Spanish Arms and Armour. Albert Frederick Calvert

Spanish Arms and Armour - Albert Frederick Calvert


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       Albert Frederick Calvert

      Spanish Arms and Armour

      Being a Historical and Descriptive Account of the Royal Armoury of Madrid

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066249007

       PREFACE

       ILLUSTRATIONS

       SPANISH ARMS AND ARMOUR

       INTRODUCTORY

       I FROM THE FIFTH TO THE FOURTEENTH CENTURY

       II THE FOURTEENTH AND FIFTEENTH CENTURIES

       III THE AGE OF CHARLES V

       IV THE DECADENCE OF ARMOUR

       Table of Contents

      IN compiling this volume I believe I can claim, in a sense, to have broken new ground, for although a description of the Spanish Royal Armoury finds a place in every Guide and Handbook to Madrid, no exhaustive survey of the contents of this priceless treasure-house, apart from the official catalogue, is in existence.

      The present work is based on the admirable catalogue prepared in 1898 at the instigation of Queen Maria Cristina by the Conde de Valencia de San Juan, to whom, with peculiar pleasure, I desire to make full acknowledgment of my indebtedness. To the formal descriptions of the exhibits, which the Conde de San Juan has collated with invariable accuracy, I have prefixed a brief sketch of the historical development of Spanish arms and armour, which, I venture to hope, will make the book more acceptable, both to the specialist in armour, and to those who visit the Armoury without any particular knowledge of the subject.

      Though the Armeria Real remains the richest in the world, it has enriched nearly all the collections of arms and armour in Europe and America. Mr. G. P. Laking, in a recent number of the Art Journal, has shown that after the fire of 1839, a very large number of pieces were fraudulently abstracted and sent to London for sale—ultimately finding their way to armouries and museums as far apart as Rome and New York. If the truth were known it would probably be found that there was not a collection of any importance that did not include some of the spoils of the great treasure house established by the Kings of Spain.

      In furtherance of my object, I have laid under contribution a large number of authorities, and I cannot omit to acknowledge my obligations to the standard works of Meyrick, Hewitt, Demmin, Lacombe and Clephan, to the writings of Baron Davillier and Don Juan Riaño, to the Iconografia Española of Don V. Carderera, and to Dr. Wendelin Boheim, of the Imperial Armoury, Vienna. I also desire to render a special tribute of thanks to Mr. E. B. d’Auvergne, who placed his expert knowledge at my service, and has rendered me invaluable assistance in my endeavours to make this compilation both accurate and complete.

      The value of a book of this kind must, I recognise, depend in a large measure upon the selection of the illustrations and the excellence of their reproduction. In this matter I have been greatly helped by Señor Don Lacoste, and Messrs. Hauser y Menet, whose photographs, other than those taken by myself, are, with their permission, reproduced here.

      A. F. C.

      “Royston,”

       Swiss Cottage,

       N.W.

       Table of Contents

Reference No. Title. Plate.
Crowns and votive Crosses of Guarrazar, Remains of St. Ferdinand’s Robe, Moorish Spurs of St. Ferdinand, 1
Cloak and Spurs of St. Ferdinand and Visigothic Bit, 1A
Don Bernardo Guillen de Entenza, 13th century, 2
Don Guillelmo Ramon de Moncada, Seneschal of Catalonia, died circa 1280, 3
Don Juan Alphonso, Lord of Ajofrin, died about 1386, 3
G 22. Sword and Scabbard, probably belonging to St. Ferdinand, 4
G 21. The Lobera of St. Ferdinand, 4
G 22. Sword and Scabbard that probably belonged to St. Ferdinand, 5
Pedro I, King of Castile, 6
Effigy of St. Ferdinand, King of Spain, 7
Sepulchral Effigy of Don Bernardo de Anglesola, circa 1384, 8
F 123. Bit, believed to have belonged to Witiza, King of the Visigoths, 9
D 11. Helmet-crest of Martin I of Aragon, 9
G 4. Pontifical Sword presented by Pope Eugene IV to John II of Castile, 10
G 13. Fifteenth Century War Sword, probably belonged to Ferdinand the Catholic, 10
G 1. Ceremonial Sword of Ferdinand and Isabella, 11
G 23.
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