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The '''Codex Guelf 125.16 Extravagantes''' was copied in the late 17th century{{cn}} from the [[Talhoffer Fechtbuch (2º Cod.MS.Philos.61)|2º Codex MS Philos. 61]], a [[nationality::German]] [[fencing manual]] based on treatises by [[Hans Talhoffer]]. The original currently rests in the holdings of [[Herzog-August Bibliothek]] in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. Aside from the writings of Talhoffer, the work is also significant due to its reference to the [[Walpurgis Fechtbuch (MS I.33)|MS I.33]], to which the scribe appears to have had access.<ref>See [[:FFile:Cod.Guelf.125.16.Extrav. 45r.jpg|folio 45r]].</ref>
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The '''Codex Guelf 125.16 Extravagantes''' was copied in the late 17th century{{cn}} from the [[Talhoffer Fechtbuch (2º Cod.MS.Philos.61)|2º Codex MS Philos. 61]], a [[nationality::German]] [[fencing manual]] based on treatises by [[Hans Talhoffer]]. The original currently rests in the holdings of [[Herzog-August Bibliothek]] in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. Aside from the writings of Talhoffer, the work is also significant due to its reference to the [[Walpurgis Fechtbuch (MS I.33)|MS I.33]], to which the scribe appears to have had access.<ref>See [[:File:Cod.Guelf.125.16.Extrav. 45r.jpg|folio 45r]].</ref>
  
 
== Provenance ==
 
== Provenance ==

Revision as of 21:21, 16 October 2014

Talhoffer Fechtbuch
Cod.Guelf.125.16.Extrav., Herzog-August Bibliothek
Wolfenbüttel, Germany

Cod.Guelf.125.16.Extrav. 01r.jpg
ff 21v - 22r
HagedornLeng
Wierschin46Hils55
Type
Date late 1600s
Language(s) Early New High German
Author(s) Hans Talhoffer
Scribe(s) Unknown
Illustrator(s) Unknown
Material Paper
Size 46 folia
Format Double-sided, illustrations on the recto side
Script Cursive
Exemplar(s) MS I.33 (1320s)
2º Cod.MS.Philos.61 (1600s)
External data Library catalog entry
Treatise scans Digital images (1700x2250)

The Codex Guelf 125.16 Extravagantes was copied in the late 17th century[citation needed] from the 2º Codex MS Philos. 61, a German fencing manual based on treatises by Hans Talhoffer. The original currently rests in the holdings of Herzog-August Bibliothek in Wolfenbüttel, Germany. Aside from the writings of Talhoffer, the work is also significant due to its reference to the MS I.33, to which the scribe appears to have had access.[1]

Provenance

Contents

[Forthcoming]

Gallery

Digital images available for import.

Additional Resources

References

  1. See folio 45r.