Wheellock Pistol

On View

in

Great Hall, Level 2, West Wing

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About the Artwork

At least three artists working in the city of Nuremberg collaborated to create this pistol and its mate. A specialist cast and refined the barrel, which bears his maker’s mark: a rearing unicorn. A lock maker — a type of artist-engineer who crafted a range of mechanical devices — skillfully assembled the wheel-shaped firing mechanism and left his own mark (a shield bearing the initials LH above two game pieces) on its surface. After inspecting the metalwork’s quality and function, city officials stamped Nuremberg’s coat of arms alongside the lock maker’s insignia. Finally, a joiner or cabinetmaker created the wooden stock and inlaid it with finely engraved staghorn hunting scenes, allegorical figures, fantastical beasts, cupids, and scrolling ornament.
This pistol is one of a matching pair of a type called “puffers” after their spherical pommels, which would have made them easy to withdraw from holsters suspended from the sides of a rider’s saddle. Like most early firearms, these weapons could fire only one shot, and their smooth barrels meant that aim could be wildly inaccurate, leading to their frequent production in pairs to give a marksman a second chance.

Wheellock Pistol

ca. 1575

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German

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Steel, wood, staghorn, pigment

Overall: 8 3/4 × 18 1/8 × 3 1/8 inches (22.2 × 46 × 7.9 cm) Overall (barrel): 11 inches (27.9 cm) Overall (caliber): 9/16 inches (1.4 cm)

Arms and Armor

European Sculpture and Dec Arts

Gift of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation

53.223

Public Domain

Markings

Stamped, on lock plate: [Arms of Nuremberg] Stamped, on lock plate: [LH above two game pieces within an escutcheon] Stamped, on barrel: [Arms of Nuremberg] Stamped, on barrel: [a unicorn rampant]

Provenance

until 1897, [Maurice Chabières-Arles, 1829–1897] (Lyon, France)
1897, by descent to his estate;
1913, purchased with entire collection en bloc by [Duveen Brothers](Paris, France).
until 1951, William Randolph Hearst [1867–1951] (New York, New York, USA);
1951, by bequest to the William Randolph Hearst Foundation;
1953-present, gift to the Detroit Institute of Arts (Detroit, Michigan, USA)

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Exhibition History

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Published References

Robinson, Francis W. "A Gift of Arms and Armor from the Collection of William Randolph Hearst." Bulletin of the DIA 33, no. 1 (1953-1954) pp. 1-5.

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Catalogue Raisoneé

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Credit Line for Reproduction

German, Wheellock Pistol, ca. 1575, steel, wood, staghorn, pigment. Detroit Institute of Arts, Gift of the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, 53.223.

Wheellock Pistol: Main View of Collection Gallery
Wheellock Pistol: 1 of Collection Gallery Wheellock Pistol: 2 of Collection Gallery Wheellock Pistol: 3 of Collection Gallery
Wheellock Pistol
Wheellock Pistol