Helmet

Date:
late 15th century
Culture:
Iranian or Anatolian
Medium:
Steel, engraved and damascened with gold and silver
Classification:
Helmets
Credit Line:
Rogers Fund, 1904
Accession Number:
04.3.209
  • Description

    Helmets of this type are usually called turban helmets because of their large bulbous shape and the flutings that imitate the folds of a turban. Because certain dervish groups wore turbans wound with a prescribed number of folds to represent an important mystical number, it is likely that turban helmets were regarded not merely as armor but also as a kind of religious insignia, their very shape marking the wearer as a fighter in the Holy War. Turban helmets, together with mail-and-plate armor of matching decoration, were intended for the heavy cavalry and are recorded as early as the fourteenth century. The examples exhibited here appear to have belonged to the dynasty of the Ak-Koyunlu (White Sheep Turkoman) that ruled northwestern Iran and Anatolia in the fifteenth century. The inscriptions, damascened with gold and silver, glorify temporal rulers, wish the owner well, or give advice on how to attain virtue.

  • See also
    What
    Where
    When
    In the Museum
    Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
40003656

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