User:DrMedRenArtHistory/Pastrana Tapestries

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The Pastrana Tapestries (Tapeçarias de Pastrana) is a set four large tapestries that commemorates the 1471 military conquests of King Afonso V of Portugal in North Africa. The imagery celebrates Afonso V's exploits, including the the successful Portuguese conquest of the Moroccan cities of Asilah and Tangier. Each panel was woven in the Flemish workshop of Pasquier Grenier in Tournai. They are made out of wool and silk, measuring each about 36 ft x 12 ft (11 m. x 4 m.). They have been housed at the Collegiate Church of Our Lady of the Assumption in Pastrana, Spain, since the seventeenth century, hence the name "Pastrana Tapestries".

From the Live article:
The tapestries depict four episodes regarding the conquest of Asilah and Tangier:


 * The Landing at Asilah
 * The Siege of Asilah
 * The Storming of Asilah
 * The Capture of Tangier

They feature an impressive array of detailed depictions of Gothic plate armours and weapons such as swords, crossbows, polearms, cannons, and even handcannons, that would have been innovative in the period.

Their manufacture has been attributed to the workshop of Pasquier Grenier in Tournai, modern-day Belgium. The tapestries are remarkable for being one of the few surviving 15th-century works of weaving depicting contemporary rather than biblical or mythological episodes. In this they showed the direction for the next three centuries, as sets of tapestries became the grandest form of military art, for example in the set commissioned some 60 years later by Emperor Charles V showing his Tunis campaign, and the English Armada Tapestries 50 years after that.

The tapestries have been kept at the Colegiada de Pastrana Museum in Pastrana, Spain, since 1664, though it is unknown how exactly they came to Spain. ]

Possibly related to the Saint Vincent Panels