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3 July 2025
- 11:5611:56, 3 July 2025 Sui iuris (hist | edit) [14,126 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Concept in jurisprudence}} {{Italic title}} {{Redirect|Church sui iuris||Catholic particular churches and liturgical rites}} {{distinguish|suo jure}}{{more citations needed|date=March 2023}} '''''Sui iuris''''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|s|u:|aɪ|_|ˈ|dʒ|ʊər|ɪ|s}}), also spelled '''''sui juris''''', is a Latin phrase that literally means "of one's own right".<ref>{{cite web|title=Collins English Dictionary |publisher=HarperCollins Publishers|url=https://w...")
- 11:5611:56, 3 July 2025 Canon law of the Catholic Church (hist | edit) [46,088 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Catholic religious laws and principles}} {{For outline|Outline of Catholic canon law}} {{Canon Law}} The '''canon law of the Catholic Church''' ({{ety|la|ius canonicum}}<ref>Black's Law Dictionary, 5th Edition, p. 771: "Ius canonicum"</ref>) is "how the Church organizes and governs herself".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.simplycatholic.com/introduction-to-canon-law/ |title=Church Teaching. Introduction to Canon Law |website=Simply Catholic |last1=F...")
- 11:5511:55, 3 July 2025 Marriage in the Catholic Church (hist | edit) [95,500 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Sacrament and social institution within the Catholic Church}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2017}} thumb|right|250px|Matrimony, ''[[Seven Sacraments Altarpiece|The Seven Sacraments'', Rogier van der Weyden, c. 1445]] {{Catholic Church sidebar}} Marriage in the Catholic Church, also known as holy matrimony, is the "covenant by which a man and woman establish between themselves a partnership of the whole of life and w...")
- 11:5411:54, 3 July 2025 Sacraments of the Catholic Church (hist | edit) [44,571 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Catholic visible rites}} {{About|the Catholic rites|other uses|Sacrament (disambiguation)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2019}} thumb|upright=1.2|''[[Seven Sacraments Altarpiece'' by Rogier van der Weyden, {{circa|1448}}]] {{Catholic Church sidebar}} There are seven '''sacraments of the Catholic Church''', which according to Catholic theology were instituted by Jesus Christ and entrusted to the Church. S...")
- 11:5311:53, 3 July 2025 Catechism (hist | edit) [77,503 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Summary or exposition of doctrine}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}} right|thumb|[[Codex Manesse, fol. 292v, "The Schoolmaster of Esslingen" (''Der Schulmeister von Eßlingen'')]] A '''catechism''' ({{IPAc-en|pron|ˈ|k|æ|t|ə|ˌ|k|ɪ|z|əm}}; from {{langx|grc|κατηχέω}}, "to teach orally") is a summary or exposition of doctrine and serves as a learning introduction to...")
- 09:2409:24, 3 July 2025 Etruscan alphabet (hist | edit) [20,314 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Alphabet used by the Etruscans of central and northern Italy}} {{use dmy dates|date=May 2023}} thumb|280px|The Marsiliana Tablet, with an archaic form of the Etruscan alphabet inscribed on the frame The '''Etruscan alphabet''' was used by the Etruscans, an ancient civilization of central and northern Italy, to write their language, from about 700 BC to sometime around 100 AD. The...")
- 09:2209:22, 3 July 2025 Latin (hist | edit) [106,785 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Indo-European language of the Italic branch}} {{Other uses}} {{Distinguish|Ladin (disambiguation){{!}}Ladin}} {{pp-pc}} {{pp-move}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}} {{Infobox language | states = {{ublist|Latium|Ancient Rome}} | ethnicity = {{ublist|Latins|Romans}} | era = As a native language, {{circa|7th century BC <!-- Praeneste fibula -->|8th century A...")
- 09:2109:21, 3 July 2025 Catechism of the Catholic Church (hist | edit) [26,660 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Summary of doctrine of the Catholic Church}} {{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}{{italic title}} {{about|the 1992 catechism|other Catholic catechisms|Catechism#Catholic catechisms}} right|thumb|The [[Good Shepherd logo on the cover of many editions is adapted from a Christian tombstone in the catacombs of Domitilla in Rome.<ref>From the ''Copyright Information'', pg. i...")
