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Wikimedia Commons · CC0 1.0 · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileA woodcut print depicting a dynamic tournament scene where a knight in full plate armor and a feathered crest remains steady on his horse. His opponent is captured in mid-fall, completely inverted with his feet in the air as his horse stumbles forward. The composition uses stark black-and-white lines to emphasize the heavy decorative patterns on the horses' coverings and the kinetic energy of the collision.
This work belongs to an ambitious series of woodcuts commissioned by Maximilian I to commemorate his jousting exploits and chivalric virtues. These projects were central to the Emperor's 'Gedechtnis' (memorial), an early modern program to secure his eternal fame through the cutting-edge technology of the printing press and the revival of courtly ritual.
Maximilian I
The Emperor authored the conceptual framework of the Freydal manuscript which these woodcuts illustrate.
Object
Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
paper
height 225 mm x width 242 mm
genre-scene
Linked Data
AI AI-cataloged fields generated by gemini-3-flash-preview on April 1, 2026. Getty identifiers are AI-inferred and may require verification.