Triumphal Entry of America in Protestant Germany

Unknown artist, Triumphal Entry of America, 29.9 × 55.5 cm (Klassik Stiftung Weimarer/Graphische Sammlung, KK207).
Linda Baez

Duke Friedrich I of Württemberg (reg. 1593–1608) maintained a Wunderkammer typical of the age, when collecting was less about systematic classification and more about assembling a trophy chest of curiosities and wonders. As was common during the period, the Duke did not hesitate to display and in some cases gift his treasures to further his diplomatic relations with courts and gentleman scholars. Notably, the Duke decided to parade his Aztec feathered shields in tournament dramatisations of ‘the Triumphal Entry of America.’ The performative insertion by Duke Friedrich I of Württemberg (reg. 1593–1608) of Aztec feathered shields in a performance was likely based upon the Protestant engraving entitled Quae pompa delecta ad Regem deferatur, published by Theodor de Bry in 1591. In the performance, the shields take their place in a symbolic act of Protestant religious war. In his chronicle Beschreibung deß Fürstlichen Apparatus, Königlichen Auffzugs/Heroischen Ingressus und herrlicher Pomp und Solennitet, Jakob Frischlin relates how at the Stuttgart Castle the personification of America made her way towards the Protestant Duke Friedrich, in the hope that he would release her from Spanish Catholic subjugation. The Protestant deployment of the shields reminds us that collections are far from innocent or static assemblages of dead objects with fixed meanings. And that is why the two shields are still held in a museum in Germany.

Further reading
  • Bujok, E. (2004) Neue Welten in europäischen Sammlungen: Africana und Americana in Kunstkammern bis 1670 (Berlin: Reimer).
  • Fane, D., A. Russo, and G. Wolf (eds.) (2015) Images Take flight: Feather Art in Mexico and Europe 1400–1700 (Munich: Hirmer).
  • Feest, C. (1990) ‘Vienna’s Mexican treasures: Aztec, Mixtec and Tarascan works from 16th-century American collections’, Archiv für Völkerkunde, vol. 45, 1–64.
  • Frischlin, M.J. (1602) Beschreibung deß Fürstlichen Apparatus, Königlichen Auffzugs/Heroischen Ingressus und herrlicher Pomp und Solennitet (Frankfurt am Main).
  • Landesmuseum Wurttemberg (2017) Die Kunstkammer der Herzöge von Württemberg: Bestand, Geschichte, Kontext, 3 vols. (Ostfildern: Jan Thorbecke Verlag).
  • Mulryne, J.R., H. Watanabe-O’Kelly, and M. Shewring (eds.) (2004) Europa Triumphans: Court and Civic Festivals in Early Modern Europe (Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate).
  • Nutall, Z. (1892) On Ancient Mexican Shields: an Essay (Leiden: P.W.M. Trap). de Sahagún, B. (1961) Florentine Codex: General History of the Things of New Spain [1577] (Santa Fe, NM: School of American Research and the University of Utah).