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Wolfgang von Polheim

Wolfgang von Polheim (1458–1512), Lord of Polheim zu Wartenburg, Puchheim and Waldenfels,[1] was an Austrian nobleman who was a close and life-long friend and counsellor of the Holy Roman Emperor, Maximilian I. He was given senior positions in the Habsburg administration in Austria and was closely involved in Maximilian's diplomatic initiatives. In 1490, he represented Maximilian at his proxy wedding to Anne of Brittany at Rennes.

Wolfgang von Polheim

Polheim was a noted participant in jousts at tournaments, an enthusiasm he shared with Maximilian. He appears prominently, in a jousting context, in two works of art commissioned by Maximilian: the monumental woodcut, the Triumphal Procession, and in some of the miniature paintings of the Freydal tournament book.

Biography

In the late Middle Ages, the von Polheims were one of the oldest and most prestigious aristocratic families of Upper Austria.[2] Wolfgang von Polheim was born in 1458, the third son of Weikhard von Polheim, lord of Polheim and Wartenburg, and his wife Barbara von Traun.[3] As children, he and Archduke Maximilian of Habsburg, the future Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, became companions and friends.[2] Maximilian was the son and heir of the Emperor Frederick III. Frederick appointed Polheim to be councillor and chamberlain to Maximilian and he remained in Maximilian's service, and continued to be his close and trusted friend, for the rest of his life.[1][2]

 
Polheim (on right) jousting with Freydal, from the Freydal tournament book, fol. 62

In 1477, Polheim accompanied Maximilian to the Low Countries for the latter's marriage at Ghent to Mary of Burgundy, heiress of Charles the Bold.[1] For the next twelve years, Maximilian remained in the Low Countries trying to maintain his control over his wife's Burgundian inheritance in the face of French expansion and internal dissent.[4] Polheim stayed with him. He campaigned with Maximilian to repulse Louis XI's attempts to seize the Burgundian territories but was taken prisoner by the French at the Battle of Guinegate in 1479. Maximilian complained about Polheim's treatment while he was a prisoner.[5] In 1488, during one of the Flemish revolts against Maximilian, he and Polheim and several of Maximilian's other companions, were imprisoned at Bruges for 14 weeks.[6]

After Mary's death, Maximilian arranged to marry Anne of Brittany and, in 1490, Polheim represented him at the proxy wedding ceremony in Rennes as Maximilian was not present in person.[7][8] As part of the symbolism of the proxy wedding, on the wedding night Polheim went to bed with Anne but wore a full suit of armour apart from on his right leg and hand. A sword was placed between them in the bed.[7][9][10] According to the 19th century German historian Hans von Zwiedineck-Südenhorst, "the not entirely normal role he played in this made him well-known in all the countries of Christendom".[note 1] In 1494, Polheim himself got married, to Johanna van Borsselen, daughter of Wolfert VI van Borsselen and heiress to the lordship of Fallais.[11][12]

Maximilian returned to the Habsburg central European territories in 1489/1490,[13] and succeeded to his father's Austrian and other domains on his death in 1493.[14] Polheim continued to serve Maximilian and was closely involved in Maximilian's diplomatic activities.[2][15] During a diplomatic mission to the French court, he met the later canonised friar Francis of Paola who had founded the Order of Minims,[16] known in Germany as the Paulaner Order.[17] Inspired by this meeting, in 1496 Polheim founded one of the first Paulaner monasteries in Germany, near his ancestral home in Vöcklabruck, together with its monastery church of St Anna's, Oberthalheim [de].[16]

In 1500 he was rewarded for his service to Maximilian by being made a knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece. In 1501, he was also appointed Oberster Hauptmann (military commander) and Regent of Lower Austria.[2][15] Maximilian made him an administrator of a number of imperial estates including at Frankenburg in Upper Austria where his harsh rule provoked a peasant revolt in 1511.[18] Polheim died the following year in 1512.[2][15] His tomb monument, by leading Salzburg Gothic sculptor Hans Valkenauer, is in the church he founded at Oberthalheim.[19] His son, Cyriak (1495-1533), succeeded him as lord of Polheim zu Wartenburg and held important positions in the administrations of Maximilian's successor, the emperor Charles V and of Charles's brother, Ferdinand.[20]

