Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album

The Thun-Hohenstein album, long-known as the Thun’sche Skizzenbuch, is a bound collection of 112 drawings that visualize armoured figures at rest and in combat, as well as empty armours arrayed in pieces. The collection gathers drawings that span the period from the 1470s to around 1590. While most...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kirchhoff Chassica
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bern Open Publishing 2018-06-01
Series:Acta Periodica Duellatorum
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/apd.2018.6.issue-1/apd-2018-0001/apd-2018-0001.xml?format=INT
id doaj-b58c932527a4495cad45859cf93f660a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b58c932527a4495cad45859cf93f660a2020-12-02T03:14:18ZengBern Open PublishingActa Periodica Duellatorum2064-04042018-06-016134510.2478/apd-2018-0001apd-2018-0001Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein AlbumKirchhoff Chassica0The University of KansasThe Thun-Hohenstein album, long-known as the Thun’sche Skizzenbuch, is a bound collection of 112 drawings that visualize armoured figures at rest and in combat, as well as empty armours arrayed in pieces. The collection gathers drawings that span the period from the 1470s to around 1590. While most of the images were executed in Augsburg during the 1540s, the album’s three oldest drawings date to the late-fifteenth century. Two of these works, which form a codicological interlude between the first and second quires, find parallels in the illustrations of contemporaneous martial treatises. This article traces the pictorial lineages of these atextual images through comparative analyses of fight books produced in the German-speaking lands, and considers how the representational strategies deployed in martial treatises inflected the ways that book painters and their audiences visualized the armoured body. This exploration situates a manuscript from which one of the drawings derives, Peter Falkner’s Art of Knightly Defense, now in Vienna, within the Augsburg book painters’ workshops that would later give rise to the Thun album. Finally, this study considers how the transmission and representation of martial knowledge in late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century Augsburg contributed to the later depictions of armoured bodies that populate the album.http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/apd.2018.6.issue-1/apd-2018-0001/apd-2018-0001.xml?format=INTThun-Hohenstein albumfight booksFechtbuchcodicologymanuscript studiesbook paintingcomparative analysisimage and memorycollecting
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kirchhoff Chassica
spellingShingle Kirchhoff Chassica
Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
Acta Periodica Duellatorum
Thun-Hohenstein album
fight books
Fechtbuch
codicology
manuscript studies
book painting
comparative analysis
image and memory
collecting
author_facet Kirchhoff Chassica
author_sort Kirchhoff Chassica
title Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
title_short Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
title_full Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
title_fullStr Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
title_full_unstemmed Visualizing the Fight Book Tradition: Collected Martial Knowledge in the Thun-Hohenstein Album
title_sort visualizing the fight book tradition: collected martial knowledge in the thun-hohenstein album
publisher Bern Open Publishing
series Acta Periodica Duellatorum
issn 2064-0404
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The Thun-Hohenstein album, long-known as the Thun’sche Skizzenbuch, is a bound collection of 112 drawings that visualize armoured figures at rest and in combat, as well as empty armours arrayed in pieces. The collection gathers drawings that span the period from the 1470s to around 1590. While most of the images were executed in Augsburg during the 1540s, the album’s three oldest drawings date to the late-fifteenth century. Two of these works, which form a codicological interlude between the first and second quires, find parallels in the illustrations of contemporaneous martial treatises. This article traces the pictorial lineages of these atextual images through comparative analyses of fight books produced in the German-speaking lands, and considers how the representational strategies deployed in martial treatises inflected the ways that book painters and their audiences visualized the armoured body. This exploration situates a manuscript from which one of the drawings derives, Peter Falkner’s Art of Knightly Defense, now in Vienna, within the Augsburg book painters’ workshops that would later give rise to the Thun album. Finally, this study considers how the transmission and representation of martial knowledge in late fifteenth- and early sixteenth-century Augsburg contributed to the later depictions of armoured bodies that populate the album.
topic Thun-Hohenstein album
fight books
Fechtbuch
codicology
manuscript studies
book painting
comparative analysis
image and memory
collecting
url http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/apd.2018.6.issue-1/apd-2018-0001/apd-2018-0001.xml?format=INT
work_keys_str_mv AT kirchhoffchassica visualizingthefightbooktraditioncollectedmartialknowledgeinthethunhohensteinalbum
_version_ 1724409743219359744