The War Book

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

The War Book

Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496

This opening page of 'Kriegsbuch' (war book) shows the author with his [?]guild seal and the banderole records the title and confirms the author and artist as Philipp Mönch the gun master and the year as 1496. The seventy or so illustrations in this paper manuscript probably functioned in the same way as a resume or portfolio does today - to showcase Mönch's talents and abilities for prospective employers. [If you click through to the enlarged version, you can see he's tucked an early pair of rivet spectacles into his hat]



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 a



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo d



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo k



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo b



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo c



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496 c



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496 d



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496 a



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496 b



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo e



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo j



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo h



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo i



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo


Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo g



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo f



Kriegsbuch by Philipp Mönch, 1496 duo a



Buch der stryt vnd büchßen, 1496 e



In Medieval times, gun manufacturing was something of a covert occupation because artisans with the specialist metalwork and pyrotechnical skills tended to keep the knowledge secret. So the formulae for explosive powders and the like were passed on by word of mouth to trusted apprentices and colleagues rather than being written down.

The connection of gunpowder to alchemy and, by extension, witchcraft would be a persuasive deterrent against sharing the knowledge anyway - lest the authorities mark you down as a heretic - but also, your value in the marketplace would only go down if your competitors were able to reproduce your designs and recipes. Further pressure limiting the open dissemination of gunsmith traditions came from feudal estate owners or regional warlords who would hire weapons experts as their exclusive employees in order to boost their security and power.

Philipp Mönch was a master gunsmith and most likely employed by the Elector Palatine of the Holy Roman Empire (SW Germany). His 'Kriegsbuch' obviously displays much more than just cannon and rifle designs. Specialisation was a loose concept back then and it was probably customary for anyone working with weapons to be part-engineer, part-architect, part-metalworker and part-carpenter. If this military manuscript was, in fact, Mönch's resume, it may well be embellished (he once opened an image file in MS Paint but he's saying he's actually got mad photoshop skills). Alternatively, it may simply be a record of Mönch's interests and/or designs while in the service of the Palatinate.

In either case, the sketches in his manuscript are fairly unremarkable for their time, in terms of innovation, and could easily have been adaptations from earlier works. Nevertheless it's an important contemporary record showing a range of mechanical technologies with drawbridges, gun styles, siege engines, cranes, water-wheels, rampart scalers and milling diagrams etc all featured. It was far safer to have a sketch album of your designs to show prospective patrons than it would have been to maintain a written record.

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