Jousting and Maximilian's Gedechtnus

 
Polheim's suit of armour at the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna

Maximilian was a life-long enthusiast of jousting and was himself a frequent participant in tournaments.[21] Polheim shared his enthusiasm and a celebrated tournament was held at Polheim's wedding in Mechelen in 1494. Maximilian evidently admired Polheim's jousting skills and he played an important part in Maximilian's tournaments.[22] A suit of armour belonging to Polheim, and made in Innsbruck around 1510, is on display at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna.[23]

Polheim is known to have frequently jousted with Maximilian. One contemporary source identifies 15 occasions when Maximilian and Polheim jousted against each other. Many of these jousts were embellished with exuberant features. At a tournament in Ghent, they were described as jousting "in 'exploding' armour [and] painted horse armour".[note 2] At another tournament, staged in the ducal menagerie in Brussels, Polheim jousted with a basket of eggs resting on his helmet and Maximilian wore a chained frog as a crest.[26]

During his reign, Maximilian commissioned a number of humanist scholars and artists to assist him in completing a series of projects, in different art forms, intended to immortalize his life and deeds and those of his Habsburg ancestors.[27] He referred to these projects as Gedechtnus ("memorial").[28] Jousting featured in some of these projects and, because of that, Polheim figured prominently in two of them: the Triumphal Procession[2] and Freydal.[29]

In the Triumphal Procession, a monumental series of woodcut prints depicting an imagined "royal entry", Polheim is given a role of particular importance.[2] As a tournament Rennen und Gestech Meister[note 3] he holds a banner which reads:

Always promoting new advances
In jousting with hooked or pointed lances
Thanks to His Highness [Maximilian], I [von Polheim] unfurled
Skills never seen in all the world[2]

The Freydal tournament book, one of the principal components of the Freydal project, is a series of miniature paintings depicting scenes from 64 fictional tournaments. In the paintings, Maximilian, in the guise of the eponymous hero Freydal, jousts with contemporary figures, many of whom Maximilian did, in fact, joust with in real life.[32] Of the 191 depictions of jousts,[note 4] Polheim features in 11 of them as Freydal's opponent. Only one other opponent features as many times as Polheim.[29]

Notes

  1. ^ Original in antiquated (1888) German: "Die nicht ganz gewöhnliche Rolle, die er dabei gespielt, hat ihn jedenfalls zu einem in allen Ländern der Christenheit vielgenannten Manne gemacht." [sic][10]
  2. ^ There were several different types of joust with varying objectives, which did not necessarily include unseating the opponent. They sometimes involved targeting specific points on the opponent's armour in order to trigger spring mechanisms with various spectacular consequences.[24] For example, in the case of the Geschiftscheiben-Rennen (the "joust of war" with "exploding shields") the aim was to strike a large roundel shield on the chest of the other rider. If the strike was correctly made, a complicated spring mechanism caused triangular metal segments attached to the surface of the shield to "explode" into the air.[25]
  3. ^ Rennen and Gestech were two broad categories of jousting. Rennen, or “jousts of war”, are where the lance has a sharpened tip. Gestech, or “jousts of peace”, are where the lance is blunted [30][31]
  4. ^ There are, in fact, 255 paintings (originally 256) in total. However, for each of the 64 tournaments there is one painting depicting a post-tournament masquerade rather than a joust.[33]

