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Difference between revisions of "Johann Andreas Schmidt"

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| name                = Johann Andreas Schmidt
 
| name                = Johann Andreas Schmidt
 
| image                = File:JohannAndreasSchmidt.jpg
 
| image                = File:JohannAndreasSchmidt.jpg
| imagesize            = 300px
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| imagesize            = 250px
 
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| caption              =  
  
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| birthname            =  
 
| birthname            =  
 
| birthdate            = ca. 1650
 
| birthdate            = ca. 1650
| birthplace          = Uncertain, probably Germany
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| birthplace          = Marienberg, Erzgebirgskreis District, Germany
 
| deathdate            = ca. 1730
 
| deathdate            = ca. 1730
| deathplace          = Unknown, probably Germany
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| deathplace          = Tübingen, Germany
 
| occupation          = [[Fencing master]]{{#set:occupation=Fencing master}}
 
| occupation          = [[Fencing master]]{{#set:occupation=Fencing master}}
 
| nationality          =  
 
| nationality          =  
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| period              =  
 
| period              =  
 
| movement            =  
 
| movement            =  
| influences          = {{plainlist | [[Johannes Georgius Bruchius]] }}
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| influences          = {{plainlist
 +
| [[Johannes Georgius Bruchius]]
 +
| [[Johann Georg]]
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}}
 
| influenced          =  
 
| influenced          =  
  
 
| genre                = [[Fencing manual]]
 
| genre                = [[Fencing manual]]
 
| language            = [[language::Early New High German]]
 
| language            = [[language::Early New High German]]
| notableworks        =  
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| notableworks        = ''[[Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst (Johann Andreas Schmidt)|Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst]]'' (1713)
 
| archetype            =  
 
| archetype            =  
 
| manuscript(s)        =  
 
| manuscript(s)        =  
| principal manuscript(s)= ''[[Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst, Nurnberg, 1780 (Johann Andreas Schmidt)|Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst oder leichte und getreue Anweisung auf Stoss und Hieb zierlich und sicher zu fechten.]]'' (1780)
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| principal manuscript(s)=  
 
| first printed edition=  
 
| first printed edition=  
 
| wiktenauer compilation by=
 
| wiktenauer compilation by=
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| below                =  
 
}}
 
}}
'''Johann Andreas Schmidt''' was a [[century::17th century]] and [[century::18th century]] [[nationality::German]] [[fencing master]] who ran his own fencing school in the Free State of Nuremburg, Bavaria, Germany. It is not known where he was born, though it was probably in Germany in ca. 1650. Sometime after 1671 (or perhaps after 1675), Schmidt studied fencing under [[Johannes Georgius Bruchius]] at the latter's school in Amsterdam. Sometime prior to 1713, Schmidt opened his own fencing school in Nuremberg.<ref name="Schmidt">[[Johann Andreas Schmidt]]. "[http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/a65293aa-68fb-f3ac-e040-e00a180606d8 Johann Andreas Schmidt]". ''Frontpiece from Fechtbook by Johann Andreas Schmidt''. Retrieved 16 January 2016.</ref>.
+
'''Johann Andreas Schmidt''' was a [[nationality::German]] [[fencing master]] at the turn of the [[century::18th century]] who ran his own fencing school in the Free State of Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany, and practiced throughout Saxony Zöblitz. He was born in Marienberg in the Erzgebirgskreis District, Germany, in ca. 1650. Sometime after 1671 (or perhaps after 1675), Schmidt studied fencing under [[Johann Georg]] and [[Johannes Georgius Bruchius]] at the latter's school in Amsterdam. At the time, Amsterdam was an international and highly influential city and it appears that Schmidt had the good fortune of fencing with masters from Spain, Italy, France, the Netherlands and elsewhere while pursuing his fencing studies and training.<ref name="Schmidt-History">[[Johann Andreas Schmidt]]. "[http://fechtgeschichte.blogspot.de/2011/10/der-fecht-und-exercitienmeister-johann.html]". ''A history of Johann Andreas Schmidt''. Retrieved 16 January 2016.</ref>
  
In 1713, while teaching at his fencing school, Schmidt published a very extensive fencing and exercise manual entitled Gründlich lehrende Fechtschule. In its third publication, it was retitled as, ''[[Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst, Nurnberg, 1780 (Johann Andreas Schmidt)|Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst oder leichte und getreue Anweisung auf Stoss und Hieb zierlich und sicher zu fechten.]]'' ("Johann Andreas Schmidts Fencing and Retreat Masters Fencing Arts, or an easy and accurate statement on the shock and small strikes and about safety in fencing."). The original publisher of the 1713 edition is not known, but the book was republished in 1749 in Nuremberg by Ben Endterischen Conforten und Engelbrechts Wittwe, and later in 1780 in Nuremberg, the latter republishing well after Schmidt's death and done by Christoph Weigelischen Runsthandlung in 1780.
+
Schmidt's fencing skill is illustrated by a story that is told of how in 1712, on a bet of 10 ducats and armed with just a stick, he took on "six strong farmers" in Altdorf in the area of Nuremberg. He defeated them all, thus winning the bet.<ref name="Schmidt-History"/> The following year, in 1713, he set up his fencing school in Nuremberg.<ref name="Schmidt">[[Johann Andreas Schmidt]]. "[http://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/a65293aa-68fb-f3ac-e040-e00a180606d8 Johann Andreas Schmidt]". ''Frontpiece from Fechtbook by Johann Andreas Schmidt''. Retrieved 16 January 2016.</ref>
  
