Dutch

Sword (Pappenheimer Rapier)

c. 1630
Steel, silver, gilding, wood, and leather
122.2 × 25.4 cm (48.1 × 10 in)

SEE IT IN PERSON

● On view now — Gallery 239

Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026

View at artic.eduPlan a visit ↗

Discussion

FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

Both mounted cavalry and men on foot favored this form of sword during the height of the Thirty Years’ War (1618–48). The large guard fitted with pierced plates protected the user’s hand from heavy cuts and thrusts. The weapon is often termed a Pappenheimer rapier after the German Count Gottfried Heinrich zu Pappenheim, an imperial field marshal during the conflict. This is an unusually ornate example, with silver and partially gilt lion heads chiseled onto the steel hilt.

Source ↗

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Sign in to join the discussion.

Community guidelines

More by Dutch

Portrait of a Man Seated in an ArmchairPortrait of a Man Seated in an ArmchairDavid Slaying GoliathDavid Slaying GoliathPortrait of a WomanPortrait of a WomanThe TerraceThe TerraceTwo MusiciansTwo MusiciansFlowers in a VaseFlowers in a VasePeasants Fighting over CardsPeasants Fighting over CardsClose HelmetClose Helmet

More like this

Smallsword with Portraits of Monarchs from the Bourbon DynastyFrench — Smallsword with Portraits of Monarchs from the BourSmallswordBlade: Peter Munch Germany, Solingen, c. 1595-1660 — SmallswSmallswordFrench — SmallswordSmallsword for a ChildFrench — Smallsword for a ChildTransitional RapierNorthern European, probably English — Transitional RapierCavalry Sword with Calendar BladeGerman — Cavalry Sword with Calendar BladeComposite Smallsword and ScabbardHilt: Flemish or Dutch; blade: French — Composite SmallswordRapierSouthern European — RapierRapierNorthern European — RapierSmallswordFrench — SmallswordComposite SwordMelchior Diefstetter — Composite SwordRapier and ScabbardAntonio Piccinino — Rapier and Scabbard