References

  1. ^ a b c Krause 2019, p. 152.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Anderson 2020, p. 200.
  3. ^ Zwiedineck-Südenhorst 1888a, p. 821.
  4. ^ Brandow & Pfaffenbichler 2019, pp. 40–43.
  5. ^ Krause 2019, p. 259.
  6. ^ Krause 2019, pp. 253, 259.
  7. ^ a b Krause 2019, p. 295.
  8. ^ Keen 2012, p. 156.
  9. ^ Bridge 1921, pp. 211–213.
  10. ^ a b Zwiedineck-Südenhorst 1888a, p. 822.
  11. ^ Anderson 2020, p. 2020.
  12. ^ Henderikx 2009, pp. 88–89.
  13. ^ Brandow & Pfaffenbichler 2019, p. 43.
  14. ^ Terjanian 2019, p. 300.
  15. ^ a b c Zwiedineck-Südenhorst 1888a, p. 823.
  16. ^ a b Metzig 2016, Pt.II, ch.8, p. 3.
  17. ^ Johnson 2009, p. 126.
  18. ^ Rebel 2017, p. 3.
  19. ^ Hourihane 2012, p. 214.
  20. ^ Zwiedineck-Südenhorst 1888b, p. 823.
  21. ^ Anderson 2020, pp. 192–193.
  22. ^ Anderson 2020, pp. 200–201.
  23. ^ Anderson 2020, p. 200, note 42.
  24. ^ Terjanian 2019, p. 212.
  25. ^ Krause 2019, pp. 114–115.
  26. ^ Krause 2019, p. 167.
  27. ^ Watanabe-O'Kelly 2000, p. 94.
  28. ^ Kleinschmidt 2008, p. 162.
  29. ^ a b Krause 2019, p. 121.
  30. ^ Jackson 2001, p. 759.
  31. ^ Silver 2002, p. 63.
  32. ^ Silver 2002, pp. 63–64.
  33. ^ Krause 2014–2015.

Bibliography

  • Anderson, Natalie (2020). "Power and Pageantry: The Tournament at the Court of Maximilian I". In Murray, Alan V.; Watts, Karen (eds.). The Medieval Tournament as Spectacle: Tourneys, Jousts and Pas d'Armes 1100–1600. The Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-78327-542-7.
  • Brandow, Adam B.; Pfaffenbichler, Matthias (2019). "Political Struggle and Dynastic Triumph: Maximilian I and the Rise of the House of Habsburg". In Terjanian, Pierre (ed.). The Last Knight: The Art, Armor, and Ambition of Maximilian I. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-1-58839-674-7.
  • Bridge, John S. C. (1921). A History of France From the Death of Louis XI. Vol. 1. Clarendon Press.
  • Henderikx, Peter (2009). "De vorming in 1555 van het markizaat van Veere en de aard en herkomst van de aan het markizaat verbonden goederen en heerlijkheden". In Blom, Peter (ed.). Borsele Bourgondië Oranje: heren en markiezen van Veere en Vlissingen 1400–1700. Verloren. ISBN 978-90-8704-005-5.
  • Hourihane, Colum, ed. (2012). "Valkenauer, Hans". The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture. Vol. 6. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-539536-5.
  • Jackson, William (2001). "Tournaments". In Jeep, John M. (ed.). Medieval Germany: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-351-66540-7.
  • Johnson, Trevor (2009). Magistrates, Madonnas and Miracles: The Counter Reformation in the Upper Palatinate. Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6480-2.
  • Keen, Maurice (2012). "The Angevin Legacy, Dynastic Rivalry and the Aftermath of the Hundred Years War, 1453–1491". In Skoda, Hannah; Lantschner, Patrick; Shaw, R. L. J. (eds.). Contact and Exchange in Later Medieval Europe: Essays in Honour of Malcolm Vale. Boydell Press. ISBN 978-1-84383-738-1.
  • Kleinschmidt, Harald (2008). Ruling the Waves: Emperor Maximilian I, the Search for Islands and the Transformation of the European World Picture C. 1500. Antiquariaat Forum. ISBN 978-90-6194-020-3.
  • Krause, Stefan (2014–2015). "Freydal, the Tournament Book of Emperor Maximilian I: The Washington Manuscript". National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
  • Krause, Stefan, ed. (2019). Das Turnierbuch Kaiser Maximilians I. Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8365-7681-9.
  • Metzig, Gregor M. (2016). Kommunikation und Konfrontation: Diplomatie und Gesandtschaftswesen Kaiser Maximilians I. (1486–1519). De Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-045673-8.
  • Rebel, Hermann (2017) [1st published 1983]. Peasant Classes: The Bureaucratization of Property and Family Relations Under Early Habsburg Absolutism, 1511–1636. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-1-4008-8649-4.
  • Silver, Larry (2002). "Shining Armor: Emperor Maximilian, Chivalry and War". In Cuneo, Pia F. (ed.). Artful Armies, Beautiful Battles: Art and Warfare in the Early Modern Europe. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-11588-0.
  • Terjanian, Pierre, ed. (2019). The Last Knight: The Art, Armor, and Ambition of Maximilian I. Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-1-58839-674-7.
  • Watanabe-O'Kelly, Helen (2000). The Cambridge History of German Literature. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-78573-0.
  • Zwiedineck-Südenhorst, Hans von (1888a). "Polheim, Wolfgang Freiherr von". In Liliencron, Rochus von (ed.). Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 26. Duncker & Humblot via Deutsche Biographie.
  • Zwiedineck-Südenhorst, Hans von (1888b). "Polheim, Cyriak Freiherr von". In Liliencron, Rochus von (ed.). Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie. Vol. 26. Duncker & Humblot via Deutsche Biographie.

