● On view now — Gallery 239
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Pole arms (staff weapons) were used not only in warfare and hunting, but also in sporting combat and ceremonies. The term refers to a family of edged weapons attached to wooden staffs. With the exception of the lance, which remained the weapon of the mounted knight, all other staff weapons were wielded by men on foot by 1600. With the development of firearms and their introduction as infantry weapons, pole arms lost their importance on the field, and from the mid-16th century, they were reserved for use in sporting contests and by princely bodyguards for ceremony and parade. The blades lent themselves to embellishment—engraving, etching, or other forms of decoration—and provided a perfect surface for the coats of arms of noble or princely families. The ceremonial use of staff weapons continues to this day with the Swiss Guards at the Vatican and Britain’s Yeomen of the Royal Guard.
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The Crucifixion
Halberd for the Bodyguard of Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau, Pri
Halberd for the Bodyguard of Emperor Mattias
Halberd for the Bodyguard of Archduke of Inner Austria (Late
Glaive for the Bodyguard of Markus Sittikus von Hohenems, Pr
Spear for the Bodyguard of Emperor Ferdinand I
Boar Spear
Wheel-Lock Spanner and Turnscrew
Jörg Hopfer — Glaive for the Bodyguard of Emperor Maximilian
French
Bladesmith: R S — Glaive
European, possibly Austrian — Presentoire
Master BE, (Bernadino da Carnago?) — Halberd
Northern Italian — Partisan
European — Dagger
European — Knife
Italian — Ceremonial Arrowhead
French — Spear
Italian — Bill
Italian — Ceremonial Glaive
German, Saxony — Boar Spear