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Source Description
The halberd and partisan are hafted weapons highly favored by European infantries of the 1500s and 1600s for their great versatility and deadly effect. From about 1550 on, these weapons underwent significant changes as they gradually became more ornamental. The large flat surfaces of the blades lent themselves to engraving, etching, gilding, and other forms of decoration. They also provided the perfect location for the coats of arms of princely or noble families. For this reason, hafted weapons became the favored parade weapons of palace guards and splendidly outfitted special regiments of princely bodyguards. These examples, made for the German dukes of Brunswick at Schloss Blankenburg, still have their silk tassels in their original colors of blue and yellow.
Scholar Source Context
Document identity
localId
165168
label
Parade Halberd (from the bodyguard of Ludwig Rudolf, Duke of Brunswick- Wolfenbüttel [1671-1735])
core
obj
dtoType
object
pageCount
1
Source metadata
id
165168
contentType
object
title
Parade Halberd (from the bodyguard of Ludwig Rudolf, Duke of Brunswick- Wolfenbüttel [1671-1735])
description
The halberd and partisan are hafted weapons highly favored by European infantries of the 1500s and 1600s for their great versatility and deadly effect. From about 1550 on, these weapons underwent significant changes as they gradually became more ornamental. The large flat surfaces of the blades lent themselves to engraving, etching, gilding, and other forms of decoration. They also provided the perfect location for the coats of arms of princely or noble families. For this reason, hafted weapons became the favored parade weapons of palace guards and splendidly outfitted special regiments of princely bodyguards. These examples, made for the German dukes of Brunswick at Schloss Blankenburg, still have their silk tassels in their original colors of blue and yellow.
date
1717
rights
CC0
rightsUri
CC0
language
en
wikidata
Q60781060
genreSpecific
Arms and Armor
imageCount
1
source
import
dimensionsRaw
Overall: 276.9 cm (109 in.)
cul
Germany, 18th century
accession
2007.164
Source extras
tec
blued, etched and gilded steel, wooden haft with orginal steel base spike, silk tassel with alternating blue and gold bands
tombstone
Parade Halberd (from the bodyguard of Ludwig Rudolf, Duke of Brunswick- Wolfenbüttel [1671-1735]), 1717. Germany, 18th century. Blued, etched and gilded steel, wooden haft with orginal steel base spike, silk tassel with alternating blue and gold bands; overall: 276.9 cm (109 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Alma Kroeger Fund, 2007.164
collection
MED - Arms & Armor
inscriptions
inscription
'LR'; 1717
inscription_translation
Ludwig Rudolf
inscription
Coat of Arms Brunswick-Wofenbüttel
didYouKnow
A halberd is a mix between a battle ax and a spear.
citations
citation
Fliegel, Stephen N. <em>Arms & Armor: The Cleveland Museum of Art.</em> [Cleveland, Ohio]: Cleveland Museum of Art, 2007.
page_number
pp. 150, 188, no. 106
creditline
Alma Kroeger Fund
updatedAt
2026-05-29 08:33:36.785000
sourceId
165168
dept
Medieval Art
coll
MED - Arms & Armor
med
blued, etched and gilded steel, wooden haft with orginal steel base spike, silk tassel with alternating blue and gold bands
thumbnail_url
image_url
Single page context
seq
1
pageIndex
0
type
photo
mediaId
02c44c0fe5b191a4