Cuirass from an Armor of Tsar Dmitry I

Art Institute of Chicago

Cuirass from an Armor of Tsar Dmitry I

Italian; Milan

Date
1605/06
Medium
Steel
Culture
Milan
Department
Applied Arts of Europe
Institution
Art Institute of Chicago

The Moscow coat of arms with an imperial double-headed eagle identifies the owner of this breastplate as Dmitry I, the ill-fated tsar of Russia who falsely claimed to be Ivan the Terrible’s lost youngest son. After only 11 months of rule, members of the Russian nobility (boyars) assassinated him and shot the ashes of his body out of a cannon. Dmitry rose to power with Polish support and was heavily influenced by Western taste and politics. This Italian-made armor (with matching helmet , also in the Art Institute’s collection) represents the height of Western fashion at the time and might have been a diplomatic gift. Only traces remain of the original gilding that once highlighted the bands of etched decoration.

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Object type
AAT300209266

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