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Difference between revisions of "Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino)"

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:''Opera Nova'' (Antonio Manciolino)}}
 
{{Infobox book
 
{{Infobox book
 
<!----------Name---------->
 
<!----------Name---------->
| name                      = Opera Nova
+
| name                      = ''Opera Nova''
 
| subtitle                  = [[title::A New Work]]
 
| subtitle                  = [[title::A New Work]]
 
 
<!----------Image---------->
 
<!----------Image---------->
 
| image                    = File:Opera Nova Manciolino.jpg
 
| image                    = File:Opera Nova Manciolino.jpg
| width                    =  
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| border                    =
 +
| width                    = 150px
 
| caption                  =  
 
| caption                  =  
 
 
<!----------Information---------->
 
<!----------Information---------->
| full title                = New Work by Antonio Manciolino,<br/>Bolognese, wherein are all the<br/>instructions and advantages that<br/>are to be had in the practice of<br/>arms of every sort; newly<br/>corrected and printed.
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| full title                = By Antonio Manciolino of Bologna, a new <br/>work wherein are all the instructions and <br/>advantages that are to be had in the<br/>practice of arms of every sort; newly<br/>corrected and printed.
 
| also known as            =  
 
| also known as            =  
 
| author(s)                = [[author::Antonio Manciolino]]
 
| author(s)                = [[author::Antonio Manciolino]]
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| genre                    = [[type::Fencing manual]]
 
| genre                    = [[type::Fencing manual]]
 
| sources                  =  
 
| sources                  =  
| publisher                = [[Nicolo d’Aristotile detto Zoppino]]
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| publisher                = [[Nicolo d’Aristotile]]
 
| pub_date                  = [[year::1531]]
 
| pub_date                  = [[year::1531]]
 
| first English edition    = Leoni, 2010
 
| first English edition    = Leoni, 2010
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| extant copies            =  
 
| extant copies            =  
 
| wiktenauer compilation by =  
 
| wiktenauer compilation by =  
| images                    = {{plainlist | [http://www.umass.edu/renaissance/lord/pdfs/Manciolino_1531.pdf Black and white photocopy] | [http://books.google.com/books?id{{=}}2Js8AAAAcAAJ Black and white photocopy] }}
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| images                    = {{plainlist
 +
| [http://books.google.com/books?id{{=}}2Js8AAAAcAAJ Digital scans] (1531)
 +
| [http://books.google.com/books?id{{=}}RgU8AAAAcAAJ Digital scans] (1531)
 +
| [https://www.umass.edu/renaissance/sites/default/files/assets/renaissance/lord/Manciolino_1531.pdf B&W photocopy] (1531)
 +
}}
 
| below                    =  
 
| below                    =  
 
}}
 
}}
'''Opera Nova''' ("A New Work") is a [[nationality::Italian|Bolognese]] [[fencing manual]] written by [[Antonio Manciolino]] and printed in ca. 1523,<ref>Leoni, Tommasso. ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531)''. Wheaton, IL: Freelance Academy Press, 2010. pp 11-12.</ref> and possibly the earliest printed Italian fencing treatise. Editions of the 1531 edition currently rest in the Raymond J. Lords Collection of the [[University of Massachusetts]] in Amherst, Massachusetts (USA),<ref>Call number unknown.</ref> as well as the holdings of the [[Bayerische Staatsbibliothek]] in Munich, Germany;<ref>Call number CGM 57<sup><u>n</u></sup>.</ref> the [[Bibliothèque Nationale de France]] in Paris, France;<ref>Call number R-24858.</ref> and the [[Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Roma]] in Rome, Italy.<ref>Call number unknown.</ref> This treatise is important as it is the earliest work currently known from the [[Filippo di Bartolomeo Dardi|Dardi]] (Bolognese) style of Italian swordsmanship.  
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'''''Opera Nova''''' ("A New Work") is a [[nationality::Italian|Bolognese]] [[fencing manual]] written by [[Antonio Manciolino]] and printed in ca. 1523,<ref name="date">Leoni pp 11-12.</ref> and possibly the earliest printed Italian fencing treatise. This treatise is important as it is the earliest work currently known from the [[Filippo di Bartolomeo Dardi|Dardi]] (Bolognese) style of Italian swordsmanship.  
  