- 08:3908:39, 3 July 2025 Spada da lato (hist | edit) [2,341 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Renaissance-era sword type}} {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2021}} {{More citations needed|date=September 2017}} upright|thumb|An early rapier or "side-sword" on exhibit in the [[Castle of Chillon.]] The '''''spada da lato''''' (Italian) or '''''side-sword''''' is a type of sword popular in Italy during the Renaissance. It is a continuation of the medieval knightly sword, and the immediate predecessor, or...")
- 08:3808:38, 3 July 2025 Rapier (hist | edit) [27,795 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|One-handed thrusting sword}} {{about|the bladed weapon|the surface-to-air missile|Rapier (missile)|other uses}} {{Infobox weapon | name = Rapier/''Espada ropera'' | image = Rapiere-Morges-kitsch.jpg | image_size = 200 | caption = Espada ropera, first half of the 17th century | origin = Europe | type = Sword <!-- Type selection --> | is_bladed = yes <!-- Service histo...")
- 08:3708:37, 3 July 2025 Gérard Thibault d'Anvers (hist | edit) [14,267 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{one source|date=November 2024}} upright=1.35|thumb|Chapter 43, Plate XII of ''Académie de l'Espée,'' describing the correct way to fight a left-handed swordsman '''Gérard''' (or '''Girard''') '''Thibault of Antwerp''' (ca. 1574–1627)<ref name="Verwey">{{cite journal |last1=de la Fontaine Verwey |first1=Herman |title=Gerard Thibault and his Academie de l'espée |journal=Quaerendo |date=Jan 1978 |...")
- 08:3608:36, 3 July 2025 Libro de las grandezas de la espada (hist | edit) [5,519 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|16th-century Spanish treatise on fencing}}{{Infobox book | italic title = <!--(see above)--> | name = The Greatness of the Sword | image = Libro de las grandezas de la espada.jpg | caption = The front (first) page | author = Don Luis Pacheco de Narvaez | audio_read_by = | title_orig = | orig_lang_code = | title_working = | translator = | illustrator = | cover_artist = | country = Spain...")
- 08:3508:35, 3 July 2025 Luis Pacheco de Narváez (hist | edit) [23,014 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Use dmy dates|date=May 2018}} {{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see Template:Infobox writer/doc --> | name = Luis Pacheco de Narváez | image = PachecoNarvaez.jpg | caption = Luis Pacheco de Narváez | birth_date = 1570 | birth_place = | death_date = 1640 | death_place = | occupation = Writer, fencing master | movement = | genre = | notableworks = ''Libro de las grand...")
- 08:3508:35, 3 July 2025 Destreza (hist | edit) [13,019 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Spanish tradition of fencing}} {{Infobox martial art | image = Ettenhard.gif | aka = | focus = Rapier; early modern bladed weaponry | country = Habsburg Spain | famous_pract = Jerónimo Sánchez de Carranza, Luis Pacheco de Narváez, Girard Thibault, Anthony De Longis }} '''{{Lang|es|La Verdadera Destreza}}''' is the conventional term for the Spanish tradition of fencing of the early modern...")
- 08:3408:34, 3 July 2025 Jerónimo Sánchez de Carranza (hist | edit) [13,620 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Spanish humanist and fencers fencing master}} {{Other uses|Carranza (disambiguation){{!}}Carranza}} {{Use dmy dates|date=February 2019}} {{Infobox writer <!-- for more information see Template:Infobox writer/doc --> | name = Jerónimo Sánchez de Carranza | image = Jerónimo_Sánchez_de_Carranza.jpg | birth_date = c. 1539 | birth_place = | death_date = c. 1600 | death_place = | occupation = First...")
- 08:3208:32, 3 July 2025 Francesco Alfieri (hist | edit) [16,122 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{tone|date=September 2021}} thumb|Francesco F. Alfieri '''Francesco Ferdinando Alfieri,''' was a famous fencer in the 17th century. He was a representative of the Venetian school of fencing and “Maestro D’Armeuvkb” to the Accademia Delia in Padua in 1640. Alfieri was originally from Padua, {{sfn|Martial Arts of the World|2010}} which at that time was the territory of the Venetian Republic.{{sfn|La storia di V...")