Schmidt's fencing manual discusses the use and fencing arts with the single [[rapier]] after the German manner, which he had learned through Bruchius, which was itself heavily influenced by the teachings of the Italian master [[Salvator Fabris]].<ref name="Reinier">[[Reinier van Noort]]. "[http://www.bruchius.com/Eng/bruchiuseng.html Johannes Georgius Bruchius]". ''School voor Historische Schermkunsten''. Retrieved 22 February 2013.</ref>   In addition, the fencing manual includes sections on exercise, performing gymnastic techniques and exercises on the pommel horse (which in historic style is depicted as being shaped like a horse with the handles -- which are even today known as pommels -- depicted as the front and back of the high saddle in 18th C. style.
+
Later he taught in Hildburghausen.  In 1721, when he challenged to fight two other fencing masters, names unknown, before Bayreuth's Marquis, Georg Wilhelm von Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1678-1726). The challenge was fought in the vestibule of the royal hall in Bayreuth and Schmidt disarmed both repeatedly, thus gaining the favor of his new patron, the Marquis of Bayreuth, who elevated him to the position of Page Fechtmeister and granted him a salary of 1,000 guilders.<ref name="Schmidt-History"/> Afterward, probably after 1726 when his patron passed away, Schmidt returned to Nuremberg to continue his teachings. Then he moved on to teach in both Stuttgart and finally in Tübingen, where he died.<ref name="Schmidt-History"/>
  
Johann Andreas Schmidts died probably around 1730, probably in Nuremberg.
+
In 1713, probably to promote his fencing school, Schmidt wrote a very extensive fencing and exercise manual entitled ''[[Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst (Johann Andreas Schmidt)|Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst]]'' ("The Body-Protecting and Enemy-Defying Art of Fencing"). The manual is dedicated to many, but first on the list is the man who is perhaps his patron, Hanns Carl Löffelholtz von Colberg. The 1713 edition was published in Nuremberg by Johann Christoph Weigel and Johann Michael Spörlin, and the book was republished in 1749, 1750, 1760 and finally 1780, all well after Schmidt's death.
 +
 
 +
Schmidt's lengthy fencing manuals (342 pages in the 1780 edition) are broadly divided into four parts. The first discusses the use and fencing arts with the single [[rapier]] after the German manner, which he had learned through Georg and Bruchius, which was itself heavily influenced by the teachings of the Italian master [[Salvator Fabris]].<ref name="Reinier">[[Reinier van Noort]]. "[http://www.bruchius.com/Eng/bruchiuseng.html Johannes Georgius Bruchius]". ''School voor Historische Schermkunsten''. Retrieved 22 February 2013.</ref> The second covers exercises by gymnastic techniques done on the pommel horse, and which in historic style is depicted in illustrations as a horse-shaped apparatus with the pommels (aka handles) being the front and back of the high saddle, itself done in 18th C. style. The third part of the manual provides more instruction on fencing techniques. Finally, the forth part provides lessons in wrestling, aka "the Ring", which portrays holds and take downs and appears to have its roots in the classic wrestling styles that accompanied teachings with the two-handed sword from the previous two centuries.<ref name="Schmidt-History"/>
 +
 
 +
Johann Andreas Schmidt died probably around 1730 in Tübingen, Germany.
  
 
== Treatise ==
 
== Treatise ==
  
A copy of the third edition of the treatise is available at the New York Public Library, where it was uncovered by modern day fencing student and instructor [[Thomas Van Hare]].  Being 374 pages long, it has been scanned and published in Google Docs and is available online at [https://books.google.de/books?id=1VICAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA202&dq=Schmidt+fechtkunst&hl=de#v=onepage&q=Schmidt%20fechtkunst&f=false Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst, Nurnberg, 1780].
+
A copy of the second edition of his treatise is available at the Bayerische StaatsBibliothek and has been scanned and published online as [http://reader.digitale-sammlungen.de/en/fs1/object/display/bsb10919114_00001.html Gründlich lehrende Fecht-Schule oder Leichte Anweisung, auf Stoß und Hieb sicher zu fechten : Nebst einem curieusen Unterricht vom Voltigieren und Ringen, Mit viel saubern darzu dienlichen Kupfern versehen, 1749].
 +
 
 +
A copy of the fifth edition of the treatise is available at the New York Public Library, where it was uncovered by modern day fencing student and instructor [[Thomas Van Hare]].  Being 374 pages long, it has been scanned and published in Google Docs and is available online at [https://books.google.de/books?id=1VICAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA202&dq=Schmidt+fechtkunst&hl=de#v=onepage&q=Schmidt%20fechtkunst&f=false Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst, Nurnberg, 1780].
  