 
== Publication History ==
 
== Publication History ==
  
''Opera Nova'' was printed in Venice in 1531 by [[Nicolo d’Aristotile detto Zoppino]]. An earlier edition seems to have been written in 1523 and printed some time thereafter, but no copies of any such earlier printing are known to exist. There also don't seem to have been any further printings of this text until the first modern Italian translation was released in 2008; this was followed by a new edition of the original text published in 2009 by [[Steven Reich]]. In 2010, Manciolino's treatise was translated into English and published by Tommasso Leoni.
+
''Opera Nova'' was printed in Venice in 1531 by [[Nicolo d’Aristotile detto Zoppino]]. Based on historical details in the text, it seems to have been written in 1523, and thus an earlier edition may have been printed around that time; no copies of the original manuscript or any print editions prior to 1531 are known to exist.<ref name="date"/> In 2009, a second edition was self-published by [[Steven Reich]], who retitled it ''Antonio Manciolino's 1531 Treatise on Bolognese Swordsmanship''.
 +
 
 +
In 2008, a modern Italian translation was published Rome by [[Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali]] under the title ''Opera Nova (1531)''.
 +
 
 +
In 2010, Manciolino's treatise was translated into English by Tom Leoni and published by [[Freelance Academy Press]] as ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531)''. A second English translation was self-published by W. Jherek Swanger in 2021 under the title ''How to Fight and Defend with Arms of Every Kind, by Antonio Manciolino''.
  
 
== Contents ==
 
== Contents ==
  
{| class="wikitable treatise"
+
{| class="treatise"
 
|-  
 
|-  
! id="page" | Page
+
! id="page" | [[Antonio Manciolino|1r - 6v]]
! Section
+
| Introduction
 
 
|-
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|1r - 6v]]
 
| Introduction by Antonio Manciolino
 
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|7r - 19r]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|7r - 19r]]
| First Book by Antonio Manciolino
+
| First Book
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|19v - 19v]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|19v - 19v]]
| Second Book by Antonio Manciolino
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| Second Book
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|30r - 37v]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|30r - 37v]]
| Third Book by Antonio Manciolino
+
| Third Book
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|38r - 49r]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|38r - 49r]]
| Fourth Book by Antonio Manciolino
+
| Fourth Book
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|49r - 58r]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|49r - 58r]]
| Fifth Book by Antonio Manciolino
+
| Fifth Book
  
 
|-  
 
|-  
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|58r - 63v]]
 
! [[Antonio Manciolino|58r - 63v]]
| Sixth Book by Antonio Manciolino
+
| Sixth Book
  
 
|}
 
|}
  
 
== Gallery ==
 
== Gallery ==
 
+
{{-}}
{{image|Manciolino 1.jpg|Cover}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 1.jpg|Title}}
{{image|Manciolino 2.jpg|Introduction}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 2.jpg|Introduction}}
{{image|Manciolino 3.jpg|Chapter 1}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 3.jpg|Chapter 1}}
{{image|Manciolino 4.jpg|Chapter 2}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 4.jpg|Chapter 2}}
{{image|Manciolino 5.jpg|Chapter 3}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 5.jpg|Chapter 3}}
{{image|Manciolino 6.jpg|Chapter 4}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 6.jpg|Chapter 4}}
{{image|Manciolino 7.jpg|Chapter 5}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 7.jpg|Chapter 5}}
{{image|Manciolino 8.jpg|Chapter 6}}
+
{{image|h=1|Manciolino 8.jpg|Chapter 6}}
{{image|Manciolino 9.jpg|Conclusion}}
+
{{image|Manciolino 9.jpg|Printer's mark}}
  
 
== Additional Resources ==
 
== Additional Resources ==
  
* Leoni, Tommasso. ''The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531).'' Wheaton, IL: [[Freelance Academy Press]], 2010. ISBN 978-0-9825911-3-0
+
{{bibliography}}
* [[Antonio Manciolino|Manciolino, Antonio]]. ''Antonio Manciolino's 1531 Treatise on Bolognese Swordsmanship.'' Transcribed [[Steven Reich]]. [http://www.lulu.com/product/paperback/antonio-manciolino/5591635 Lulu.com], 2009.
 
