Arms and Armor in Renaissance Europe

Although arms and armor are most commonly associated with warfare, both were used in other contexts, including hunting, tournaments, and as parade costume.
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Armor, Steel, copper alloy, textile, leather, Italian
Italian
ca. 1400–1450 and later
Hand-and-a-Half Sword, Steel, copper alloy, probably German
probably German
ca. 1400–1430
Head of a Hunting Spear, Steel, copper alloy, German or Austrian
German or Austrian
1425–50
Shield for the Field or Tournament (Targe), Wood, leather, linen, gesso, pigments, silver, German
German
ca. 1450
Sallet in the Shape of a Lion's Head, Steel, copper, gold, glass, pigment, textile, Italian
Italian
ca. 1475–80
Helm for the Joust of Peace (<i>Stechhelm</i>), Steel, copper alloy, German, probably Nuremberg
German, probably Nuremberg
ca. 1500
Elements of an Italian Light-Cavalry Armor <i>alla Tedesca</i> (in the German Fashion), Steel, gold, copper alloy, leather, Italian, Milan
Italian, Milan
ca. 1510
Portions of a Costume Armor, Kolman Helmschmid  German, Steel, copper alloy, gold, German, Augsburg
Kolman Helmschmid
ca. 1525
Burgonet, Filippo Negroli  Italian, Steel, gold, textile, Italian, Milan
Filippo Negroli
dated 1543
Armor for Man and Horse, Kunz Lochner  German, Steel, leather, copper alloy, textile, German, Nuremberg
Kunz Lochner
dated 1548, with later restorations
Armor of Emperor Ferdinand I (1503–1564), Kunz Lochner  German, Steel, brass, leather, German, Nuremberg
Kunz Lochner
dated 1549
Wild Boar Hunt with Spears, from "Hunting Scenes in Ornamental Frames", Jan van der Straet, called Stradanus  Netherlandish, Engraving
Multiple artists/makers
1570
Armor Garniture of George Clifford (1558–1605), 
Third Earl of Cumberland, Jacob Halder  British, Steel, gold, leather, textile, British, Greenwich
Jacob Halder
1586
Album of Tournaments and Parades in Nuremberg, Pen and ink, watercolor, gold and silver washes; paper bound in gold-tooled leather, German, Nuremberg
German, Nuremberg
late 16th–mid-17th century
Armor for Heavy Cavalry with Matching Shaffron (Horse's Head Defense), Steel, gold, leather, textile, French
French
ca. 1600
Rapier of Prince-Elector Christian II of Saxony (1583–1611), Israel Schuech  German, Steel, bronze, gold, enamel, paste jewels, cameos, pearls, wood, hilt, German, Dresden; blade, Spanish, Toledo
Israel Schuech
Juan Martinez
dated 1606
Wheellock Rifle, Johann Michael Maucher  German, Steel, wood (cherry), ivory, mother-of-pearl, German, Schwäbisch Gmünd
Johann Michael Maucher
ca. 1680–90
Hunting Sword with Scabbard, Joseph Deutschmann  German, Steel, silver, ivory, wood, leather, German, possibly Munich
Joseph Deutschmann
ca. 1740

Although arms and armor are most commonly associated with warfare, both were used in other contexts, including hunting, tournaments, and as parade costume.

For warfare, arms and armor must, above all, be practical, affording the utmost protection and functionality without impairing body movement because of excess weight or inflexible material. Even such practical equipment, however, was often decorated, care being taken that the decoration would not impede its function.

Almost all types of weapons have been used in hunting, including bows, crossbows, and firearms, as well as special kinds of swords and spears. In rare instances, armor was worn for hunting bear or wild boar.

Early forms of the tournament were little different from military exercises, with combatants using the same equipment that they would have used in warfare. The first objects specifically for use in tournaments—such as extra plates for the protection of the throat and hands, or blunted lance heads—were introduced around 1300. During the late fourteenth century, equipment such as the shield and Great Helm were superceded on the battlefield by more sophisticated gear, but continued to be used in tournaments. This development ultimately led to the creation of specialized armor designed exclusively for certain types of tournament. Also important was the invention of the garniture, a basic suit of armor that, through the addition of further pieces and plates, could be adapted for various purposes both on the battlefield and in different types of tournament. The idea of highly specialized tournament armor lives on in some of today’s sports equipment.

The symbolic value of arms and armor was reflected in their use as display objects in tournaments, parades, and triumphal entries, and as funerary achievements (for instance, a grouping of weapons and armor hung over a knight’s tomb). During the Renaissance, some of the most sumptuous swords, maces, firearms, shields, and armor were made specifically for ceremonial purposes. Such armor was sometimes referred to as armor all’antica or alla romana. These objects were intended to imitate arms and armor of the style used by the heroes of classical antiquity and medieval chivalry. Worn or carried in processions or at court, they were designed to bestow upon the wearer the glory and fame, virtues and achievements of those antique military leaders who Renaissance princes and commanders sought to emulate. Since these accoutrements were not intended to face the risk of damage or loss in battle, many of the functional and protective qualities of “normal” arms and armor—lightness, practicality, and the “glancing surface”—had been abandoned in favor of theatrical and symbolic effect.

Finally, mention must also be made of armor for horses and dogs. Whereas horses could be protected by or adorned with armor for most of the above occasions, armor for dogs was rare and only used—if at all—for hunting and warfare.


Contributors

Dirk H. Breiding
Department of Arms and Armor, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2002


Citation

View Citations

Breiding, Dirk H. “Arms and Armor in Renaissance Europe.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/rarm/hd_rarm.htm (October 2002)