Polish half-heavy cavalry, 17th century
imnk
miniaturka

description:

1. Polish half-heavy cavalryman
Poland, 17th century
From the former collection of the Moszyński family

on the belt:

Hussar’s war hammer 
Poland, 1st half of the 17th century

Cossack’s sabre with sheath 
Poland, mid- 17th century

2. Turkish kalkan-shield 
Ottoman, 17th century
Gift of Władysław Józef Fedorowicz, 1922 

3. Composite bow 
Near East, 17th century

4. Bow case
Poland, “Lvov manufacture”, 17th/18th century
Gift of the Hutten-Czapski family, 1903 

5. Quiver
Poland, „Lvov manufacture”, 17th/18th century
Gift of the Hutten-Czapski family, 1903  

6. Missiourka-helmet
Poland, 17th/18th century

7. Arrows 
Near East, 18th century
From the former collection of the Moszyński family

8. Mace 
Hungary (?), 17th/18th century
From the former collection of the Moszyński family

9. Pair of cavalry wheel-lock pistols 
Germany, workshops of Wolfenbüttel and Suhl, about 1690  


exposition: Gallery „Arms and Uniforms in Poland",
The Main Building, 1, 3 Maja Av.


key: Armour <<<

The collection of armour, the heart of which is the hussar armour from the 17th and 18th centuries, is one of the largest in Poland. Prominent items in this collection are the Hussarian fish scale armour owned by Hetman Stanislaw Jan Jablonowski and the Hussar armour of the Wielogłowski family from the mid-17th century.  A priceless historical piece is the Behteret armour dated  to 1560 – one of two surviving suits of this type in Poland, and as is Hussar breastplate with fualds dating from the 16th century, known as an anima. In its collection of Western European armour the museum boasts a Renaissance suit dating from 1560, comprised of elements from the finest metalsmiths of Europe of the period, Augsburg, Nuremberg, and Brest, and made famous by the painting The Prussian Homage [Hołd pruski], in which the painter Jan Matejko depicted the Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights Albrecht Hohenzollern dressed in it. In addition to complete suits of armour, the collection preserves elements of armour that were once part of a larger whole, among which there is a face plate from the helmet of Holy Roman Emperor Charles V, dating from 1530 to 1545. Other valuable artefacts include a breastplate made in Augsburg, decorated with a scene of the adoration of Christ, and a breastplate from the former Radziwiłł armoury in Nieśwież [now Nesvizh in Belarus]. The collection also contains helmets, beginning with 16th-century close helms and morions and continuing through 17th and 18th century Pappienheimer Zischagge helmets to 20th-century helmets used in both world wars. 


Piotr Wilkosz


© 2010 National Museum in Krakow
design & concept: creator.pl
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