Hi guys - as some of you may know, Eleonora Litta with a little help from me produced a translation of the Getty version of Fiore dei Liberi's Fior di Battaglia some time ago and I have been working with this and presenting my interpretations for a while now.
For a long time I have talked about getting some kind of documentation for this up online. Well having come back from the outstanding Annual HEMAC Event in Dijon (where there were several ARMA members, and the main organiser, Fabrice Cognot, is also an ARMA member, incidentally) I have been totally inspired to get off my ass and do something about this!
Now, the reason I am not sticking the translation out is that Eleonora is not totally happy with it - it is totally serviceable and all clear, but she is a qualified palaeographer, philologist and linguist, not to mention a proud Italian noble, so understandably she does not want to put something out that she feels is less than perfect.
So, I have made the decision to try and put some other things out that can help the community, and of course by the end of the year Bob Charron's books will hopefully be in print, and that will no doubt help a lot of Fiore practitioners in their studies.
So how can I help?
Well firstly, I have written an article about Fior di Battaglia and Fiore and his associates for a historical arms and armour journal which is being published in conjunction with a conference in Florence, Italy. Copies of this journal can be bought here:
http://www.international-arms-and-armour-conferences.com/publication.htm Also you will find more information about the conference at that site, and you will see that besides my article on Fiore (which contains information about Fiore previously unpublished in English), there are also articles by such names as Prof Alan Williams, David Edge (Curator of Wallace Collection Armouries), Master Armourer Chris Dobson and more.
As a nugget of information that some of you may find interesting, Fiore, when he arrived in Udine to assist the townspeople in the civil war, was put in charge of the town ballista crews! He was effectively some kind of artillery officer during the war.
The other thing that I am doing which may be of interest/help to some people, is constructing an online version of the Getty treatise Fior di Battaglia. I am constructing it in the same way, and paraphrasing the translation, and also adding my own interpretations, with extra pictures to show the transitional movements. This will take a long time and be on going, but I have just started, and you can see a bit of the structure here:
http://www.fioredeiliberi.org/gallery/ So, once more unto the breach, and onward!
Matt