The Cgm 558, or Codex germanicus monacensis, is a convolution of two 15th-century manuscripts with a total of 176 folia, bound together in the 16th century.
The second part contains a short Fechtbuch on 12 pages, penned in Hand B, attributed on fol.
The treatise consists of 122 short paragraphs, numbered by de Grenier (2004), treating the long sword (1–50), pole weapons (halberd, spear 51–55), combat on horseback with sword or spear (56–64), the baselard (65–80), dagger on foot and on horseback (81–85), knife (86–90), unarmed defense against an attack with a baselard, a dagger or a knife (91–98) and grappling (99–122).
Paragraphs numbered 44 consists of three rhymed couplets, the last one reading This is reminiscent of one of Johannes Liechtenauer's verses, c.f.
The long sword terminology seems also loosely influenced by the German school, but it has some terms that are not encountered elsewhere (gassen how, schlims how (two strikes), drig angel "triangle" (a stance or stepping action)).