- 08:3008:30, 3 July 2025 Francesco Maria II della Rovere (hist | edit) [6,647 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Duke of Urbino (1574–1621, 1623–31)}} {{One source|date=March 2019}} {{Infobox royalty | name = Francesco Maria II | image = Francesco II della Rovere.jpg | image_size = | caption = ''Francesco Maria II della Rovere'', by Federico Barocci (1572) | succession = Duke of Urbino<br>Lord of Pesaro | reign = 28 September 1574{{sndash}}{{avoid wrap|3 November 1621}} | reign-type = First reign | predecesso...")
- 08:3008:30, 3 July 2025 Federico Ubaldo della Rovere (hist | edit) [4,563 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Duke of Urbino (1621–1623)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=October 2015}} {{Infobox royalty |consort = yes | name = Federico Ubaldo | image = Portrait of Federico Ubaldo della Rovere by Claudio Ridolfi.jpg | full name = Federico Ubaldo della Rovere | succession = Duke of Urbino | reign=3 November 1621 – 28 June 1623 | predecessor = Francesco Maria II | successor = Francesco Maria II | spouse = [...")
- 08:2908:29, 3 July 2025 Ridolfo Capo Ferro (hist | edit) [8,182 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Italian fencer}} right|thumb|Title page of the 1629 edition, including a portrait of Capo Ferro. '''Ridolfo Capo Ferro da Cagli''' (Ridolfo Capoferro, Rodulphus Capoferrus) was an Italian fencing master in the city of Siena, best known for his rapier fencing treatise published in 1610. He seems to have been born in the town of Cagli in the Duchy of Urbino (nowadays [[Province of Pesaro e Urbino]...")
- 08:2808:28, 3 July 2025 Salvator Fabris (hist | edit) [15,479 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Italian fencer}} {{Infobox martial artist | name = Salvator Fabris | other_names = Salvatore Fabris, Salvador Fabbri | image = FabrisPortrait.jpg | image_size = 250px | caption = Salvator Fabris | birth_date = ca. 1544 | death_date = {{death date|1618|11|11|mf=yes}} | birth_place = Padua, Italy{{Citation needed|date=September 2009}} | death_place = Padua, Italy | death_cause = Malignant Fever...")
- 08:2708:27, 3 July 2025 Vincentio Saviolo (hist | edit) [6,560 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Italian author on fencing in English}} {{multiple issues| {{Cleanup rewrite|date=February 2012}} {{more footnotes|date=October 2014}} }} thumb|The title page from ''Vincentio Saviolo, His Practise'', Saviolo's fencing handbook published in 1595. Fencing master '''Vincentio Saviolo''' (d. 1598/9), though Italian born and raised, authored one of the first books on fencing to be available in th...")
- 08:2608:26, 3 July 2025 Ragione di adoprar sicuramente l'Arme, si da offesa come da difesa (hist | edit) [9,764 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|1570 fencing treatise by Giacomo di Grassi}} {{italictitle}} The '''''Ragione di adoprar sicuramente l'Arme, si da offesa come da difesa''''' was a famous treatise on fencing published by Giacomo di Grassi in 1570.<ref>Ragione di adoprar sicuramente l'arme si da offesa, come da difesa. Giacomo di Grassi, 1570 </ref> The text was later translated into English and published again in 1594, as '' Di Grassi, His True Arte of Defence''.<ref>Di Grassi, His T...")
- 08:2508:25, 3 July 2025 Antonio Francesco Manciolino (hist | edit) [3,360 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Italian swordsman}} {{More footnotes|date=July 2022}} link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Opera_Nova_-_title_page.png|thumb|Cover of ''Opera Nova'''''Antonio Francesco Manciolino''' (... - ...; fl. 1518-1531) is considered one of the most important masters of the so-called "Bolognese School" of fencing. There is very little biographical information about Antonio Francesco Manciolino:<ref name=":0">...")
- 08:2308:23, 3 July 2025 Roger I of Sicily (hist | edit) [20,007 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Grand Count of Sicily from 1071 to 1101}} {{Infobox royalty | name = Roger I | image = Calabria, trifollaro di ruggieri I d'altavilla, 1072-1101.JPG | caption = Roger I as he appears on a ''trifollaro'' minted at Mileto | succession = Grand Count of Sicily | reign = 1071–1101 | cor-type = | predecessor = Robert Guiscard (as Lord) | successor = Simon of Hauteville | s...")