wolfgang, polheim, 1458, 1512, lord, polheim, wartenburg, puchheim, waldenfels, austrian, nobleman, close, life, long, friend, counsellor, holy, roman, emperor, maximilian, given, senior, positions, habsburg, administration, austria, closely, involved, maximil. Wolfgang von Polheim 1458 1512 Lord of Polheim zu Wartenburg Puchheim and Waldenfels 1 was an Austrian nobleman who was a close and life long friend and counsellor of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I He was given senior positions in the Habsburg administration in Austria and was closely involved in Maximilian s diplomatic initiatives In 1490 he represented Maximilian at his proxy wedding to Anne of Brittany at Rennes Wolfgang von Polheim Polheim was a noted participant in jousts at tournaments an enthusiasm he shared with Maximilian He appears prominently in a jousting context in two works of art commissioned by Maximilian the monumental woodcut the Triumphal Procession and in some of the miniature paintings of the Freydal tournament book Contents 1 Biography 2 Jousting and Maximilian s Gedechtnus 3 Notes 4 References 5 BibliographyBiography EditIn the late Middle Ages the von Polheims were one of the oldest and most prestigious aristocratic families of Upper Austria 2 Wolfgang von Polheim was born in 1458 the third son of Weikhard von Polheim lord of Polheim and Wartenburg and his wife Barbara von Traun 3 As children he and Archduke Maximilian of Habsburg the future Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I became companions and friends 2 Maximilian was the son and heir of the Emperor Frederick III Frederick appointed Polheim to be councillor and chamberlain to Maximilian and he remained in Maximilian s service and continued to be his close and trusted friend for the rest of his life 1 2 Polheim on right jousting with Freydal from the Freydal tournament book fol 62 In 1477 Polheim accompanied Maximilian to the Low Countries for the latter s marriage at Ghent to Mary of Burgundy heiress of Charles the Bold 1 For the next twelve years Maximilian remained in the Low Countries trying to maintain his control over his wife s Burgundian inheritance in the face of French expansion and internal dissent 4 Polheim stayed with him He campaigned with Maximilian to repulse Louis XI s attempts to seize the Burgundian territories but was taken prisoner by the French at the Battle of Guinegate in 1479 Maximilian complained about Polheim s treatment while he was a prisoner 5 In 1488 during one of the Flemish revolts against Maximilian he and Polheim and several of Maximilian s other companions were imprisoned at Bruges for 14 weeks 6 After Mary s death Maximilian arranged to marry Anne of Brittany and in 1490 Polheim represented him at the proxy wedding ceremony in Rennes as Maximilian was not present in person 7 8 As part of the symbolism of the proxy wedding on the wedding night Polheim went to bed with Anne but wore a full suit of armour apart from on his right leg and hand A sword was placed between them in the bed 7 9 10 According to the 19th century German historian Hans von Zwiedineck Sudenhorst the not entirely normal role he played in this made him well known in all the countries of Christendom note 1 In 1494 Polheim himself got married to Johanna van Borsselen daughter of Wolfert VI van Borsselen and heiress to the lordship of Fallais 11 12 Maximilian returned to the Habsburg central European territories in 1489 1490 13 and succeeded to his father s Austrian and other domains on his death in 1493 14 Polheim continued to serve Maximilian and was closely involved in Maximilian s diplomatic activities 2 15 During a diplomatic mission to the French court he met the later canonised friar Francis of Paola who had founded the Order of Minims 16 known in Germany as the Paulaner Order 17 Inspired by this meeting in 1496 Polheim founded one of the first Paulaner monasteries in Germany near his ancestral home in Vocklabruck together with its monastery church of St Anna s Oberthalheim de 16 In 1500 he was rewarded for his service to Maximilian by being made a knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece In 1501 he was also appointed Oberster Hauptmann military commander and Regent of Lower Austria 2 15 