Friday, October 5, 2012

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth riders in de Bruyn's album - part III

Salve,
almost 15 years ago Richard Brzezinski published his two, now legendary, Osprey Publishing volumes dedicated to the armies of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Volume two included an  overview of the so called Foreign Autorament where Western or German-dressed units were grouped. De Bruyn's engravings belong to Bathory's reign and foreign autorament of the Commonwealth army was reformed under king Władyslaw IV, but German-style cavalry was already  present during our Hungarian king reign.
Here it is worth noting that during Bathory's reign Ducal Prussia was firmly within the Polish control and being an integral part of the Commonwealth provided troops and volunteers for the Commonwealth cavalry and infantry units, along with Duchy of Pomerania and Silesia etc. By the way one of the most famous Renaissance Polish commanders, cavalry foray master, known as Terror Tartarorum Bernard Pretwicz came to Polish Kingdom from Sliesia.
  Royal City of Gdańsk and Royal Prussia, and Upper Silesia also provided German-looking units for the Polish Crown while Livonia, Kurland and northern parts of Grand Duchy of Lithuania also provided German amred and often dressed units.

Here are de Bruyn's German horsemen - and it  seems to me that he was much more familiar with the subject.   Note muzzles and heavy bits, double reins, docked tails and heavier horses than previous two parts' plates.

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Michal 'Kadrinazi' blogs often about the reiter and dragoon units in the Commonwealth armies, sharing his research about these often forgotten units of Old Poland.

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth riders in de Bruyn's album - part II

Salve,
today I will share with you some more images by Abraham de Bruyn depicting the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth nobles and military figures. Today's display shows more Polish and Hungarian nobles, as well as includes horse warriors that also served in the Commonwealth forces: Hungarians, Wallachians, Tatars etc.
Hungarians, often present in Polish military, came en masse with king Bathory and distinguished themselves throughout his Livonian War and earlier, in the war with Royal city of Gdańsk.

Lithuanian and Ruthenian horsemen belong to cavalry units known then as 'jazda kozacka' and came from the equestrian nobility of Grand Duchy of Lithuania, today Belarus and Ukraine and yes, parts of Russia.  The 'jazda kozacka' also could and did include newly arrived settlers like Circassians and older populations like Polish Tatars.

..Lithuanian horseman  with a lance

.. Polish horseman,  perhaps a hussar retainer

.. Hungarian noble
.. Hungarian costume

.. typical Hungarian hussar

.. Wallachian hussar
..Wallachian light horsemen

.. Tatar

.. another image of a Tatar

..and another Ruthenian carrying a rohatyna lance




Additionally, our Commonwealth forces also included nobles, their retainers, and mercenary warriors from German speaking parts of Poland (Poland had large population of emigrants from war-torn Holy Roman Empire) and the Holy Roman Empire (including Polish speaking Silesia and Duchy of Pomerania). During XVI century large parts of the Commonwealth dressed in the same fashions as the German states, and newly acquired Livonian states had mostly German-speaking nobility dressed as in German states, so the Germans in de Bruyn's plates should be included as well. The third installment will include these plates.
ps
top image shows Polish noble and his retainer carrying a tuck

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth riders in de Bruyn's album - part I

Salve,
INTERNET digital libraries allow us to peruse books long ago taken from the circulation, especially very old books and prints from XVI-XVII centuries.
In those libraries there are many treasures - eg archive.org,  gallica etc - and search engines permit us to search their collections and download found treasures for free, for non-commercial use.

In these collection one can find prints by Abraham de Bruyn, a Flemish engraver active in the second half of XVI century in Flanders and in the free city of Cologne (here one of his books - description the duc d'Anjou's departure from Dover, passage through Zeeland, and entry into Antwerp on 19 February 1582, available for free at archive.org ).
 The following images of Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth nobles and soldiers come from two sets of illustrations  -
1.
Illustrations de Diversarum gentium armatura equestris. Ubi fere Europae, Asiae atque Africae equitandi ratio propria expresaa est.  (1578)

2.
Equitum descripcio, quomodo equestres copie, nostra hac aetate, in sua armatura, per cunttas, videlicet Europae, Asiae et Affrice, nationes in re militare sese habent nunc primum. (1576)

The engravings show the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth horsemen around the reign of our good king Stefan Batory, when Polish and Hungarian military traditions saw the most interplay - especially the emergence of armoured hussars, complete rule of the Hungarian sabre etc while the costumes military men wore merged, as evinced in these engravings

