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The Exercise of Armes for Calivres, Muskettes, and Pikes: Book Plate of Henry Edward Bunbury and Thomas Francis Fremantle (verso) | musefully
The Exercise of Armes for Calivres, Muskettes, and Pikes: Book Plate of Henry Edward Bunbury and Thomas Francis Fremantle (verso)
1607
Jacob de Gheyn II
Jacob de Gheyn II (Dutch, 1565–1629)
Medieval Art
The Exercise of Armes for Calivres, Muskettes, and Pikes: Book Plate of Henry Edward Bunbury and Thomas Francis Fremantle (verso), 1607. Engraved by Jacob de Gheyn II (Dutch, 1565–1629). Paper; page: 27.5 x 19 cm (10 13/16 x 7 1/2 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Norman O. Stone and Ella A. Stone Memorial Fund 2022.21.1.b The Exercise of Arms, published in 1607–8, is one of the most famous manuals of arms. Jacob De Gheyn's book became popular all over Europe and was quickly translated into several languages. Its 117 copper engravings portray the step-by-step sequence for training foot soldiers in the handling of the standard weaponry of the 17th-century warfare: muskets, matchlock or calivers, and pikes. The depiction of the soldiers in this book inspired Rembrandt when painting his famous The Night Watch.