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  2. Rapier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rapier

    A rapier (/ ˈreɪpiər /) or espada ropera ('dress sword') is a type of sword originally used in Spain [1] and Italy [citation needed]. The name designates a sword with a straight, slender and sharply pointed two-edged long blade wielded in one hand. [2] It was widely popular in Western Europe throughout the 16th and 17th centuries as a symbol ...

  3. SCA Rapier Combat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCA_Rapier_Combat

    SCA Rapier Combat. Rapier combat is a style of historical fencing practiced in the Society for Creative Anachronism (SCA). The primary focus is to study, replicate and compete with styles of rapier sword-fighting found in Europe during the Renaissance period, using blunted steel swords and a variety of off-hand defensive items.

  4. Salvator Fabris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salvator_Fabris

    Salvator Fabris. Salvator Fabris (1544-1618) was an Italian fencing master from Padua. During his life he taught in various European countries, most notably in Denmark where he was the fencing instructor of King Christian IV. [1] It was during his time in Copenhagen that he published his treatise on rapier fencing, Lo Schermo, overo Scienza d ...

  5. Historical European martial arts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_European...

    Historical European martial arts. The first page of the Codex Wallerstein shows the typical arms of 15th-century individual combat, including the longsword, rondel dagger, messer, sword -and- buckler, voulge, pollaxe, spear, and staff. Historical European martial arts (HEMA) are martial arts of European origin, particularly using arts formerly ...

  6. History of fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_fencing

    The English term fencing, in the sense of "the action or art of using the sword scientifically" (OED), dates to the late 16th century, when it denoted systems designed for the Renaissance rapier. It is derived from the latinate defence (while conversely, the Romance term for fencing, scherma, escrima are derived from the Germanic (Old Frankish ...

  7. German school of fencing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_school_of_fencing

    The German school of fencing (Deutsche Schule; Kunst des Fechtens[a]) is a system of combat taught in the Holy Roman Empire during the Late Medieval, German Renaissance, and early modern periods. It is described in the contemporary Fechtbücher ("fencing books") written at the time. The geographical center of this tradition was in what is now ...

  8. Ridolfo Capo Ferro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ridolfo_Capo_Ferro

    Ridolfo Capo Ferro da Cagli (Ridolfo Capoferro, Rodulphus Capoferrus) was an Italian fencing master in the city of Siena, best known for his rapier fencing treatise published in 1610. He seems to have been born in the town of Cagli in the Duchy of Urbino (nowadays Province of Pesaro e Urbino ), but was active as a fencing master in Siena ...

  9. Gérard Thibault d'Anvers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gérard_Thibault_d'Anvers

    Gérard Thibault d'Anvers. Chapter 43, Plate XII of Académie de l'Espée, describing the correct way to fight a left-handed swordsman. Gérard (or Girard) Thibault of Antwerp (ca. 1574–1627) [1] was a fencing master and writer of the 1628 rapier manual Academie de l'Espée. Thibault was from the Southern Netherlands which is today Belgium.