The Decoration of Arms and Armor

It was the use and function of the individual weapon or armor that determined why, how, and to what extent an object was decorated.
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Shaft-hole axe head with bird-headed demon, boar, and dragon, Silver, gold foil, Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
ca. late 3rd–early 2nd millennium BCE
Two Shield Bosses (Umbos), Iron, copper alloy, gold, Western European, Langobardic
Western European, Langobardic
7th century
Hand-and-a-Half Sword, Steel, copper alloy, probably German
probably German
ca. 1400–1430
Mask Visor in Form of a Human Face, Kolman Helmschmid  German, Steel, gold, German, Augsburg
Kolman Helmschmid
ca. 1515
Short Sword (Yatagan) from the Court of Süleyman the Magnificent (reigned 1520–66), Ahmed Tekelü  possibly Iranian, Steel, gold, ivory (walrus), silver, turquoise, pearls, rubies, Turkish, Istanbul
Ahmed Tekelü
ca. 1525–30
Design for a Sword Hilt, Pen, ink, wash, paper, German, probably Nuremberg
German, probably Nuremberg
ca.1550
Comb Morion, Steel, German, Brunswick
German, Brunswick
ca. 1560–65
Priming Flask Bearing the Monograms and Arms of the Prince-Elector August I of Saxony (reigned 1553–86) and  Anna of Denmark (reigned 1553–85), Iron, gold, silver, silk, German, probably Saxony
German, probably Saxony
ca. 1575
Design for the Pommel Plate of a Saddle from a Garniture of Alessandro Farnese (1545–1592), Andrea Casalini  Italian, Pen and brown ink, with color washes, on paper, Italian, Parma
Andrea Casalini
ca. 1575–80
Cross Hilt Sword, Clemens Horn  German, Iron, silver, wood, copper alloy, steel, gold, hilt, British, London; blade, German, Solingen
Clemens Horn
1600–1625
Flintlock Gun of Louis XIII (1601–1643), King of France, Pierre Le Bourgeois  French, Steel, brass, silver, gold, wood (walnut), mother-of-pearl, French, Lisieux
Pierre Le Bourgeois
Marin Le Bourgeois
ca. 1620
Dagger with Scabbard, Steel, iron, gold, rubies, emeralds, glass, wood, textile, Indian, Mughal
Indian, Mughal
1605–27
Pair of Snaphaunce Pistols, Matteo Cecchi, called Acquafresca  Italian, Steel, silver, wood (ebony), Italian, Bargi
Matteo Cecchi, called Acquafresca
Giovan Battista Francino
ca. 1690
Flintlock Gun, Louis Jaley  French, Steel, gold, wood, silver, French, Saint-Etienne
Multiple artists/makers
dated 1735
Smallsword with Scabbard, Master GG  French, Gold, steel, wood, fish skin, French, Paris
Master GG
hallmarked 1773–74
Pair of Flintlock Pistols of Empress Catherine the Great (1729–1796), Johan Adolph Grecke  Russian, Steel, ivory, gold, brass, Russian, Saint Petersburg
Johan Adolph Grecke
1786
Colt Third Model Dragoon Percussion Revolver, serial no. 12406, Samuel Colt  American, Steel, brass, gold, wood (walnut), American, Hartford, Connecticut
Samuel Colt
ca. 1853
Sword Hilt, Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse  French, Bronze, gold, French, Paris
Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse
Lucien Falize
1881–82

With few exceptions, arms and armor of virtually all periods and from all the world’s cultures were decorated to varying degrees. The desire to embellish objects of everyday and special use was naturally extended to those that served such important purposes as obtaining food, self-defense, and maintaining power. Most cultures valued weapons and armor as signs of rank and status, as traditional symbols of the warrior class, and as diplomatic gifts. However, it was the use and function of the individual weapon or armor that determined why, how, and to what extent an object was decorated.

While the equipment of the common man-at-arms was often plain or the decoration kept to a minimum, it was the arms and armor of the higher levels of society—nobility, military commanders, and elite warriors—that would conspicuously be adorned with costly decoration (). In times when wealth equalled power, this degree of decoration was as much an expression of the wearer’s status and rank as it was indicative of the value placed on such arms and armor by the owner. However, on arms and armor for practical use, on the battlefield or for hunting, care was taken that the decoration did not impede function. Only the equipment and accoutrements for tournaments and especially for ceremonial use were sometimes so lavishly decorated that the importance of the decoration began to supercede the function of the actual object. A somewhat different variety is the symbolic decoration that was meant to empower both the object and its owner with magical and apotropaic qualities, to justify claims to power or to denote religious beliefs, education, and sophistication.

In the Museum’s collection of arms and armor, the diversity of decoration of earlier periods and various cultures is represented with such outstanding examples as a Mesopotamian gold and silver axhead () of the late third to early second millennium B.C., and a presentation model of a Colt Percussion revolver () of the mid-nineteenth century with elegant gold inlay.

Some of the foremost artists of their time—painters, draftsmen, and goldsmiths—were actively engaged in designing arms, armor, and their decoration, or decorating the objects themselves. Cennino Cennini’s famous handbook on artistic techniques, Il libro dell’arte, written around 1400, describes how to make crests for helmets used in tournaments. Many court painters appear to have also been involved in the embellishment and painting of banners and shields. Artists such as Albrecht Dürer, Hans Burgkmair, and Hans Holbein drew elaborate designs for cannons, sword hilts (), scabbards, armor, and etched decoration of various parts of armor, while field and tournament armors were etched with designs of exquisite quality by printmakers like Daniel Hopfer (1471–1536). Since the sixteenth century, famous goldsmiths and silversmiths such as Bartolomeo Campi, Étienne Delaune, or Elisaeus Libaerts became involved in the designing and decorating—even the production—of armor, sword hilts (), and firearms ().

Decoration itself could take many forms. The simplest was the addition of separate decorative and/or symbolical elements to an otherwise strictly functional object or group of objects, for example, the crests on helmets of the European knight and Japanese samurai. More sophisticated decoration involved the mechanical alteration of an object’s shape, form, and surface, or adorning the latter in a variety of artistic techniques and styles with additional materials such as paint, semi-precious and precious metals and stones, textiles, and fur. In many cases, various materials and different artistic techniques might be combined to decorate one object or group of objects.


Contributors

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

October 2003


Citation

View Citations

Breiding, Dirk H. “The Decoration of Arms and Armor.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/decaa/hd_decaa.htm (October 2003)