- 08:2208:22, 3 July 2025 Third Crusade (hist | edit) [70,758 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|1189–1192 attempted re-conquest of the Holy Land}} {{Infobox military conflict | conflict = The Third Crusade | partof = the Crusades | image = The Third Crusade (1189-1192).png | image_size = 300px | caption = Routes taken by the Crusader armies | date = 11 May 1189 – 2 September 1192 | place = Levant, Sicily, Iberia, Balkans and Anatolia | result...")
- 08:2108:21, 3 July 2025 Republic of Pisa (hist | edit) [16,388 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Italian maritime republic (c. 1000–1406)}} {{Infobox country | native_name = {{native name|it|Repubblica di Pisa}} | conventional_long_name = Republic of Pisa | common_name = Pisa | government_type = Oligarchic republic | event_start = | year_start = {{circa|1000}} | date_start = | era = Middle Ages | year_end = 1406 | date_end...")
- 08:2008:20, 3 July 2025 Filippo Vadi (hist | edit) [8,045 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Italian fencing master}} {{Infobox person | name = Filippo Vadi | image = Cod.1324 18v.jpg | caption = Illustration from Filippo Vadi's ''De Arte Gladiatoria Dimicandi'', National Central Library of Rome, Codex 1324 | birth_date = 1425 | birth_place = Pisa, Republic of Pisa | death_date = 1501 | death_place = Urbino, Duchy of Urbino | nationality = Italian | kn...")
- 08:1408:14, 3 July 2025 Principle of double effect (hist | edit) [7,991 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Christian ethical consideration}} {{more sources|date=April 2023}} {{Thomism}} {{Abortion in the Catholic Church}} The '''principle of double effect''' – also known as the '''rule of double effect''', the '''doctrine of double effect''', often abbreviated as '''DDE''' or '''PDE''', '''double-effect reasoning''', or simply '''double effect''' – is a set of ethical criteria which Christian philosophers have advocated for evaluating the pe...")
- 08:1108:11, 3 July 2025 Cardinal virtues (hist | edit) [29,948 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Virtues of mind and character}} thumb|upright=1.25|An image personifying the four virtues (''[[Ballet Comique de la Reine'', 1582)]] {{Catholic philosophy|expanded=Ethics}} The '''cardinal virtues''' are four virtues of mind and character in classical philosophy. They are prudence, justice, fortitude, and Temperance (virtue)|temperance...")
- 08:1008:10, 3 July 2025 Courage (hist | edit) [45,666 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description| Ability to deal with fear}} {{Redirect2|Bravery|Fearlessness|other uses|Bravery (disambiguation)|and|Courage (disambiguation)|and|Fearless (disambiguation)}} {{essay|date=May 2021}} thumb|262px|<div style="text-align: center;">''[[God Speed (painting)|God Speed'' by Edmund Leighton</div>]] {{emotion}} '''Courage''' (also called '''bravery''', '''valour''' (British and Commonwealth English)...")
- 08:0608:06, 3 July 2025 Club (weapon) (hist | edit) [17,441 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Redirect|Cudgel|the racehorse|Cudgel (horse)}} {{short description|Blunt weapon}} {{More citations needed|date=December 2010}} thumb|An assortment of club weapons from the ''[[Wujing Zongyao'' from left to right: flail, metal bat, double flail, truncheon, mace, barbed mace]] A '''club''' (also known as a '''cudgel''', '''baton''', '''bludgeon''', '''truncheon''', '''cosh''', '''nightstick''', or '''impact weapon''') is a short staff or s...")
- 07:5007:50, 3 July 2025 Morality (hist | edit) [82,054 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Distinction between right and wrong or good and bad behavior}} {{hatnote group| {{redirect-several|dab=off|Morality (disambiguation)|Morals (film){{!}}''Morals'' (film)|The Immoralist{{!}}''The Immoralist''}} {{distinguish|Morale|Molarity|Molality}} }} thumb|''Allegory with a portrait of a Venetian senator (Allegory of the morality of earthly things)'', attributed to [[Tintoretto, 1585]] '''Morality''' ({{etymology|la...")
- 07:4807:48, 3 July 2025 Prudence (hist | edit) [21,627 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Ability of a person to regulate themselves with the use of reason}} {{Other uses}} {{Redirect|Imprudence|the French short story|Imprudence (Maupassant short story)|the racehorse|Imprudence (horse)}} {{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}} thumb|The crowned Prudencia, carrying scales, allegorically rides a wagon to [[Heaven. Concordia puts the finishing touches on the w...")
