Dictionary Definition
smite
Verb
1 inflict a heavy blow on, with the hand, a tool,
or a weapon
2 affect suddenly with deep feeling; "He was
smitten with love for this young girl"
3 cause pain or suffering in; "afflict with the
plague"; "That debasement of the verbal currency that afflicts
terms used in advertisement" [syn: afflict] [also: smote, smitten, smit]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- , /smaɪt/, /smaIt/
- Rhymes with: -aɪt
Etymology
smītan.Verb
- To hit.
- To strike down or kill with godly force.
- To injure with divine power.
Translations
Old Frisian
Verb
- To '''throw
Conjugation
Extensive Definition
Academic fencing or Mensur is the traditional
kind of fencing
practiced by some student
corporations (Studentenverbindungen)
in Germany,
Austria,
Switzerland and
recently to a minor extent in Latvia and Flanders as
well.
Technique
Modern academic fencing, the "Mensur," is neither
a duel nor a sport. It is a traditional way of
training and educating character and personality, thus, in a Mensur
bout, there is neither winner nor loser.
The participants, or Paukanten, use
specially-developed swords. The so-called Mensurschläger (or simply
Schläger; the plural form is identical to the singular form), exist
in two versions. The most common weapon is the "Korbschläger" with
a basket-type hilt (German
Korb or "basket"). In some universities in the eastern part of
Germany, the so-called "Glockenschläger" is in use which is
equipped with a bell-shaped hilt (German Glocke or "bell"). These
universities are Leipzig,
Berlin, Greifswald,
Dresden,
Tharandt (in the Forestry College which is now part of
Technische Universität Dresden), Halle
on the Saale, Frankfurt/Oder,
and
Freiberg. In Jena
both "Korbschläger" and "Glockenschläger" are used.
Studentenverbindungen from some western cities use
"Glockenschläger" because their tradition had its origin in one of
the eastern universities but moved to Western Germany after WW
II.
At the beginning of the tradition, duellists wore
only their normal clothing (as duels sometimes would arise
spontaneously) or light cloth armor on arm, torso, and throat.
Fencers are, in recent years, protected by a chain mail
shirt, chain mail
gauntlets,
padding on the throat and right arm, and steel goggles with a nose
guard. They fence at arm's length and stand more or less in one
place, while attempting to hit the unprotected areas of their
opponent's face and head. Flinching or dodging is not allowed; the
goal being less to avoid injury than to endure it stoically. Two
physicians are present (one for each opponent) to attend to
injuries and stop the fight if necessary.
The scar resulting from a hit is called a Schmiss
(German
for a "smite") which was seen as a badge of honour especially in
the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th
century. Today it is not easy for an outsider to identify Mensur
scars in the face of a conversation partner due to better medical
treatment.
History
Starting in Spain at the end of the 15th century,
the dueling sword became a regular part of the attire of noblemen
throughout Europe. In the Holy
Roman Empire this became usual among students as well. Brawling
and fighting was a regular occupation of students in the German
speaking areas during the early
modern period. In line with developments in the aristocracy and
the military, regulated duels were introduced to the academic
environment as well. The basis of this was the conviction that
being a student meant being something different from the rest of
the population. Students wore special clothes, developed special
kinds of festivities, sang student songs, and fought duels,
sometimes spontaneously (so called rencontre, French "meeting" or
"combat"), sometimes according to strict regulations called comment
(French "how"). The weapons used were the same as those employed in
civilian dueling, being
at first the rapier and
later the smallsword
(court sword, dress sword, French L'épée de cour, German
Kostümdegen, Galanteriedegen) which was seen as part of the dress
and always at hand as a side arm.
Student life was quite unsafe in these years,
especially in the 16th and 17th century during the reformation wars and the
Thirty Year
War (1618-1648) when a major part of the German population was
killed. Public life was brutal and students killing each other in
the street was not uncommon.
A major step towards civilization was the
introduction of the "regulated" duel of which the first recordings
exist from the 17th century. The fight was not decided on the spot
but the time and location were appointed and negotiations were done
by officials. A so-called Kartellträger did the arrangements and a
second represented the interests of the fighter during the duel and
could even give physical protection from illegal actions. A kind of
referee was present to make decisions and eventually the practice
of having an attending doctor became normal so as to give medical
help in case of an injury.
At the end of the 18th century (after the
French
Revolution), wearing of weapons in everyday life fell out of
fashion and was more and more forbidden, even for students. This
certainly reduced the number of spontaneous duels dramatically. The
regulated duel remained in use although it continued to be
forbidden.
The foil was
invented in France as a training weapon in the middle of the 18th
century in order to practice fast and elegant thrust fencing.
Fencers blunted the point by wrapping a foil around the blade or
fastening a knob on the point ("blossom", French fleuret). In
addition to practising, some fencers took away the protection and
used the sharp foil for duels. German students took up that
practice and developed the Pariser ("Parisian") thrusting small
sword for the Stoßmensur ("thrusting mensur"). After the dress
sword was abolished, the Pariser became the only weapon for
academic thrust fencing in Germany.
