Peter Davidson
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The assassin’s new castles
Frescoes and textiles for the Leslies at Nové Město nad Metují and Ptui
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After his successful part in the political assassination of Count Wallenstein in the 1630s, the soldier of fortune and minor Aberdeenshire landowner Walter Leslie was rapidly ennobled and given estates in two parts of the Holy Roman Empire (now Moravia and Slovenia). This chapter considers the crude but ambitious cycle of baroque ceilings at the Moravian castle as embodying the rapid transformation of a soldier of fortune into a warrior-statesman. This status within the Empire is further asserted by the extraordinary vestments which were transported from the Slovenian castle of Ptui to the Leslie house of Fetternear in Aberdeenshire. These are extraordinary hybrid works: European baroque in design, but incorporating Turkish gold embroidery from captured banners from the Siege of Vienna.

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Relics, dreams, voyages

World baroque

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