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Christian Henry Tobler
Location: Oxford, CT Joined: 25 Aug 2003
Posts: 704
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Radovan Geist
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Bartek Strojek
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Posted: Thu 16 Apr, 2020 2:26 am Post subject: |
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In Polish, there's tulich as well, and the meaning's about the same.
More importantly, there's tylec, meaning some kind of dagger as well, and formally tylec and tilitz would be almost identical.
The word appears in the end of XV century in the list of arms and armor in possession of some Kraków's townsfolk, arms of militia from Sandomierz, for example.
There's also tylczyk, which looks like diminutive variant, tylec + yk suffix. It appears in Marcin Bielski 1567 poem, as a part of war gear.
Sadly, I don't think that any more detailed description exists.
Here, I've found the book which mentions tylec as well. Can't read Czech well, but it seems that it mostly says the same thing, that tylec is some kind of a dagger/dussack.
https://www.academia.edu/9283312/Dussacks_and_issue_of_single-edged_weapons_of_Medieval_and_Early_Modern-Age_Tesáky_a_problematika_jednosečných_zbraní_středověku_a_raného_novověku
As far as origin of a word, it's hard to say.
Theoretically, it's easily explained as polish tył (meaning "back, rear") with ec suffix.
It's kinda sketchy semantically, but in later Polish tylec indeed appears as a back, rear, blunt, side of a knife or other tool.
"Tylec noża" - "backside of a knife".
So theoretically, we could have transfer of name from part of a knife/dagger to a knife itself?
If so, we could speculate the it could mean single edge dagger with pronounced spine, but that's of course guessing based on a guess.
In other Slavic languages, tyl means the only back of the head, neck, original meaning, only in Polish the meaning changed into more general one, today it's the main word used meaning "back/rear".
Alternatively, tylec/tilitz and mentioned tulich/dolch may be all variants of the same word, but one would have to study it to explain differences in form.
And as far as dolch/tulich goes, it seems that the word is even more cryptic, with no known etymology.[/b]
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Sean Manning
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Posted: Fri 17 Apr, 2020 2:21 am Post subject: |
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When I have problems like this, I start by searching lexica for examples of use, then I put them all together and track them down one by one and read the full text of each. Matthias Lexer and Gerhard Köbler both seem to be leaning on the Gebrüder Grimm for their examples of this word so I would start with them.
I like the idea that it could be the same word as dolch but I do not have a good feeling for Germanic philology.
weekly writing ~ material culture
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Iagoba Ferreira
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Posted: Fri 17 Apr, 2020 3:20 am Post subject: |
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That sounds very close to kiliç (sword) in Turkish...
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Christian Henry Tobler
Location: Oxford, CT Joined: 25 Aug 2003
Posts: 704
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Posted: Fri 17 Apr, 2020 3:06 pm Post subject: |
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Good stuff here, thanks!
Here some other stuff I found or had sent my way:
From a local 15th century law on fines for drawing weapons:
Ob ainer uber den andern ain swert, messer, hackn, stecken, spies, degen, stecher, tiliz oder anderlai weer oder waffen auszuckät...
And from an old post from my colleague Jens-Peter Kleinau (his Facebook post shows an early precursor to the bayonet):
A Tüllmesser, or Tillmesser (Tilitz, Diglitz, Tillitz) of the late 16th or early 17th century. A popular weapon for hunting and later for war. These kind of knifes started their carreer in the 15th century or even earlier on hunting the Apline chamois (Gamsjagd) (Emperor Maximilian had 18 of those in his hunting box at Ehrenberg) In the mountains everything you carry must be calculated as weight. So they were knifes that could be mounted on staffs to become a spear head. For hunting the chamois the staffs could be mounted to a very long spear of 5-7 meters. So reaching places a human could not climb. In later times these knifes were mounted on rifles to give the final thrust after wounding the animal with a bullet. Even more later it became a weapon of war until today.
Jens' take might be the best for what I'm looking for, as my inquiry stems from Maximilian's work, but of course terms shift in meaning over time as well.
All the best,
Christian
Christian Henry Tobler
Order of Selohaar
Freelance Academy Press: Books on Western Martial Arts and Historical Swordsmanship
Author, In Saint George's Name: An Anthology of Medieval German Fighting Arts
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