Maciej Talaga Talaga Archaeology of Motion

Archaeology of Motion

von Maciej Talaga

Embodied Historical Research on Late-Medieval German Martial Arts from Manuscript 3227a

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Beschreibung

This book proposes archaeology of motion — a methodological framework that extends the artefact concept to bodily techniques preserved in historical recipes, enabling rigorous reconstruction of discontinued embodied practices. Drawing on Maxine Sheets-Johnstone, Timothy Ingold, Ben Spatz, Wojciech Klimczyk, Nicholai Bernstein, and James Gibson's affordance theory, while engaging seriously with sceptics including Hayden White, Kalle Pihlainen, and Eric Burkart, it grounds practice-based research in four operational principles: verifiability, longitudinity, material triangulation, and transparent documentation. The result is a methodological response to recent calls for embodied historical inquiry — including Lauren Mancia's reperformance — that addresses the verifiability problem head-on.
The framework is tested through a twelve-month longitudinal case study on manuscript 3227a, the earliest and most enigmatic Liechtenauerian fight book. New source-critical analysis yields revises dating and geographical attribution, and proposes genre reinterpretation as a martial compendium for urban laboratores-bellatores. The technical content is then reconstructed through sustained embodied practice triangulated against a catalogue of over 360 Central-European longsword finds, generating a structured inventory of 180 body techniques, elementary actions, kinetic artefacts, and underlying principles, including the system-defining concept of moße (measure).
The book addresses philosophers and theorists of history working on practice-based and embodied historiography; experimental archaeologists and scholars working in material engagement theory; anthropologists of skill acquisition and apprenticeship; and the international HEMA research community alongside specialists in late-medieval German martial culture. By offering a transferable methodological infrastructure, it opens new avenues for research on other discontinued embodied practices — artisanal, performative, ritual, or martial — and reframes bodily motion as a legitimate object of historical and archaeological inquiry.


This book proposes archaeology of motion — a methodological framework that extends the artefact concept to bodily techniques preserved in historical recipes, enabling rigorous reconstruction of discontinued embodied practices. Drawing on Maxine Sheets-Johnstone, Timothy Ingold, Ben Spatz, Wojciech Klimczyk, Nicholai Bernstein, and James Gibson's affordance theory, while engaging seriously with sceptics including Hayden White, Kalle Pihlainen, and Eric Burkart, it grounds practice-based research in four operational principles: verifiability, longitudinity, material triangulation, and transparent documentation. The result is a methodological response to recent calls for embodied historical inquiry — including Lauren Mancia's reperformance — that addresses the verifiability problem head-on.
The framework is tested through a twelve-month longitudinal case study on manuscript 3227a, the earliest and most enigmatic Liechtenauerian fight book. New source-critical analysis yields revises dating and geographical attribution, and proposes genre reinterpretation as a martial compendium for urban laboratores-bellatores. The technical content is then reconstructed through sustained embodied practice triangulated against a catalogue of over 360 Central-European longsword finds, generating a structured inventory of 180 body techniques, elementary actions, kinetic artefacts, and underlying principles, including the system-defining concept of moße (measure).
The book addresses philosophers and theorists of history working on practice-based and embodied historiography; experimental archaeologists and scholars working in material engagement theory; anthropologists of skill acquisition and apprenticeship; and the international HEMA research community alongside specialists in late-medieval German martial culture. By offering a transferable methodological infrastructure, it opens new avenues for research on other discontinued embodied practices — artisanal, performative, ritual, or martial — and reframes bodily motion as a legitimate object of historical and archaeological inquiry.


Offers the first comprehensive theoretical treatment of embodied research in the study of the past Illustrates the potential and limitations of embodied historical research with a strong case study examines bodily motion as a critical yet underexplored aspect of historical and archaeological inquiry Additional multimedia content accessible in browser or via SN More Media App

Autor*in

Maciej Talaga

Themen in »Archaeology of Motion«

New-materialist historiography Interdisciplinary embodied research Experiential archaeology and history Medieval history of the body Medieval German fight book from manuscript 3227a Medieval German technical literature Auto-ethnography in historical research

Stimmen zu »Archaeology of Motion«

Details

ISBN: 9789819240302
Verlag: Springer Singapore
Erscheinung: 19.10.2026

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