Maximilian made him an administrator of a number of imperial estates including at Frankenburg in Upper Austria where his harsh rule provoked a peasant revolt in 1511 18 Polheim died the following year in 1512 2 15 His tomb monument by leading Salzburg Gothic sculptor Hans Valkenauer is in the church he founded at Oberthalheim 19 His son Cyriak 1495 1533 succeeded him as lord of Polheim zu Wartenburg and held important positions in the administrations of Maximilian s successor the emperor Charles V and of Charles s brother Ferdinand 20 Jousting and Maximilian s Gedechtnus Edit Polheim s suit of armour at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Vienna Maximilian was a life long enthusiast of jousting and was himself a frequent participant in tournaments 21 Polheim shared his enthusiasm and a celebrated tournament was held at Polheim s wedding in Mechelen in 1494 Maximilian evidently admired Polheim s jousting skills and he played an important part in Maximilian s tournaments 22 A suit of armour belonging to Polheim and made in Innsbruck around 1510 is on display at the Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna 23 Polheim is known to have frequently jousted with Maximilian One contemporary source identifies 15 occasions when Maximilian and Polheim jousted against each other Many of these jousts were embellished with exuberant features At a tournament in Ghent they were described as jousting in exploding armour and painted horse armour note 2 At another tournament staged in the ducal menagerie in Brussels Polheim jousted with a basket of eggs resting on his helmet and Maximilian wore a chained frog as a crest 26 During his reign Maximilian commissioned a number of humanist scholars and artists to assist him in completing a series of projects in different art forms intended to immortalize his life and deeds and those of his Habsburg ancestors 27 He referred to these projects as Gedechtnus memorial 28 Jousting featured in some of these projects and because of that Polheim figured prominently in two of them the Triumphal Procession 2 and Freydal 29 In the Triumphal Procession a monumental series of woodcut prints depicting an imagined royal entry Polheim is given a role of particular importance 2 As a tournament Rennen und Gestech Meister note 3 he holds a banner which reads Always promoting new advancesIn jousting with hooked or pointed lancesThanks to His Highness Maximilian I von Polheim unfurledSkills never seen in all the world 2 The Freydal tournament book one of the principal components of the Freydal project is a series of miniature paintings depicting scenes from 64 fictional tournaments In the paintings Maximilian in the guise of the eponymous hero Freydal jousts with contemporary figures many of whom Maximilian did in fact joust with in real life 32 Of the 191 depictions of jousts note 4 Polheim features in 11 of them as Freydal s opponent Only one other opponent features as many times as Polheim 29 Notes Edit Original in antiquated 1888 German Die nicht ganz gewohnliche Rolle die er dabei gespielt hat ihn jedenfalls zu einem in allen Landern der Christenheit vielgenannten Manne gemacht sic 10 There were several different types of joust with varying objectives which did not necessarily include unseating the opponent They sometimes involved targeting specific points on the opponent s armour in order to trigger spring mechanisms with various spectacular consequences 24 For example in the case of the Geschiftscheiben Rennen the joust of war with exploding shields the aim was to strike a large roundel shield on the chest of the other rider If the strike was correctly made a complicated spring mechanism caused triangular metal segments attached to the surface of the shield to explode into the air 25 Rennen and Gestech were two broad categories of jousting Rennen or jousts of war are where the lance has a sharpened tip Gestech or jousts of peace are where the lance is blunted 30 31 There are in fact 255 paintings originally 256 in total However for each of the 64 tournaments there is one painting depicting a post tournament masquerade rather than a joust 33 References Edit a b c Krause 2019 p 152 a b c d e f g h i Anderson 2020 p 200 Zwiedineck Sudenhorst 1888a p 821 Brandow