Escopeta de llave de chispa de Luis XIII, rey de Francia

Gunsmith Pierre Le Bourgeois French
Gunsmith Marin Le Bourgeois French
ca. 1620
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 375
Esta es una de las escopetas más antiguas con llave de chispa, un mecanismo de ignición que dominaría la tecnología de las armas de fuego durante los doscientos años siguientes. Fue realizada para Luis XIII por Pierre y Marin Le Bourgeois de Lisieux, a quienes se atribuye la invención de la llave de chispa. La escopeta ostenta el monograma del rey bajo una corona, y su rica ornamentación está formada por delicadas incrustaciones de alambre y madreperla, una culata de madera finamente tallada y piezas metálicas de latón dorado. Luis XIII era un ávido coleccionista de armas de fuego y un armero aficionado. Esta escopeta está grabada con el número de inventario 134, indicando que formaba parte de la colección real, o cabinet d’armes.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Título: Escopeta de llave de chispa de Luis XIII, rey de Francia
  • Artista: Pierre Le Bourgeois, francés, m. 1627
  • Fecha: ca. 1620
  • Material: Acero, latón, plata, oro, madera, madreperla
  • Dimensiones: l. 139,7 cm, calibre 15 mm
  • Crédito: Fondos Rogers y Harris Brisbane Dick, 1972
  • Número de inventario: 1972.223
  • Curatorial Department: Arms and Armor

Audio

Solo disponible en: English
Cover Image for 4434. Flintlock Gun

4434. Flintlock Gun

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NARRATOR: Look for the gun in this case with the scrolled butt, second from the top. Curator Stuart Pyhrr.

STUART PYHRR: This gun, made for Louis XIII, King of France, about 1620, is not only a technical marvel but a work of art. The fruitwood stock is gracefully carved at its butt, not with the usual square or angular end, but, rather, with a delicate scroll outlined by a copper leaf and buttons of mother-of-pearl. It glitters in the light. The decoration of the stock in silver and brass wire, engraved silver sheet and mother of pearl, includes the crown monogram, “L,” for Louis XIII, who, as young monarch, was not only an avid hunter but also a gun collector and amateur gunsmith. He was known to contemporaries as "Louis l'Arquebusier"—“Louis the Gun-Maker.”

NARRATOR: This beautifully crafted weapon was also one of the earliest firearms to use the flintlock mechanism. The flintlock was invented in France about this time—around 1620—and became the standard firing mechanism on most guns up until the nineteenth century. Press PLAY to hear more about how the flintlock mechanism works.

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