangoni, another student of di Luca. In 1531 he received permission to construct a water wheel drawing water from the Reno River,[1] but the purpose of this water wheel is unclear. Marozzo's students included Giovanni Battista da i Letti, Giacomo Crafter d'Agusta, and his son Sebastiano Marozzo; the famous masters Giovanni dall'Agocchie, Angelo Viggiani dal Montone, and Mercurio Spezioli were also influenced by his teachings, though it is unclear if they actually studied in his school.

In 1536, Marozzo authored an extensive illustrated treatise on swordsmanship, dedicated to Rangoni and titled Opera Nova ("A New Work"); this seems to have become the dominant work in the Dardi or "Bolognese" school of swordsmanship, reprinted many times well into the 17th century. Achille Marozzo himself died in 1553 and is buried in Bologna at the military hospital.[1]

Treatise

Additional Resources

  • Gotti, Roberto, Daniel Jaquet. "Two late flying prints informing on the artist involved in the Opera Nova of Achille Marozzo and on the date of an original (lost) edition?" Acta Periodica Duellatorum 4(1): 213-220. 2016. doi:10.1515/apd-2016-0007
  • Leoni, Tom. Marozzo Book 1. Lulu Press, 2018.
  • Rapisardi, Giovanni (in Italian). Achille Marozzo, Opera Nova dell'Arte delle Armi. Padova, Italy: Gladiatoria, 1999.
  • Swanger, W. Jherek. The Duel, or the Flower of Arms for Single Combat, Both Offensive and Defensive, by Achille Marozzo. Lulu Press, 2018.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Marozzo Achille". Scrimipedia.com. Retrieved 2011-12-11.
  2. Marozzo, Achille. Opera Nove de Achille Marozzo Bolognese, Maestro Generale de l'Arte de l'Armi. Modena: 1536. p ii.
  3. Cullinan, Richard. "Marozzo, Achille, Opera Nova de Achille Marozzo Bolognese, Mastro Generale de l'Arte de l'Armi (Modena 1536) - Arte dell' Armi de Achille Marozzo Bolognese (Venetia 1568)". Lochac Fencing. Retrieved 2011-12-12.