Save object
You may download and use the image for private purposes. Nutzungsbedingungen & AGBs
To request to use the image for commercial or academic purposes, please send us a reproduction request
Save object
You may download and use the image for private purposes. Nutzungsbedingungen & AGBs
To request to use the image for commercial or academic purposes, please send us a reproduction request
Save object
You may download and use the image for private purposes. Nutzungsbedingungen & AGBs
To request to use the image for commercial or academic purposes, please send us a reproduction request
Halber Kinderharnisch, Kinderrüstung
Archduke Ferdinand Charles was the elder of two sons born to Leopold V, Archduke of Austria, and his wife Claudia de’ Medici; he was thus a nephew of Emperor Ferdinand II.
The armour was produced by a Milanese master-craftsman around 1575, and half a century later it was passed down to Ferdinand Charles. According to an inscription on the inside (DEL S. PAVOL FRANCISCO CHARNESECI), now lost, it once belonged to Paolo Francesco Carnesecchi, a son of Pietro Carnesecchi (1508-1567), who became a Knight of the Order of Malta in 1641. In 1628, ten days after the birth of Ferdinand Charles, Mary Magdalena, Grand Duchess of Tuscany and sister of Leopold V, dispatched this armour to Innsbruck as a christening gift for her nephew.
The armour may originally have been part of a small garniture. This is suggested by the shape of the right shoulder, which is smaller than the left one and would therefore belong to a cavalry armour. The surface is blued and decorated with fire-gilt bands. Some of the original textile parts of the armour have survived, including the lining of the helmet, the tassets, and the straps.
Ferdinand Charles succeeded his father in 1632 and took over gubernatorial duties from his mother when he came of age in 1646. He financed his profligate lifestyle by selling or mortgaging Austrian sovereign rights, for instance in the Prättigau, the Lower Engadin, and the Puster Valley. He was a fierce believer in absolutism, reducing the participation of the Estates to an absolute minimum. He never called a diet again after 1648 and had his chancellor Wilhelm Biener illegally executed after a secret trial.



Archduke Ferdinand Charles was the elder of two sons born to Leopold V, Archduke of Austria, and his wife Claudia de’ Medici; he was thus a nephew of Emperor Ferdinand II.
The armour was produced by a Milanese master-craftsman around 1575, and half a century later it was passed down to Ferdinand Charles. According to an inscription on the inside (DEL S. PAVOL FRANCISCO CHARNESECI), now lost, it once belonged to Paolo Francesco Carnesecchi, a son of Pietro Carnesecchi (1508-1567), who became a Knight of the Order of Malta in 1641. In 1628, ten days after the birth of Ferdinand Charles, Mary Magdalena, Grand Duchess of Tuscany and sister of Leopold V, dispatched this armour to Innsbruck as a christening gift for her nephew.
The armour may originally have been part of a small garniture. This is suggested by the shape of the right shoulder, which is smaller than the left one and would therefore belong to a cavalry armour. The surface is blued and decorated with fire-gilt bands. Some of the original textile parts of the armour have survived, including the lining of the helmet, the tassets, and the straps.
Ferdinand Charles succeeded his father in 1632 and took over gubernatorial duties from his mother when he came of age in 1646. He financed his profligate lifestyle by selling or mortgaging Austrian sovereign rights, for instance in the Prättigau, the Lower Engadin, and the Puster Valley. He was a fierce believer in absolutism, reducing the participation of the Estates to an absolute minimum. He never called a diet again after 1648 and had his chancellor Wilhelm Biener illegally executed after a secret trial.
Historische Schenkung:
Maria Magdalena von Österreich (1609-1621), Großherzogin der Tsokana (1589 - 1631) DNBarrow_outward
Time:
um 1575
Object Name
Halber Kinderharnisch, Kinderrüstung
Culture
Italienisch
Material/technology:
Eisen, geschmiedet, getrieben, gebläut, teils feuervergoldet. Schnallen, Riemenzungen: Messing, feuervergoldet. Nietkappen: teils Eisen, teils Messing, feuervergoldet. Rosetten: teils Kupfer, teils Messing, feuervergoldet. Textil: Samt (Reste), Seide, Silberlahn, Goldlahn. Leder (teils modern).
Dimensions:
Maße inkl. Sockel: H 142 cm, B 32 cm, T 45 cm
Objektmaße exkl. Sockel: H 110cm
Gesamtgewicht exkl. Figurine, exkl. Sockel: 5,30 kg
Inscribed
Ehemals stand mit Ölfarbe auf der Innenseite der Brust: DEL S. PAVOL FRANCISCO CHARNESECI
Copyright
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Hofjagd- und Rüstkammer
Invs.
Hofjagd- und Rüstkammer, A 1526
Browse more
Similar items you might be interested in

The Orator Giovan Pietro Maffeis (?) Giovanni Battista Moroni around 1560/65

Emperor Joseph II with Grand Duke Pietro Leopoldo of Tuscany Bernardino Regoli 1769–73

Taufe Christi J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1891

Büßender Hl. Hieronymus J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1891

Madonna mit dem Jesuskinde und den hll. Rosalia und Katharina J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1910

Maria mit Kind und den hll. Rosa (?) und Katharina (?) J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1891

Maria mit Kind und den hll. Petrus, Johannes Evangelist (?), Johannes d. Täufer und Paulus J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1891

Heimkehr der Hagar J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1891

Salomons Urteil J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1910

Traum des Josef J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1910

Venus und Vulcan J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1910

Die Heilige Familie J. Löwy, K. und K. Hof-Photograph, Kunst- und Verlagsanstalt (Wien) 1888 bis 1910







