Object Image

Cup-Hilted Rapier

The rapier was the principal civilian sidearm throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Designed for cut-and-thrust fencing of progressively complex techniques, the rapier is characterized by a double-edged blade with an acute point and an elaborate guard for the hand. The guards, usually of iron or steel, were subject to a variety of embellishment. They were engraved, chiseled, gilded, damascened, and encrusted in gold and silver in keeping with fashionable styles.

Unless otherwise noted, the materials, attributions, and dating given here refer to the hilts. Rapier blades, invariably of steel, bear a variety of maker’s marks denoting their origin in the two principal centers of blademaking, Toledo in Spain and Solingen in Germany.

Credit: Gift of Alan Rutherfurd Stuyvesant, 1951

c. 1650-75
Steel, iron
118.8in
51.170.1
Image and text © Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2019

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The Metropolitan Museum of Art
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