- 07:4707:47, 3 July 2025 Flos Duellatorum (hist | edit) [6,496 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{No footnotes|date=January 2024}} thumb|260px|The ''sette spade'' Diagram from the Pisani facsimile (fol. 17A). The four animals symbolize [[prudence (lynx), celerity (tiger), audacity (lion), and fortitude (elephant). Cf. also Five Animals.]] The '''Flos Duellatorum''' is the name given to one of the manuscript versions of Fiore dei Liberi's illuminated manuscript fech...")
- 07:4607:46, 3 July 2025 Cluny Fechtbuch (hist | edit) [3,662 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Multiple issues| {{no footnotes|date=December 2011}} {{technical|date=December 2011}} }} thumb|300px|Example images, showing mounted combat, [[armoured combat, sword and buckler, grappling, großes Messer and a judicial duel.]] The '''Cluny Fechtbuch''' is a South German fechtbuch dating to about 1500. It is influenced by Paulus Kal and Peter Falkner, and was in turn drawn upon by Jorg Wilhalm (1520s). The manus...")
- 07:4507:45, 3 July 2025 Johannes Lecküchner (hist | edit) [2,714 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''Johannes Lecküchner''' (c. 1430s – 1482) was a 15th-century priest and fencer of the area of Nuremberg. He was inscribed at the University of Leipzig in 1455 and receives the title of ''bacalaureus'' in 1457. He was ordained acolyte in 1459, and as priest at some point before 1478. He was employed as communal priest in Herzogenaurach from 1480 until his death on 31 December 1482.<ref>according to the transcription at www.pragmati...")
- 07:4307:43, 3 July 2025 New Testament (hist | edit) [160,961 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Second division of the Christian biblical canon}} {{About|the Christian Greek Scriptures of the biblical canon|the theological concept|New Covenant||A New Testament (disambiguation)|and|The New Testament (disambiguation)}} {{Use Oxford spelling|date = January 2025}} {{Use dmy dates|date=May 2020}} <!-- SOURCE CHECKING FOR PAGE NUMBERS AND COMPLETENESS WAS DONE THROUGH A POINT INDICATED BY A FURTHER NOTE BELOW, FEBRUARY 2016. NOTE, WHILE SOME STANDARDI...")
- 07:4007:40, 3 July 2025 Martyr (hist | edit) [44,556 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Person who suffers persecution}} {{Other uses}} thumb|330x330px|Miniature from the ''[[Menologion of Basil II'' depicting the 20,000 Martyrs of Nicomedia, who were martyred when Roman soldiers set their church on fire on Christmas Day, AD 302]] A '''martyr''' ({{Langx|el|μάρτυς}}, ''mártys'', 'witness' stem {{Lang|el|μαρτυρ-}}, ''martyr-'') is someone...")
- 07:3907:39, 3 July 2025 Indulgence (hist | edit) [69,753 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Remission of sins in the Catholic Church}} {{Redirect|Indulge|the extended play by Jones|Indulge (EP)|the publication in India|The New Indian Express}} thumb|Inscription on the [[Archbasilica of St. John Lateran in Rome: {{lang|la|Indulgentia plenaria perpetua quotidiana toties quoties pro vivis et defunctis}} (English: "Perpetual everyday plenary indulgence on every occasion for the livi...")
- 07:3807:38, 3 July 2025 Block book (hist | edit) [22,570 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Early Western block-printed book}} {{confuse|Textblock (disambiguation){{!}}book blocks}} right|thumb|Page from the ''[[Apocalypse'' text, possibly the earliest of the blockbooks, with added hand-colouring]] '''Block books''' or '''blockbooks''', also called '''xylographica''', are short books of up to 50 leaves, block printed in Europe in the second half of the 15th century as woodcuts with blocks carve...")
- 07:3707:37, 3 July 2025 Woodcut (hist | edit) [35,902 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{short description|Relief printing technique}} {{for multi|the origins of the technique, development in Asia, and non-artistic use in Europe|Woodblock printing|the related technique invented in the 18th century|Wood engraving}} {{Use dmy dates|date=July 2021}} thumb|''The Four Horsemen'' {{Circa|1496–98}} by [[Albrecht Dürer, depicting the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse]] '''Woodc...")