 
== Additional Resources ==
 
== Additional Resources ==
  
 
+
{{bibliography}}
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
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[[Category:Copy/Pasting]]
 
[[Category:Copy/Pasting]]
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[[Category:Image Processing]]
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[[Category:Translation]]
  
 
[[Category:Rapier]]
 
[[Category:Rapier]]

Latest revision as of 01:37, 19 October 2023

Johann Andreas Schmidt
Born ca. 1650
Marienberg, Erzgebirgskreis District, Germany
Died ca. 1730
Tübingen, Germany
Occupation Fencing master
Influences
Genres Fencing manual
Language Early New High German
Notable work(s) Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst (1713)

Johann Andreas Schmidt was a German fencing master at the turn of the 18th century who ran his own fencing school in the Free State of Nuremberg, Bavaria, Germany, and practiced throughout Saxony Zöblitz. He was born in Marienberg in the Erzgebirgskreis District, Germany, in ca. 1650. Sometime after 1671 (or perhaps after 1675), Schmidt studied fencing under Johann Georg and Johannes Georgius Bruchius at the latter's school in Amsterdam. At the time, Amsterdam was an international and highly influential city and it appears that Schmidt had the good fortune of fencing with masters from Spain, Italy, France, the Netherlands and elsewhere while pursuing his fencing studies and training.[1]

Schmidt's fencing skill is illustrated by a story that is told of how in 1712, on a bet of 10 ducats and armed with just a stick, he took on "six strong farmers" in Altdorf in the area of Nuremberg. He defeated them all, thus winning the bet.[1] The following year, in 1713, he set up his fencing school in Nuremberg.[2]

Later he taught in Hildburghausen. In 1721, when he challenged to fight two other fencing masters, names unknown, before Bayreuth's Marquis, Georg Wilhelm von Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1678-1726). The challenge was fought in the vestibule of the royal hall in Bayreuth and Schmidt disarmed both repeatedly, thus gaining the favor of his new patron, the Marquis of Bayreuth, who elevated him to the position of Page Fechtmeister and granted him a salary of 1,000 guilders.[1] Afterward, probably after 1726 when his patron passed away, Schmidt returned to Nuremberg to continue his teachings. Then he moved on to teach in both Stuttgart and finally in Tübingen, where he died.[1]

In 1713, probably to promote his fencing school, Schmidt wrote a very extensive fencing and exercise manual entitled Leib-beschirmende und Feinden Trotz-bietende Fecht-Kunst ("The Body-Protecting and Enemy-Defying Art of Fencing"). The manual is dedicated to many, but first on the list is the man who is perhaps his patron, Hanns Carl Löffelholtz von Colberg. The 1713 edition was published in Nuremberg by Johann Christoph Weigel and Johann Michael Spörlin, and the book was republished in 1749, 1750, 1760 and finally 1780, all well after Schmidt's death.

Schmidt's lengthy fencing manuals (342 pages in the 1780 edition) are broadly divided into four parts. The first discusses the use and fencing arts with the single rapier after the German manner, which he had learned through Georg and Bruchius, which was itself heavily influenced by the teachings of the Italian master Salvator Fabris.[3] The second covers exercises by gymnastic techniques done on the pommel horse, and which in historic style is depicted in illustrations as a horse-shaped apparatus with the pommels (aka handles) being the front and back of the high saddle, itself done in 18th C. style. The third part of the manual provides more instruction on fencing techniques. Finally, the forth part provides lessons in wrestling, aka "the Ring", which portrays holds and take downs and appears to have its roots in the classic wrestling styles that accompanied teachings with the two-handed sword from the previous two centuries.[1]

Johann Andreas Schmidt died probably around 1730 in Tübingen, Germany.

Treatise

A copy of the second edition of his treatise is available at the Bayerische StaatsBibliothek and has been scanned and published online as Gründlich lehrende Fecht-Schule oder Leichte Anweisung, auf Stoß und Hieb sicher zu fechten : Nebst einem curieusen Unterricht vom Voltigieren und Ringen, Mit viel saubern darzu dienlichen Kupfern versehen, 1749.

A copy of the fifth edition of the treatise is available at the New York Public Library, where it was uncovered by modern day fencing student and instructor Thomas Van Hare. Being 374 pages long, it has been scanned and published in Google Docs and is available online at Johann Andreas Schmidts, Fecht- und Exercitienmeisters Fecht-Kunst, Nurnberg, 1780.

Additional Resources

The following is a list of publications containing scans, transcriptions, and translations relevant to this article, as well as published peer-reviewed research.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Johann Andreas Schmidt. "[1]". A history of Johann Andreas Schmidt. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  2. Johann Andreas Schmidt. "Johann Andreas Schmidt". Frontpiece from Fechtbook by Johann Andreas Schmidt. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  3. Reinier van Noort. "Johannes Georgius Bruchius". School voor Historische Schermkunsten. Retrieved 22 February 2013.