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Wikimedia Commons · CC0 · Hover to magnify, click for fullscreen
Original fileThe etching captures the violent climax of a German tournament, showing one rider remaining steadfast while his opponent and horse are thrown backward in mid-air. Both knights wear heavy ceremonial armor with elaborate ostrich-plume crests, and their horses are draped in highly decorative textile caparisons. The scene is rendered with the energetic, dense line work characteristic of the artist's technical experiments with iron etching.
This work reflects the chivalric culture of Emperor Maximilian I, who transformed the tournament into a theater of virtue and an allegory for the knight's struggle against the unpredictable whims of Fortune. It connects to the Neoplatonic ideal of the 'Miles Christianus' (Christian Knight) and the 'Art of Combat' as a disciplined mastery over physical and spiritual chaos.
DUTUIT
Emperor Maximilian I (Theuerdank)
Dürer's chivalric scenes were central to the allegorical projects of Maximilian I, which used knightly trials to symbolize the path of the soul.
Object
Engraving
genre-scene
Digital Source
Wikimedia Commons · CC0
https://www.parismuseescollections.paris.fr/fr/petit-palais/oeuvres/la-course-au-grand-galop-ou-le-tournoi-allemand-bartsch-app-36#infos-principales
Creative Commons Zero, Public Domain Dedication
4242 × 3923 px
ff3f3c39e7c46b63f6cd79f062688707fb634cfa
June 25, 2023
March 24, 2026
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.