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Konrad Seusenhofer information


Armour of Emperor Maximilian I, c1515

Konrad Seusenhofer (died 30 August 1517, in Innsbruck, Tirol) was a leading 16th-century Austrian armourer who worked for Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor.[1][2]

In 1514 Maximilian I presented Henry VIII with a suit of armour which included the most unusual ‘Horned helmet’ or armet, later chosen as the symbol of the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds.[3] Three suits of similar design were made by Seusenhofer, but only the armour given to Maximilian's grandson, the future Emperor Charles V, survives intact in Vienna. Henry's armour no longer survives and, because of its extraordinary appearance, the horned helmet was thought to have been that of the jester Will Somers. Originally the helmet had silver-gilt panels placed over rich, velvet cloth.

  1. ^ "Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor".
  2. ^ Capwell, Tobias (23 February 2022). Meet the Expert: The Emperor’s New Armour. Wallace Collection – via YouTube.
  3. ^ "The horned helmet | Royal Armouries". Archived from the original on 2015-03-27. Retrieved 2013-02-09.

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parade armet) is the surviving part of a full suit of armour made by Konrad Seusenhofer between 1511 and 1514. The armour was a gift from the Holy Roman Emperor...

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he held for the rest of his life alongside the Innsbruck armourer, Konrad Seusenhofer. Many of the exceptional armours created by the Helmschmied workshop...

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