Landsknecht - meaning and definition. What is Landsknecht
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What (who) is Landsknecht - definition

MERCENARY FOOTSOLDIERS IN 16TH CENTURY EUROPE
Landsknechte; Landsknechts; Lanzknecht; Landsnecht; Lansquenets
  • Landsknechte}} engaged in a [[push of pike]] (engraving by [[Hans Holbein the Younger]], early 16th century)
  • Landsknecht}}.
  • Landsknechte}} in the ''Geschichte des Kostüms''
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  • Landsknecht}} with a ''[[Zweihänder]]''
  • Landsknecht}} with his Wife'', by [[Daniel Hopfer]]. Note the ''[[Zweihänder]]'' over his shoulder and the smaller ''[[Katzbalger]]'' at his hip.
  • ''Landsknechte'', [[etching]] by [[Daniel Hopfer]], ''c.'' 1530
  • Landsknecht}} mercenaries with [[arquebus]]es (''Tapestries of the [[Battle of Pavia]]'' by [[Bernard van Orley]], between 1528 and 1531)
  • Landsknechte}} (etching by [[Daniel Hopfer]])

landsknecht         
['lan(d)skn?kt]
¦ noun a member of a class of mercenary soldiers in the German and other continental armies in the 16th and 17th centuries.
Origin
from Ger. Landsknecht, lit. 'soldier of the land'.
lansquenet         
  • [[Jacob Duck]]: guardroom with soldiers playing cards, 17th century
CARD GAME
Lancequenet; Landsknecht (card game)
['l?:nsk??n?t, 'lans-]
¦ noun
1. historical a gambling game of German origin involving betting on cards turned up by the dealer.
2. archaic variant of landsknecht.
Origin
C17: via Fr. from Ger. Landsknecht (see landsknecht).
Lansquenet         
  • [[Jacob Duck]]: guardroom with soldiers playing cards, 17th century
CARD GAME
Lancequenet; Landsknecht (card game)
·noun A game at cards, vulgarly called lambskinnet.
II. Lansquenet ·noun A German foot soldier in foreign service in the 15th and 16th centuries; a soldier of fortune;
- a term used in France and Western Europe.

Wikipedia

Landsknecht

The Landsknechte (singular: Landsknecht, pronounced [ˈlantsknɛçt]), also rendered as Landsknechts or Lansquenets, were Germanic mercenaries used in pike and shot formations during the early modern period. Consisting predominantly of pikemen and supporting foot soldiers, their front line was formed by Doppelsöldner ("double-pay men") renowned for their use of Zweihänder and arquebus. Originally organized by Emperor Maximilian I and Georg von Frundsberg, they formed the bulk of the Holy Roman Empire's Imperial Army from the late 1400s to the early 1600s, fighting in the Habsburg-Valois wars, the Habsburg-Ottoman wars, and the European wars of religion.

Although prone to mutiny if unpaid and divided within their ranks between Catholics and Lutherans, the Landsknechte were well-armed, experienced, and fierce warriors. In addition, they were recruitable in large numbers throughout Germany and Austria by the Holy Roman Emperor and thus guaranteed both quantity and quality to the Imperial military for a century and a half. At the peak of their fame during the reign of Charles V of Habsburg, and under the leadership of notable captains such as Georg von Frundsberg and Nicholas of Salm, the Imperial Landsknechts obtained universal prestige for important successes such as the capture of the French King Francis I at the Battle of Pavia in 1525 and the resistance against the Ottoman Turks led by Suleiman the Magnificent at the Siege of Vienna in 1529, while also being responsible for the infamous Sack of Rome in 1527.