Gallery 345, Arms and Armor, third floor (Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Galleries)
Main Building
Gallery 345, Arms and Armor, third floor (Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Galleries)
Main Building
The sitter, a nobleman identified by the heraldic arms on the shield at his side, was a member of the Schenken von Limpurg family of Swabia, in southern Germany. He is clad in a typical late Gothic German armor, whose characteristic features include a breastplate built with a piece for the chest and another for the abdomen; narrow one-piece tassets (thigh defenses) suspended from the steel skirt; and poleyns (knee defenses) incorporating elongated plates extending down the shin section of the greaves (lower leg defenses). The gorget (neck defense) formed of multiple lames is a relatively unusual feature, recorded on funeral effigies of German knights in the 1470s and thereafter.
This stained glass panel is presumably the remnant of a larger ensemble for a window in a church or chapel patronized by a branch of the Schenken von Limpurg family.
Gallery 345, Arms and Armor, third floor (Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Galleries)
Title: | Kneeling Knight in Prayer |
Date: | c. 1470 |
Artist: | Artist/maker unknown, German |
Medium: | Stained, partially etched, and painted glass; lead |
Dimensions: | 27 x 17 x 1/4 inches (68.6 x 43.2 x 0.6 cm) |
Classification: | Architecture (including fragments) |
Credit Line: | Bequest of Carl Otto Kretzschmar von Kienbusch, 1977 |
Accession Number: | 1977-167-1036 |
Geography: | Made in southern Germany, Germany, Europe |
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Gallery 345, Arms and Armor, third floor (Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Galleries)
Main Building