Royal Armoury of Madrid

Royal Armory of Madrid

The Royal Armoury of Madrid or Real Armería de Madrid, between many other things, the collection contains the personal arms of the Kings of Spain, and also houses present military weapons and diplomatic works of art like mixed tapestries, paintings and other works of art and trophies. Among the most notable parts of the collection features armor and full tools that Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II used.

The fact be a certain continuity of representation, more or less accurately of the different reigns, has conferred a dynastic character derived from its formation over time.

The decision to grant preferential treatment to the Armory dates back at least to the death of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, which occurred on 21 September 1558. At the end of 1559 had already been made known to the testamentaries of the Emperor the decision of the new King of take to him the Armory.

Location

The armory of the Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, had come, mostly, from Brussels to Spain via the port of Laredo, in September 1556, from where it went to Valladolid. At his death his weapons are scattered between Valladolid and to a lesser extent, in the Monastery of Yuste, and possibly in the Alcázar of Madrid.

The establishment of the Court in Madrid said that in July 1562, Philip II had already decided that was done in Madrid, determination that could have been, earlier though.

Former building

Antigüa Real Armería de Felipe II.
Back facade of the Antigüa Real Armería de Felipe II (photo in 1884).

This building that is currently known as "Antigüa Real Armería de Felipe II" was decided, apparently, in 1553, to provide the Alcázar of a new Stables.[1] The conception of it is probably due to Philip II himself judging by a sketch of his fist preserved in the Archivo General de Simancas.

This former armoury was located in the complex of the Royal Stables of the Alcázar of the Habsburgs, who it built was the master builder Gaspar de Vega between 1556 and 1564 at the behest of King Philip II. When works were completed, the king commanded to move the Armoury to the wing of the Stables that was in front of the main facade of the Alcázar.

The new site was structured around a rectangular hall of 63 meters long by 10 meters wide, and consists of ground floor and main floor. Crowning the building a ledge of stone on which stood the roof truss and slate roof, and stepped gables at both front ends. Downstairs, destined to stables, it had three naves, while the upper floor, where it settled the Armory, was completely clear. The interior of the hall was completed in 1565. It was whitewashed and a large portion decorated with azulejos from Talavera de la Reina pottery by Juan Florez.

The most characteristic element of its structure was the called "Arc of the Armoury" that connected the Alcázar with the outside, the arc was built during the reign of Charles II of Habsburg.[2]

Current location

In 1884 a fire destroyed partially the Armory built by Philip II. No expense spared Alfonso XII ordered the construction of a new building which is its current headquarters. The early disappearance of the monarch prevented that he saw culminated his work, which was finally ended by the will of the Queen Maria Cristina. The main floor of the new building was conceived as a large room decorated with tapestries weapons and outfits in which was installed the entire collection. The new facility, inaugurated in 1893, was a milestone, for all purposes, in the history of the collection, conditioning, since, at present, the image of it.

The current Royal Armoury of Madrid is located on the ground floor of the Royal Palace of Madrid, and is considered, along with the Imperial Armoury of Vienna, one of the best in the world. It consists of pieces from as early as the 15th century. The collection highlights the tournament pieces made for Charles V and Philip II by the leading armourers of Milan and Augsburg. Among the most remarkable works are full armour and weapons that Emperor Charles V used in the Battle of Mühlberg, and which was portrayed by Titian in his famous equestrian portrait housed at the Museo del Prado. The armoury retains some of the most important pieces of this art in Europe and the world, including several signed by Filippo Negroli, one of the most famous designers in the armourers' guild.

Collections

The weapons were guarded in the former building in large "drawers" of wood, i.e. large closets like cloakrooms. The distribution of the weapons in the room was thought thoroughly. Higher grade weapons stored inside the drawers. Firearms, archery, and to a lesser extent, some knives and small, in lanceras over the windows. The remaining pole weapons occupied the front ends of the room and of the drawers. In the western headwall highlighted two small pieces of artillery and four sledges with fittings of its shots.

The criteria of distribution and management inside the drawers were more complex. The first criterion of distribution catered to the owners of the weapons. Those of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor occupied mainly the first eight drawers in the southern side, while those of Philip II were stored next to those of his father in the northern wall. According to the second criterion, certain drawers housed the set of armor, spines, trappings and clothing that constitute each of the harnesses of Charles V and Philip II. The third criterion, broader, responded to the types of objects, both from a formal point of view as material. Thus drawers that kept only one type of weapon, dedicated for example for knives, for chain mails, or other objects with common features as was its decorative art in the case of arms decorated in damascened settled. Other drawers guarded weapons of particular interest to the dynasty, as the dedicated to the trophies of Mülhberg and Pavia, of the that grouped guns of legendary characters or some symbolic importance, as the ceremonial sword of the Catholic Monarchs, the rapier sent by Pope Clement VII to Charles V, the armors sent to Philip II by the shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi or the swords attributed to El Cid, to el Gran Capitán, to Roland and to Boabdil.