..Polish nobleman

.. Polish hussar officers

.. Polish hussar

.. Hungarian hussar

.. Lithuanian hussar

.. Ruthenian hussar

.. Polish standards bearers

.. Polish horse - musicians

.. Polish horse - trumpeters

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next time - part II

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Turkish horses and their tack in Melchlior Lorck's art II




Salve,
let us turn to the detailed tack elements on these horses in Lorck's art.
The plate I am going to examine more closely today shows a rider ( perhaps a sipahi oglan of the Kapikulu cavalry) riding a very nicely collected (and his is riding on a very loose rein, a dream of many modern dressage horse riders) horse, with high, if proud neck carriage and low-set tail ( a proof that the stallion is not an Arabian horse or Arabian descent) carrying a lance with a small pennon with tassells (a bit similar to the Sipahi pennon from the Codex Vindobonensis no.8626). The rider is holding  what it looks like a wicker shield called kalkan,, also armed with a bow and arrows, and a sabre. The horse has his tail gathered with what looks like a ring or a metal band, harkening back to the times of the ancient Saka/Scythians, Achaemenid Persians and ancient Turk riders. The horse himself perhaps is an example of the Turkish horse from the Cukurova aka Cilicia Pedias breeding area.


The peculiarities of his horse's tack are quite a few and merit a closer look. Namely, the first strong feature is the entire bridle arrangement- it consists of simple bridle with a nose band and browband and throat latch and a separate and very ornate (gold, silver or tombac) metal strap from which a long and flowing bonçuk (pendulous tugh of horse tail hairs)is hanging. The reins are 3, two for control while riding attached to the curb-bit with some very long shanks, and the third rein  is a halter rein, attached to the pommel of the saddle.
The entire arrangement causes the horse to elevate his head -not unlike the 
The horse bonçuks in Ottoman art from mid-XVI century
The exmaple of the captured Ottoman horse tack showing a halter rein, at Dresden - Saxon kings collection.

   The saddle is secured with a breastplate covered with gold or gilded with gold tombac, and the central metal ornament is  perhaps covered with precious and semi-precious gem-stones (popular was carnelian ) and presumably one or two girth straps, we do not see if there is a crouper, but a large blanket covers horse's back, loins and croup, a feature of the Eurasian horse warrior's tack for millennia. The visible stirrup  is  wide but nor excessively.

   Returning to the halter rein - this device was to have long life in the military and working horse horsemanship in Eurasia and later in the Americas; exemplum: during the Napoleonic period the complete halter-bridle combination was used (my friend zuzu aka Przemek Dunaj has been reconstructing Duchy of Warsaw uniforms, here the uhlans , including their bridles and saddles,I provided little helping with the vocabulary of the bridle parts): two period images of Polish cavalrymen of  in French service/Duchy of Warsaw, first by a German artist Hoffmann Nicolaus ( 1740-1823) showing typical Napoleonic period bridle and method of attaching the halter  (more interesting images - flicker), second a typical bridle-halter of used by the Duchy of Warsaw general.




and the image I love the most - Juliusz Kossak's imaginary portrait of our beloved, sans peur et sans reproche prince Poniatowski mounted on his Arabian stallion Szumka ( bred by prince Eustachy E. Sanguszko at his famous horse stud in Sławuta, now in Ukraine )



ps
very interesting blog on art of the Ottoman Hungarian borderlands during the Renaissance













Thursday, September 20, 2012

Turkish horses and their tack in Melchlior Lorck's art I





Salve,

 I have been wanting to share with you some XVI century prints depicting Ottoman forces on horseback.
These prints were drawn and carved into woodcuts by German artist Melchlior Lorck who visited, as a member of the Holy Roman Emperor Embassy under Ogier Ghiselin de Busbecq to Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, Istanbul in 1555-1559.

Here are the prints - from stallions dressed for war and parade to very ordinary work horses and even a mule, albeit very richly tacked.















 to be continued
ps
the top print shows a very splendidly attired horse and rider, quite similar to the Polish and Hungarian winged hussars. These Ottoman Turkish riders were called Deliler (singular Delil) and by the Christian writers from Poland, Holy Roman Empire, France, or England simply Deli.
...more on Melchlior Lorck and his art here and here

Friday, September 7, 2012

Sassanian warriors



Salve,
5 years ago my friend and scholar Patryk Skupniewicz wrote an article for the Ancient Warfare Magazine (vol I-4  2007/2008), and based on his fine sketches I sketched, drew and painted several Sassanian warriors using mostly acrylics and inks. All mistakes were mine...
 
Chronologically, from the earliest to the latest Sassanians


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