- 07:3607:36, 3 July 2025 Brotherhood of Saint Mark (hist | edit) [4,251 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{more footnotes|date=December 2018}} The '''Brotherhood of Saint Mark''' ({{langx|de|Marxbrüder}}, Marx brothers) was the name of an organization of German swordsmen in the 16th century. thumb|The Arms of the Brotherhood of St Mark [[Image:Federfechter Wappen.jpg|thumb|250px|The Federfechter coat of arms shows two hands gripping a quill, a griffin holding a sword (repeated as the [[Crest (heraldry)|crest]...")
- 07:3507:35, 3 July 2025 Federfechter (hist | edit) [6,123 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "thumb|250px|The Federfechter coat of arms shows two hands gripping a quill, a griffin holding a sword (repeated as the [[Crest (heraldry)|crest), two crossing winged swords and a swordsman armed with a Zweihänder.]] The '''''Freifechter''''' or '''''Federfechter''''' (''Freifechter von der Feder zum Greifenfels'') were a fencing guild founded aro...")
- 07:3407:34, 3 July 2025 Masters of Defence (hist | edit) [8,400 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "thumb|A. Salzmann - Épée de [[Godefroy de Bouillon - Jerusalem]] '''Masters of Defence''' or '''Masters of Fencing''' is a widespread guild of teachers specializing in close combat military techniques with weapons, civilian fighting skills, and unarmed combat. The title was coined during the medieval period, and referred to men who were particularly skilled at the art of fighting.<ref name="J...")
- 07:3407:34, 3 July 2025 Paulus Kal (hist | edit) [7,378 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Infobox writer | name = Paulus Kal | image = Paulus Kal.png | imagesize = 200px | caption = | pseudonym = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{circa|1420s}} | birth_place = Dingolfing, Germany | death_date = after 1485 | death_place = | occupation = Fencing master<br/>Toll collector | nationality = | citizenship = | education...")
- 07:3307:33, 3 July 2025 Ecumenical creeds (hist | edit) [5,674 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Three creeds in Lutheran tradition}} thumb|Russian [[icon representing the Nicene Creed, 17th century]] '''Ecumenical creeds''' is an umbrella term used in Lutheran tradition to refer to three creeds: the Nicene Creed, the Apostles' Creed and the Athanasian Creed. These creeds are also known as the catholic or universal creeds.<ref name=Concord>{{cite web|title=The Three...")
- 07:3207:32, 3 July 2025 Hypostasis (philosophy and religion) (hist | edit) [34,877 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Underlying state or underlying substance}} '''Hypostasis''' (plural: '''hypostases'''), from the Greek {{lang|grc-Grek|ὑπόστασις|italic=no}} (''hypóstasis''), is the underlying, fundamental state or substance that supports all of reality. It is not the same as the concept of a substance.{{Citation needed|reason=citation of statement or further detail for context|date=August 2024}} In Neoplatonism...")
- 07:3007:30, 3 July 2025 Trinity (hist | edit) [136,749 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Christian doctrine that God exists in three persons}} {{redirect-several|dab=off|Holy Trinity (disambiguation)|Trinity (disambiguation)}} thumb|A compact diagram of the Trinity, known as the "[[Shield of the Trinity", consisting of God the Father, God the Son (Jesus), and God the Holy Spirit (the Shield is generally not intended to be a schematic diagram of the structure of God,...")
- 07:2907:29, 3 July 2025 Johannine Comma (hist | edit) [152,566 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Interpolated phrase in verses 5:7–8 of 1 John}} {{Textus Receptus sidebar}} {{Use dmy dates|date=January 2016}} The '''Johannine Comma''' ({{langx|la|Comma Johanneum}}) is an interpolated phrase (comma) in verses {{Bibleverse-nb|1 John|5:7-8|KJV}} of the First Epistle of John.<ref name="Metzger1994">{{Cite book| edition = 2| publisher = Deutsche Biblegesellschaft| isbn = 978-3-438-06010-5| las...")
- 07:2807:28, 3 July 2025 Gloss (annotation) (hist | edit) [9,028 bytes] WikiKnight (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{Short description|Brief marginal notation of the meaning of a word or wording in a text}} {{More citations needed|date=December 2007}} thumb|right|upright=0.9|A gloss is a notation regarding the main text in a document. Shown is a parchment page from the Royal Library of Copenhagen. A '''gloss''' is a brief notation, especially a marginal or interlinear one, of the meaning of a word or wording in a tex...")