The core of the current collection corresponds to the armory guarded by Philip II when he established the Court in Madrid, consisting of his personal armory, but especially by of the his father, Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, who in turn had retained weapons belonging to his father, Philip I of Castile and to his grandparents, Ferdinand II of Aragon and Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor. Within this set stand the armors of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II as a set of most important and core on which is based the rest of the collection. Along with it highlighted other significant sets of the formation of the current collection, despite the irregular increase of its funds from the 16th to the 19th century: among them are the medieval weapons from the Treasury of the Alcázar of Segovia; the firearms of Charles V and Philip II; the armours of the Princes and Infantes of Spain being children; military trophies; and diplomats and family gifts as the sent by the following persons: the Duke of Mantua to Charles V; the shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi to Philip II; Charles Emmanuel I, Duke of Savoy and James I of England to Philip III; Infanta Isabel Clara Eugenia and Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria to Philip IV; or the Sultan of Turkey to Charles III among others. The last set of special importance in the collection, which are the firearms forging in Madrid for the venatoria activities of the Court, of great reputation throughout the continent.[3]

The medieval and transition to Renaissance funds are a set of importance for its meaning, despite its number and diverse origins. One part was in the armory of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, who had inherited his father's weapons, of his grandparents and some of his contemporaries. A second set comes from the Royal Treasury of the Alcazar of Segovia, moved to the Armory of Madrid by Philip II. A third group consists of several purchases, donations and transfers of royal medals made between the reigns of Ferdinand VII to Alfonso XII. Highlights the depiction of the emblems of the kingdoms of Castile, León and Aragon, present in the acicates and the mantle of Ferdinand III of Castile, those coming from his burial in the Cathedral of Seville, and the crest of Drac Alat attributed to Martin of Aragon. Together with them stand the royal sword of the Catholic Monarchs, used as ceremonial sword in the Spanish Court until the 18th century.

The reign of the Catholic Monarchs and the weaponry of Late Middle Ages, is also represented by weapons from various sources that frame the activity in this period. Are preserved Contemporary war weapons to the Granada War, consisting of illustrative defensive pieces of the Spanish, Italian and German workshops; and two of the oldest portable fire weapons known in Spain, even debtors in some ways, of the archery that supersede with the time. Within this group it deserve special mention the helmets and the armor pieces associated with a peculiar prestigious peninsular production, whose workshops have not yet been identified, but are supposed are from Aragonese origin; The Nasrid sultanate of Granada is present through a small but important sample of its panoply, since are preserved an example of each of the three types of weapons of Granadan creation; one genet from the collection of Cardinal-Infante Ferdinand of Austria; one leather shield preserved in the armory of Charles V; and a dagger wing associated with a belt with pouch and a holster for a Quran, those latter captured at the Battle of Lucena to Muhammad XII (Boabdil), and those presented to Alfonso XIII by the Marquis of Viana as part of the Villaseca legacy.

The collection retains weapons related with some of the facts and prominent figures of the reign of the Catholic Monarchs through their weapons, such as the sword of Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba (el Gran Capitán), or the weapons of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, specifically a headpiece of horse, a coracina and two fences. The firsts allude to his power and dynasty by a decoration and heraldic and allegorical character that puts the imperial emblems. These weapons come from the collection of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor where were also guarding the weapons of his father, Philip I of Castile, representative of the marriage alliances between the Catholic Monarchs and Maximilian. The armory of Philip I of Castile is currently divided between the Hofjagd und Rüstkammer (Kunsthistorisches Museum) of Vienna and the Royal Armory of Madrid, where are primarily the weapons used since his marriage with Joanna of Castile, among which a two hands sword with his personal motto, and helmets and testeras of Flemish, German and Italian origin; between these, two helmets by the Milanos workshop of Filippo Negroli and three armor that match only two examples in the Flemish and Spanish production period, and three armors that match two unique examples in the Flemish and Spanish production of the period.

