Italian or French, 1545-1555
Image copyright Pyhrr and Godoy
In sixteenth-century
Though painting, architecture, and sculpture were the primary venues for classicist works, the military world was affected as well. In the 1500s, the knight – expensive to train and arm, an emblem of upper class superiority – was increasingly lame as a fighting unit. The Battle of Pavia in 1525, where around 1,500 conscripts with matchlock guns demolished a force of French cavalry four times as large, clearly demonstrated that cheap, mass units of foot soldiers with impersonal weapons like guns and pikes, allied with capitalistic mercenary groups, could make paragons of chivalry feel sharply the cramping of weak muscles and creaking in aged joints. But Renaissance armorers could also tap into that weakness and supersede it with a style called “all’antica”: armor made “in the antique mode”.
Image copyright Pyhrr and Godoy
The Lion Armor is a beautiful piece of art; that much is plain. Even as a symbol of social decay, it is among the finest full harnesses extant (now in the Royal Armouries,
The pride of the suit is the embossing, in the form of eleven growling lion’s heads – as old a Classical image of martial prowess as there is – on the toe caps, knees, gauntlet cuffs, elbows, shoulders, and crown of the helmet. These have been hammered out of plates of steel which would have begun as thicker than the surrounding pieces, because the embossing would drastically thin the metal, a danger for an armor worn in combat. (And the Lion Armor did see combat, probably in a tournament: there are sword-cuts on the left side of the visor.) The fluting seen in German Gothic armors proved that craftsmen could sculpt the steel with simple lines to add both beauty and strength. In the Lion Armor, that sculpture is purely decorative, yet still integrated into fighting harness, both beautiful and effective.
The Lion Armor, then, is a successful work of fantasy-come-true. It is as remarkable a work of art as it is a functional tool of war, made for a man more likely a wannabe than a warrior. The decoration of this armor proclaims life and power: the etching, reminiscent of plant life; the gilding, bright yellow like the sunlight superseding the dun steel; the ferocious lions in positions of strength, guiding the hands, feet, and head of the wearer, calling back to the lion skin of the indomitable Heracles. A man in this armor is donning a myth, adopting a persona in the hope that it makes for a brighter future.
Next time, the armor we look at will make a darker prediction, and one that actually came true.
Works Cited:
Pyhrr, Stuart W. and Jose A. Godoy, Heroic Armor of the Italian Renaissance: Filippo Negroli and His Contemporaries. The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 1998, New York