Since fencing on thrust with a sharp point is
quite dangerous, many students died from their lungs being pierced
(Lungenfuchser) which made breathing difficult or impossible.
However, the counter movement had already started in Göttingen in
the 1760s. Here the Göttinger Hieber was invented, the predecessor
of the modern Korbschläger, a new weapon for cut fencing. In the
following years, the Glockenschläger was invented in East German
universities for cut fencing as well.
Thrust fencing (using Pariser) and cut fencing
using Korbschläger or Glockenschläger) existed in parallel in
Germany during the first decades of the 19th century - with local
preferences. So thrust fencing was especially popular in Jena, Erlangen, Würzburg and
Ingolstadt/Landshut,
two towns where the predecessors of Munich university were located.
The last thrust Mensur is recorded to have taken place in Würzburg
in 1860.
Until the first half of the 19th century all
types of academic fencing can be seen as duels, since all fencing
with sharp weapons was about honour. No combat with sharp blades
took place without a formal insult. Compared to pistol duels, these
events were quite harmless. The fight was regularly ended when an
injury occurred which caused a wound with a length of at least one
inch and with at least one drop of blood coming out from it. It was
not uncommon that students fought approximately 10 to 30 duels of
that kind during their university years.
For duels with non-students, e.g. military
officers, the academic sabre became usual, apparently derived from
the military sabre. It was
a heavy weapon with a curved blade and a hilt similar to the
Korbschläger.
During the first half of the 19th century and
some of the 18th century, students believed that the character of a
person could easily be judged by watching him fight with sharp
blades under strict regulations. Academic fencing was more and more
seen as a kind of personality training by showing countenance and
fairness even in dangerous situations. Student corporations
demanded that their members fight at least one duel with sharp
blades during their university time. The problem was that some
peaceful students had nobody to offend them. The solution was a
kind of formal insult which did not actually infringe honour but
was just seen as a challenge for fencing. The standard wording was
dummer Junge (German for "stupid boy").
In the long term, this solution was unsatisfying.
It was around 1850 that the Bestimmungsmensur (German bestimmen
means "ascertain", "define" or "determine") was developed and
introduced throughout Germany. This meant that the opponents of a
Mensur were determined by the fencing official of their
corporations. These officials were regularly vice-chairmen
(Consenior) and responsible for arranging Mensur bouts in
cooperation with their colleagues from other corporations. Their
objective was to find opponents of equal physical and fencing
capabilities in order to make the event challenging for both
participants. That is the way it is still done today. That is the
concept of the Mensur in the modern sense of the word.
Before the
Communist revolution in Russia and before
World
War II, academic fencing was known in most countries of
Eastern
Europe as well.
Academic fencing in Germany was temporarily
abolished, along with the Studentenverbindungen,
during the Third Reich,
but it is still practiced by hundreds of traditional
Studentenverbindung corporations.
In literature
American traveller Mark Twain devoted several chapters of A Tramp Abroad (1880) to Heidelberg students' fencing.Jerome K.
Jerome devoted a chapter to "The German Mensur" in
Three Men on the Bummel.
George
MacDonald Fraser's Royal Flash,
the protagonist Flashman is
scarred with a schläger as part of his disguise as a Danish
prince.
References
External links
- Secrets of the German Broadsword – An Introduction into the Culture of the Schläger
- http://www.jonathan-green.com/articles/report_a03/report_a03.htm Article on German Student Corps and academic fencing from the portfolio of Jonathan Green
smite in German: Mensur
(Studentenverbindung)
smite in Polish: Menzura (pojedynek)
smite in Swedish: Mensurfäktning
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
affect,
agonize, bang, bash, baste, bastinado, bat, beat, belabor, belt, biff, birch, bonk, buffet, cane, catch, clap, clip, clobber, clout, club, clump, coldcock, come home to,
cowhide, crack, crucify, cudgel, cut, dash, deal, deal a blow, deck, ding, drub, excruciate, fetch, fetch a blow, flagellate, flail, flog, fustigate, give a whipping,
give the stick, harrow,
hit, hit a clip, hit the
mark, horsewhip,
impress, impress
forcibly, jab, knock, knock cold, knock down,
knock out, knout, lace, lash, lay on, let have it, make an
impression, martyr,
paste, pistol-whip,
plunk, poke, pommel, pummel, punch, rawhide, rock, scourge, sink in, slam, slog, slosh, slug, smack, snap, soak, sock, spank, strap, strike, strike at, strike hard,
strike home, stripe,
swat, swinge, swipe, switch, tell, thrash, thump, thwack, torment, torture, traumatize, trounce, truncheon, try, wallop, whack, whale, wham, whip, whop, yerk