Portrait of Gregor Baci

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Portrait of Gregor Baci
Portrait of Gregor Baci.jpg
ArtistUnknown Austrian painter
Year16th century
TypeOil on canvas
Dimensions31 cm× 39 cm(12 in× 15 in)
Location Ambras Castle, Innsbruck

Portrait of Gregor Baci is a 16th-century painting by an unknown Austrian painter. It is housed in Ambras Castle in Innsbruck, Austria. [1] The painting depicts a Hungarian nobleman who reportedly survived a severe head injury: a lance entered his right eye socket and exited through his neck. [2] In "therapeutic purposes", the spearhead was sawed off from both ends. According to historical records, the nobleman lived for one year after the wounding. [3]

Contents

Description

The painting depicts the Hungarian nobleman Gregor Baci (Baksa Márk), who reportedly survived a severe head injury: a lance entered his right eye socket and exited through his neck. [2] An inscription in the upper left corner, in Latin, reads: GREGOR. BAXI VNG: NOB: – "Gregor Baxi, Hungarian nobleman." [1] There are several versions of the circumstances of the injury. According to one version, it occurred during a jousting tournament; according to another, in battle against the Ottoman Turks. [4]

For "therapeutic purposes," the spearhead was sawed off from both ends. According to historical records, the nobleman lived for one year after the wounding. [5] [3]

Engraving of Gregor Baci, late 16th century, unknown artist. Baksa Mark.jpg
Engraving of Gregor Baci, late 16th century, unknown artist.

The painting was first mentioned in the 1621 inventory of Ambras Castle under the title "Hungarian hussar, wounded in combat with the Turks." It most likely entered the collection of Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria due to his well-known interest in arms and curiosities. One of the mysteries of the painting is whether such an injury could be survived. The unusual medical detail may have been the main reason the portrait was commissioned. Although similar traumas were not uncommon in the early modern period, the survival of Baci attracted lasting curiosity. [1]

A comparable case was described in The Lancet in 2010: a craftsman impaled by a metal rod that fell from a church ceiling at a height of 14 metres survived the injury with minimal long-term symptoms five years later. [6] Due to skepticism among museum visitors, the case was studied by radiologists, radiation oncologists, and neurologists at the Medical University of Innsbruck. Using two-dimensional data from the painting, they created a three-dimensional anatomical reconstruction of the skull with rapid prototyping technology. Their findings suggested that Baci could indeed have survived the injury if the lance had passed below the brain. [7]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 A.G. Nerlich, O. Báthory, L.A. Kristóf, A.A. Balogh, F.M. Galassi, G. Mattutino, S.T. Donell, O.K. Peschel, R. Bianucci The portrait of Márk Baksa: Jael syndrome in a 16th century Hungarian hussar, a multidisciplinary investigation / Ethics, Medicine and Public Health, Vol. 32, 2024, 100979, ISSN   2352-5525
  2. 1 2 Kaufmann, Thomas DaCosta (1988). The School of Prague: Painting at the Court of Rudolf II. University of Chicago Press. p. 54. ISBN   9780226427270.
  3. 1 2 Bartz-Schmidt, K. U. Ophthalmologische Traumatologie: Textbuch und Atlas; mit 63 Tabellen. — 2002, Germany: Schattauer. P. 13 (in German) ISBN   9783794520411
  4. Evans, R.J.W. (1981). "Rudolf II and his World: A Study in Intellectual History 1576–1612". The Historical Journal. 24 (3): 703–705. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00004761.
  5. Laurin Luchner Schloss Ambras für Mediziner. In: Medizinischer Monatsspiegel. 1967, P. 60-64
  6. Missmann, Martin; Tauscher, Thomas; Jank, Siegfried; Kloss, Frank; Gassner, Robert (2010). "Impaled head". The Lancet . 375 (9711): 317. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60294-4. PMID   20109914.
  7. "Riddle of man pierced by lance solved after 400 years". Tiroler Tageszeitung. 2013-03-14. Retrieved 2025-08-29.