● On view now — Gallery 239
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · verified July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
This harness represents one of the last vestiges of fully armored cavalry, known as cuirassiers, trained to charge the enemy with a lance. By the 17th century firearms dominated the battlefield. In response to this development, the armorer of this piece made the breastplate and helmet thicker to resist the impact of musket fire. The dent on the breastplate, visible under the right arm, is a "proof mark" made when the armorer fired a musket at the piece to guarantee to his client that the armor was indeed shot-proof. Remarkably, the small size and girth of this armor suggest that it was made for a teenage boy for use either in training or in actual war, perhaps to accompany his father on a military campaign.
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Austrian, Innsbruck — Portions of a Field Armor
German, Augsburg — Field Armor
Italian, Milan — Garniture for Field and Foot Tourney at the
Jörg T. Sorg, the Younger — Armor for Field and Tournament
South German or Austrian (Probably Innsbruck) — Armor for th
South German; Augsburg — Composite Boy's Armor for Foot Tour
Workshop of Michel Witz, the Younger — Three-Quarter Field A
Italian — Portions of a Jousting Armor
German, Nuremberg — Fluted Field Armor
Probably Italian — Breastplate with Tassets (Thigh Defenses)
German, Augsburg — Composite Armor for the Joust and Tourney
North German — Infantry Armor