Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Under Catherine the Great of Russia the arms center of Tula produced many luxury firearms after the Western European style for use at court and as diplomatic gifts. This fowling piece was part of a set of hunting weapons given by the empress to the French ambassador Louis Charles Auguste le Tonnelier, Baron de Breteuil, in 1763, commemorated on the gilt face of the lock plate. The earlier date of 1745, engraved under the front spring on the lock, shows that the gun was older at the time it was given and perhaps redecorated. The barrel is a remarkable tour de force of a technique, called goldschmelz in German, whereby the barrel was acid etched with a pattern, filled in with gold, and then polished and blued to create a brilliant contrast.
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Jean Le Clerk — Presentation Flintlock Fowling Piece in the
German — Wheellock Rifle
French — Matchlock Petronel
German — Wheellock Rifle
Ancient Egyptian — Kohl Stick
Polish, Silesia, Teschen — Wheellock Birding Rifle (Tschinke
German — Matchlock Musket
Tilman Keuks — Triple-Barrel Revolving Flintlock Fowling Pie
Europe — Surgeon's Probe
Lock: Karl Starek
Austria, Vienna, active 1764-85
Barrel: Gi
German — Matchlock Musket
North African, Moroccan — Snaphance Gun