카를 5세의 바퀴식 방아쇠가 달린 2연발 권총

Gunsmith Peter Peck German
Etcher Ambrosius Gemlich German
ca. 1540–45
On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 375
작품은 뮌헨의 시계 제조공이자 총기 제작자인 페터 펙이 만든 바퀴식 방아쇠 권총으로 정교한 디자인과 기계를 다루는 재주가 합쳐진 작품입니다. 에칭과 도금 작업을 한 총열, 그 외 금속 부분 및 신성 로마제국 황제 카를 5세의 상징은 예술가 암브로시우스 게믈리히가 장식한 것입니다. 15세기 후반 또는 16세기 초반에 이탈리아와 독일에서 발명된 이 같은 바퀴식 방아쇠 메커니즘은 최초의 자동점화장치 시스템으로서 미리 총을 준비하고 장전해서 바로 쏠 수 있도록 고안되었습니다. 카를 5세는 이같이 정교하게 장식된 소형화기를 최초로 의뢰했던 고위 고객이었습니다.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 제목: 카를 5세의 바퀴식 방아쇠가 달린 2연발 권총
  • 아티스트: 페터 펙, 독일, 1503– 1596년, 암브로시우스 게믈리히, 독일, 1520– 50년경 활동
  • 연대: 1540– 45년경
  • 재료: 철, 금, 나무, 뿔
  • 크기: 길이: 49.2cm, 구경: 12mm
  • 크레디트 라인: 윌리엄 H. 리그스 기증, 1913
  • 작품 번호: 14.25.1425
  • Curatorial Department: Arms and Armor

Audio

다음에서만 사용 가능: English
Cover Image for 4411. Double-Barreled Wheellock Pistol Made for Emperor Charles V

4411. Double-Barreled Wheellock Pistol Made for Emperor Charles V

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DONALD LAROCCA: This is a double-barrel, wheel-lock pistol made for the Holy Roman Emperor Charles the Fifth, about 1540, or 45.

NARRATOR: Donald Larocca is Curator of Arms and Armor.

DONALD LAROCCA: Charles the Fifth was ruler of huge territories; it was under his reign that much of the New World was explored. He had large territories throughout Europe as well. He was a great patron of the armorer’s art. He had many, many armors, complete suits of armor, sets of decorated swords, and lots of firearms too, and this pistol here is really one of the best types of pistols from that period. Handheld firearms are still a relatively new development at this period of time in the early sixteenth century. Firearms had been developing for a good century, and artillery for another century before that, so you have the use of gunpowder on the battlefields of Europe from the thirteenth century onward. It was only early in the sixteenth century, when these type of firing mechanisms were perfected, that allowed a gun to be practical for use, that they really began to be used much more widely by the nobility and on the battlefield.

What we see is that this is a highly decorated piece, this is not just a rough-and-tumble thing intended for use in warfare necessarily. The stock is inlaid with bone or ivory; the metal work is chiseled and engraved and then gilded. So from the amount of decoration you can see that it is a piece for a very highly-placed patron. It has two locks, each lock allowing one of the two barrels to fire separately. The locks are the circular pieces that you see on the side and that’s where the name “wheel-lock” comes from. The wheel-lock is almost like a clock mechanism, and in fact the gun maker on this, Peter Peck, was also a clockmaker. The early mechanisms for firearms of this type were frequently made by people who were also clock-makers, because they knew the techniques to make those kinds of mechanisms.

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