* Manciolino, Antonio (in Italian). ''Opera Nova (1531).'' Rome: [[Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali]], 2008. ISBN 978-8884741769
 
  
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
  
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
 +
 +
== Copyright and License Summary ==
 +
 +
For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the [[Talk:{{PAGENAME}}|discussion page]].
 +
 +
<section begin="sourcebox"/>{{sourcebox header}}
 +
{{sourcebox
 +
| work        = Images
 +
| authors    =
 +
| source link =
 +
| source title= [[:File:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf]]
 +
| license    = public domain
 +
}}
 +
{{sourcebox
 +
| work        = Transcription
 +
| authors    = [[transcriber::Steven Reich]]
 +
| source link =
 +
| source title= [[Index:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf|Index:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino)]]
 +
| license    = copyrighted
 +
}}
 +
{{sourcebox footer}}<section end="sourcebox"/>
  
 
[[Category:Treatises]]
 
[[Category:Treatises]]

Latest revision as of 22:29, 18 October 2023

Opera Nova
A New Work
Opera Nova Manciolino.jpg
Full title By Antonio Manciolino of Bologna, a new
work wherein are all the instructions and
advantages that are to be had in the
practice of arms of every sort; newly
corrected and printed.
Author(s) Antonio Manciolino
Illustrated by Unknown
Dedicated to Don Luisi de Cordola
Place of origin Venice, Italy
Language Italian
Genre(s) Fencing manual
Publisher Nicolo d’Aristotile
Publication date 1531
First english
edition
Leoni, 2010
Pages 63 pages
Treatise scans

Opera Nova ("A New Work") is a Bolognese fencing manual written by Antonio Manciolino and printed in ca. 1523,[1] and possibly the earliest printed Italian fencing treatise. This treatise is important as it is the earliest work currently known from the Dardi (Bolognese) style of Italian swordsmanship.

Publication History

Opera Nova was printed in Venice in 1531 by Nicolo d’Aristotile detto Zoppino. Based on historical details in the text, it seems to have been written in 1523, and thus an earlier edition may have been printed around that time; no copies of the original manuscript or any print editions prior to 1531 are known to exist.[1] In 2009, a second edition was self-published by Steven Reich, who retitled it Antonio Manciolino's 1531 Treatise on Bolognese Swordsmanship.

In 2008, a modern Italian translation was published Rome by Il Cerchio Iniziative Editoriali under the title Opera Nova (1531).

In 2010, Manciolino's treatise was translated into English by Tom Leoni and published by Freelance Academy Press as The Complete Renaissance Swordsman: Antonio Manciolino’s Opera Nova (1531). A second English translation was self-published by W. Jherek Swanger in 2021 under the title How to Fight and Defend with Arms of Every Kind, by Antonio Manciolino.

Contents

1r - 6v Introduction
7r - 19r First Book
19v - 19v Second Book
30r - 37v Third Book
38r - 49r Fourth Book
49r - 58r Fifth Book
58r - 63v Sixth Book

Gallery


Title
Manciolino 1.jpg
Introduction
Manciolino 2.jpg
Chapter 1
Manciolino 3.jpg
Chapter 2
Manciolino 4.jpg
Chapter 3
Manciolino 5.jpg
Chapter 4
Manciolino 6.jpg
Chapter 5
Manciolino 7.jpg
Chapter 6
Manciolino 8.jpg
Printer's mark
Manciolino 9.jpg

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 Leoni pp 11-12.

Copyright and License Summary

For further information, including transcription and translation notes, see the discussion page.

Work Author(s) Source License
Images File:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino) 1531.pdf
Public Domain.png
Transcription Steven Reich Index:Opera Nova (Antonio Manciolino)
Copyrighted.png