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1st Class English Literature Dissertation

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I was awarded a first class mark for my double dissertation in English Literature at Durham University. This dissertation is 50 pages with in depth analysis of plays including Romeo and Juliet and Twelfth Night.












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Uploaded on
December 21, 2020
Number of pages
51
Written in
2018/2019
Type
Thesis
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‘Draw, if you be men’: Duelling in Renaissance Drama


2018/2019

Z0971022

12,025 words

, Contents

Illustrations 2


Introduction 3


Chapter 1: ‘Your reputation lies at his mercy’: The Judicial Duel 9


Chapter 2: ‘Let us take the law of our sides’: The Extra-legal Duel 16


Chapter 3: ‘I’ll be your foil, Laertes’: Duelling for Sport 25


Chapter 4: ‘Draw upon a woman? Why, what dost mean’: Women and Duelling 31


Conclusion 37


Bibliography 41




1

, Illustrations


Figure 1- Victoria and Albert Museum, V & A Search the Collections (2017)
www.collections.vam.ac.uk [accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 2- Victoria and Albert Museum, V & A Search the Collections (2017)
www.collections.vam.ac.uk [accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 3- Thomas Middleton and William Rowley, A Fair Quarrel (London: n.p., 1627).


Figure 4- Vincentio Saviolo, His Practise: In Two Bookes (London: John Wolfe, 1595).


Figure 5- Victoria and Albert Museum, V & A Search the Collections (2017)
www.wallacecollection.org.uk [accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 6- The Wallace Collection, The Collection (2019) www.wallacecollection.org.uk
[accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 7- The Wallace Collection, The Collection (2019) www.wallacecollection.org.uk
[accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 8- The Wallace Collection, The Collection (2019) www.wallacecollection.org.uk
[accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 9- Vincentio Saviolo, His Practise: In Two Bookes (London: John Wolfe, 1595).


Figure 10- Victoria and Albert Museum, V & A Search the Collections (2017)
www.collections.vam.ac.uk [accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 11- Victoria and Albert Museum, V & A Search the Collections (2017)
www.collections.vam.ac.uk [accessed 4 March 2019].


Figure 12- Thomas Dekker, The Roaring Girl (London: Nicholas Okes, 1611).


2

, Introduction

What was Duelling in Renaissance Drama?



Duel, from the Italian duello and Latin duellum (duo meaning two and bellum meaning war)1

is a form of sword fighting originating in Europe during the late medieval period. Young

aristocratic men travelled abroad to receive an education, which often included sword

fighting. Upon their return they brought these skills back to England. Continental sword

fighting gained prominence in England as foreign fencing masters such as Rocco Bonetti and

Vincentio Saviolo established schools in London in the latter part of the 16th century.

However, it was not just continental masters that established schools in London, as the

Fencing Teachers’ Guild and Corporation of Masters of the Noble Science of Defence taught

an anglicized version of continental technique. Alongside these schools, fencing manuals

entered circulation as fencing masters of different nationalities outlined their guidelines for

the correct practice for duelling. These opinions often differed, illustrating an interplay

between different nationalities, for example apparent in Vincent Saviolo’s His Practise, 1595,

George Silver’s Paradoxes of Defence, 1599, and Girard Thibault’s De L’Espée 1628.

Prior to the arrival of these continental masters in England, a variety of weaponry had

been used when duelling, these included the small sword, sword and buckler, broadsword,

rapier, longsword, and dagger. However, as continental styles influenced English sword

fighting the traditional sword and buckler and broadsword were abandoned in favour of the

lighter and more agile rapier. This led to an upsurge in street violence as an increasing

number of people were carrying weapons. However, the rapier was primarily only used by

noblemen or members of the gentry as it was expensive to purchase and difficult to procure

as rapiers were often produced abroad. Therefore, rapiers became a symbol of wealth,


1
Oxford English Dictionary, duel (2016) http://www.oed.com [accessed 12 February 2019].

3
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