amp Pfaffenbichler 2019 pp 40 43 Krause 2019 p 259 Krause 2019 pp 253 259 a b Krause 2019 p 295 Keen 2012 p 156 Bridge 1921 pp 211 213 a b Zwiedineck Sudenhorst 1888a p 822 Anderson 2020 p 2020 Henderikx 2009 pp 88 89 Brandow amp Pfaffenbichler 2019 p 43 Terjanian 2019 p 300 a b c Zwiedineck Sudenhorst 1888a p 823 a b Metzig 2016 Pt II ch 8 p 3 Johnson 2009 p 126 Rebel 2017 p 3 Hourihane 2012 p 214 Zwiedineck Sudenhorst 1888b p 823 Anderson 2020 pp 192 193 Anderson 2020 pp 200 201 Anderson 2020 p 200 note 42 Terjanian 2019 p 212 Krause 2019 pp 114 115 Krause 2019 p 167 Watanabe O Kelly 2000 p 94 Kleinschmidt 2008 p 162 a b Krause 2019 p 121 Jackson 2001 p 759 Silver 2002 p 63 Silver 2002 pp 63 64 Krause 2014 2015 Bibliography EditAnderson Natalie 2020 Power and Pageantry The Tournament at the Court of Maximilian I In Murray Alan V Watts Karen eds The Medieval Tournament as Spectacle Tourneys Jousts and Pas d Armes 1100 1600 The Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 78327 542 7 Brandow Adam B Pfaffenbichler Matthias 2019 Political Struggle and Dynastic Triumph Maximilian I and the Rise of the House of Habsburg In Terjanian Pierre ed The Last Knight The Art Armor and Ambition of Maximilian I Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 674 7 Bridge John S C 1921 A History of France From the Death of Louis XI Vol 1 Clarendon Press Henderikx Peter 2009 De vorming in 1555 van het markizaat van Veere en de aard en herkomst van de aan het markizaat verbonden goederen en heerlijkheden In Blom Peter ed Borsele Bourgondie Oranje heren en markiezen van Veere en Vlissingen 1400 1700 Verloren ISBN 978 90 8704 005 5 Hourihane Colum ed 2012 Valkenauer Hans The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture Vol 6 Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539536 5 Jackson William 2001 Tournaments In Jeep John M ed Medieval Germany An Encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 66540 7 Johnson Trevor 2009 Magistrates Madonnas and Miracles The Counter Reformation in the Upper Palatinate Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6480 2 Keen Maurice 2012 The Angevin Legacy Dynastic Rivalry and the Aftermath of the Hundred Years War 1453 1491 In Skoda Hannah Lantschner Patrick Shaw R L J eds Contact and Exchange in Later Medieval Europe Essays in Honour of Malcolm Vale Boydell Press ISBN 978 1 84383 738 1 Kleinschmidt Harald 2008 Ruling the Waves Emperor Maximilian I the Search for Islands and the Transformation of the European World Picture C 1500 Antiquariaat Forum ISBN 978 90 6194 020 3 Krause Stefan 2014 2015 Freydal the Tournament Book of Emperor Maximilian I The Washington Manuscript National Gallery of Art Washington D C Krause Stefan ed 2019 Das Turnierbuch Kaiser Maximilians I Taschen ISBN 978 3 8365 7681 9 Metzig Gregor M 2016 Kommunikation und Konfrontation Diplomatie und Gesandtschaftswesen Kaiser Maximilians I 1486 1519 De Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 045673 8 Rebel Hermann 2017 1st published 1983 Peasant Classes The Bureaucratization of Property and Family Relations Under Early Habsburg Absolutism 1511 1636 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 8649 4 Silver Larry 2002 Shining Armor Emperor Maximilian Chivalry and War In Cuneo Pia F ed Artful Armies Beautiful Battles Art and Warfare in the Early Modern Europe Brill ISBN 978 90 04 11588 0 Terjanian Pierre ed 2019 The Last Knight The Art Armor and Ambition of Maximilian I Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 1 58839 674 7 Watanabe O Kelly Helen 2000 The Cambridge History of German Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 78573 0 Zwiedineck Sudenhorst Hans von 1888a Polheim Wolfgang Freiherr von In Liliencron Rochus von ed Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie Vol 26 Duncker amp Humblot via Deutsche Biographie Zwiedineck Sudenhorst Hans von 1888b Polheim Cyriak Freiherr von In Liliencron Rochus von ed Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie Vol 26 Duncker amp Humblot via Deutsche Biographie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wolfgang von Polheim amp oldid 1140425237, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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