Grenades, projectiles, fireworks and offensive weaponry
illustrations from a 16th century German manuscript
Beyond the novel inclusion of our rocket bird and turbo cat - up top - this 1584 treatise on explosive devices appears to illustrate weaponry seen in earlier manuscripts and offers no new technologies for the Renaissance commando types.
The sketches show various types of barrel bombs, hand grenades, nasty fragmentation/shrapnel explosives, cannons,
- Ms. Codex 109 ('Feuer Buech' or 'Feuerwerkbuch' - Fireworks Book) is an anonymous paper manuscript of ~230 leaves, including more than 30 colour sketches, hosted online in full by the University of Pennsylvania Libraries.
- The accompanying bibliographic description notes that the manuscript contents bears similarities with a Berlin work from the 1420s.
- Previously: Combat -- includes a number of similar illustrated Renaissance/Medieval military manuscripts and books (particularly: Artillery Firepower from a few decades later)
- Note: the images above are cropped slightly and a modest amount of background staining has been removed.
- ADDIT (Jan 2013) - @MitchFraas observes: "Here's another lovely explosive cat+bird illus. from a different Penn Ms. http://twitpic.com/bxgle8 "
- UPDATE !!: See: A Rocket Cat? Early Modern Explosives Treatises at Penn --> Mitch Fraas from the University of Pennsylvania Libraries has gathered together all the information that has surfaced since the Rocket Cat image (or Turbo Cat, as I originally dubbed it) careened around the interwebs. [Unique at Penn : blog homepage]
- Elsewhere: Twitter -<>- Delicious -<>- Pinboard.
Wow, Amazing.
ReplyDeleteI love everything about the slightly startled guy on page 55v. The right hand, the pursed lips...
ReplyDelete..not to forget the fashionable tissue carrying pockets in the sleeves!
ReplyDeleteI thing the first picture actually depicts animal borne bombs to bring down a castle. the caption says "ein schloss mit meiner[?] katzen[?] anzüge zündten"- something about using a cat to attack a castle?
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure if those are throwing stars. I think they may be caltrops.
ReplyDeletehttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caltrop
Added above, thanks J-M W.
ReplyDeleteit's really amazing to see the amount of time and effort that went in to making books during this time compared to how simple and mechanized the process is now.
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure that's Streaky, Supergirl's cat.
ReplyDeleteI think you're right Anthony L.
ReplyDeleteI read it as "Ein Schlosse mit E[?]iner Katzen an zue zündten."
That translates roughly to: "To ignite a castle with a cat"
Fun fact, one of the myths that may or may not be true about Ghengis Khan is that when laying siege to a city, he told the city that all he wanted was a "tribute of cats and birds" and once the animals were sent out he did just this- lighting them on fire and releasing them to run right back into the city.
ReplyDelete@det teoretiske mennesket
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure it says "Ein Schloß mit Ainer Katzen an zür zündten", which would probably be rendered something like "Ein Schloß mit einer Katzen an zu zünden" in Modern German. (Yeah, yeah, actually Schloss in the more recent spelling.) Wikipedia has a picture of some blackletter typefaces for comparison: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gebrochene_Schriften.png
@det:
ReplyDeleteOn closer inspection of the bigger version I have to agree that it says züe. Also I suppose it actually says Schloſß (Schlosß), but definitely not Schlosse. :P
In fact, it seems to me that this book was well-known before: Heidelberg digital library has it and also there is an edition by Rainer Leng devoted to "Buch von den probierten Künsten". If I am wrong please tell me.
ReplyDelete