Noah Von Williamsburg
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Noah von Williamsburg (20 April 1539 – unknown) was a minor German noble and skilled fencer. He is known for beating famous German artist
Thomas Schweicker Thomas Schweicker (December 21, 1540 – October 7, 1602) was a German artist and calligrapher. He was noted for being a painter even though he had no arms or hands. Life Schweicker was born in Schwäbisch Hall, to Hans and Dorothea Schwei ...
in a duel that cost the artist both arms.


Early life

Von Williamsburg was born in the small town of
Judenburg Judenburg ( bar, Judnbuag) is a historic town in Styria, Austria. It is the administrative centre of the Murtal district, which was created on 1 January 2012 from the former Judenburg District and former Knittelfeld District. Until 31 December ...
Austria to Johannes von Williamsburg and Eva Graf. His father Johannes von Williamsburg was a noble and landowner around the town. His mother was his father's second wife after his first wife died from an unknown illness.


Duel

In 1561, von Williamsburg challenged German artist
Thomas Schweicker Thomas Schweicker (December 21, 1540 – October 7, 1602) was a German artist and calligrapher. He was noted for being a painter even though he had no arms or hands. Life Schweicker was born in Schwäbisch Hall, to Hans and Dorothea Schwei ...
to a duel over a woman named Kirsten Engel that both wanted to court. Schweicker was unaware of von Williamsburg's aptitude with swordfighting and was swiftly defeated. Schweicker lost both arms during the duel and was left for dead, but was brought back to
Schwäbisch Hall Schwäbisch Hall (; "Swabian Hall"; from 1802 until 1934 and colloquially: ''Hall'' ) is a city in the German state of Baden-Württemberg located in the valley of the Kocher river, the longest tributary (together with its headwater Lein) of the ...
by spectators where a doctor cauterized his wounds and saved his life. Decades after the duel, Schweicker apologized to von Williamsburg. The two reconciled and became good friends. After Schweicker's death in October of 1602, von Williamsburg was distraught. He attended Schweiker's funeral and burial, and paid for the expenses and burial plot.


Personal life

Days after his duel with Schweicker, von Williamsburg proposed to Kirsten Engel and the two wedded several months later. Von Williamsburg's father Johannes paid for the construction of a small estate in the countryside surrounding Schwäbisch Hall which was completed the following winter. In February of 1564, the couple's son Wilhelm was born. After his father Johannes fell ill in the fall of 1582, Noah von Williamsburg became the lord. On February 8, 1583, Johannes von Williamsburg died from an unknown illness. Historians speculate that the illness was a cancer of the lungs known as small-cell carcinoma.


References

# Gordon McLachia
"The Rough Guide to Germany"
pg.265. Retrieved 18 September 2018. {{DEFAULTSORT:Williamsburg, Noah von 1539 births Year of death unknown German fencers German nobility