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  1. JUDICIAL DUELS BETWEEN HUSBANDS AND WIVES Allison Coudert This paper attempts to shed light on what ap pears to be a unique series of pictures from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, depicting judicial duels between husbands and wives. Judging from the illustrations, these marital combats were generally inelegant affairs of sticks

  2. Jan 18, 2023 · Between colorful scenes of intimate grappling, demonstrations of the longsword, lance, falchion, knife, and scythe, cheap tricks for outwitting your enemy, and the mournful aftermath of battle, we find men and women engaged in judicial duels.

  3. Trial by combat (also wager of battle, trial by battle or judicial duel) was a method of Germanic law to settle accusations in the absence of witnesses or a confession in which two parties in dispute fought in single combat; the winner of the fight was proclaimed to be right.

  4. Aug 23, 2024 · According to 13th and 14th-century legal treatises, judicial duels between men and women only happened in cases of notnunft.

  5. Jul 19, 2023 · It is highly unlikely that Mediæval divorce was ever settled by combat. Yet a handful of sources do mention judicial duels fought between men and women, most famously Hans Talhoffer’s Fechtbuch (‘Fight Book’) of 1467.

  6. Women in Judicial Duels. Trial By Combat between a Man and a Woman. In 1467, Hans Talhoffer wrote his Fechtbuch giving illustrated instructions on how duels with a great variety of weapons should be fought. One section deals with combats between a man a woman. R.

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  8. Nov 1, 2021 · For example, the Lex Alamannorum (Lantfridana recension 81, dated between 712 and 730 AD) prescribes a trial by combat in the event that two families dispute the boundary between their lands.

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