The Armouries of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II

The armouries of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Philip II constitute the core of the collection, especially in regard to the imperial armory. Meanwhile, the weapons of Philip II can not be dissociated from those of his father, given the close relationship between the two, and by their German or Italian origin within the same chronological period. In fact, most of the armors of Philip II were forged when Charles V lived, coinciding at times in its development with those of the Emperor. The whole of the armors of Charles V and Philip II was forged between 1519 and 1560, during the Renaissance, during the time of splendor of the art of the armour.

Essentially, is not a set of war weapons, but a collection of luxury weapons as a representation of power, intended to be used in the various events of the Court: fairs, tournaments, military parades, jousting, etc. Most of the armours of Charles V and Philip II were forged following the concept of fitting armor invented by Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor: consisted of a base armour provided with reinforcement parts or complement, decorated uniformly, so that the exchange of the different pieces that compose it, could lead to the formation of various figures intended to the combat on foot, to the fair and to the equestrian tournament, to the war in its different variants or to the parade. The Spanish Royal Collection retains much of these auxiliary pieces and a high number of fences or armors of horse, associated, in some cases, to such armors.

In this type of weapons is especially valued the constructive and technical wit, the formal design and the decoration, the latter rich in connotations of all being, from chivalry to the reflection of the ideas and themes of humanism through allegorical, religious, heraldic and / or dynastic, or recreating the classical tradition of the Roman times.[4] The physical implementation of the decoration is done by techniques to show or enhance the beauty and richness of the pieces sculpted thanks to etched surfaces, light embossed, golden or silver surfaces, bluing, gold and silver damascened, etc. Therefore, throughout Europe the luxury weapons could only be forged and decorated in a limited number of highly specialized workshops. The most important were located, for historical and geographical reasons, in Germany and northern Italy. In the case of Charles V stand out the workshops of Kolman and Desiderius Helmschmid from Augsburg, and of Filippo Negroli and brothers from Milan. In the case of Philip II, Franz and Wolfgang Grosschedel from Landshut, Desiderius Helmschmid and Antoni Peffenhauser from Augsburg. These armourers are given special preference, but both Charles V and Philip II possessed weapons coming from other high-level workshops, such as Mattheus Frawenbrys, Caremolo Mondrone, or Bartolomeo Campi, either because these are specific orders, or by being parts submitted by various personages related to the Spanish Court.[5]

Notes

  1. On the circumstances surrounding the transfer of the collection to Madrid and its installation in the new armory see: Soler Del Campo, A. (1999). "La armería de Felipe II". Reales Sitios. pages 135, 24-37.
  2. "Durante el reinado de Carlos II, algunos cambios en el paisaje urbano matritense", Paisajes urbanos matritenses
  3. In 1898 was published the last general catalog of the collection by the Count Viudo of Valencia de Don Juan. This catalog applies as a reference guide for the study of it. Its inquiry no problems using the index of the work. Valencia De Don Juan, Conde Viudo. De. (1898): "Catálogo Histórico-Descriptivo de la Real Armería de Madrid". Madrid.
  4. On the symbolic aspects of the weapons and especially its consideration as high level artworks see: Pyhrr, S. W. and Godoy, J. A. (1998). "Heroic Armor of the Italian Renaissance. Filippo Negroli and his Contemporaries" (With essays and a compilation of documents by Silvio Leydi). New York. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 8 Oct. 1988 - 17 Jan. 1999. For weapons in the context of the chivalric games: Rangström, L. [Pub.]. (1992): "Riddarlek och Tornerspel. Sverige - Europa - Tournaments and the Dream of Chivalry". Stockholm. Livrustkammaren of Stockholm 12.6.1992-6.12.1992.
  5. As an introduction to the work of the leading armourers who put their art at the service of Charles V and / or Philip II, and the context in which it develops: Boccia, L. G. and Coelho, E. T. (1967): "L' Arte dell'armatura in Italia". Milan. Cortes Echanove, J. (1963): "Armas y armeros en la época de Felipe II". El Escorial (1563-1963). Lavin, J. D. (1965): "A History of Spanish Firearms". New York. Reitzenstein. "Die Landshutter Plattner Wolfgang und Franz Grosschedel". "Münchner Jahrbuch der Bildenden Kunst", pages 142-153. Reitzenstein, A., (1971): "Antoni Peffenhauser Waffen und Kostümkunde", pages 111-127. Thomas B. (1944): "Deutsche Plattnerkunst". Munich. Thomas, B. (1980): "Augsburger Harnische und stangenwaffen (Plattner, Atzmaler, Goldschmiede)".

Bibliography

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