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Los 530

An intaglio carved pendant, depicting a mother holding two children and with another two tugging at her skirts, set in a yellow metal frame, a paste set heart-shaped pendant and a blue enamel locket with hair panel

Los 541

A 19th Century enamel and pearl brooch, of oval shape decorated applied flowers on a blue enamel ground within a border of pearls, an enamel and marcasite brooch centred by a cherub, a matching ring etc.

Los 560

A Victorian pearl and black enamel mourning ring set in 15ct gold, a gem set ring in 18ct gold and an opal ring set in rose gold

Los 566

A wooden jewellery box with lift-out tray, 27.5cm wide and a quantity of costume jewellery including ear studs, necklaces, enamel badges, etc.

Los 571

An Arts & Crafts silver and enamel necklace by Charles Horner, Chester 1919, the stylised triangular pendant with swirling spandrels suspended beneath a circular drop Condition Report: Lot 571: Light wear and scratches in line with age and usage but overall good.

Los 587

A Jorgen Jensen pewter pendant of modern design, on a neck chain, a Norwegian silver and enamel butterfly brooch and sundry costume jewellery

Los 596

A lady's silver and enamelled open-faced fob watch, the circular gilt dial with Arabic numerals, the case bearing import marks for 1911, the grey blue guilloche enamel back highlighted with gilt, and the matching grey blue enamel chain of baton links

Los 603

A 9ct gold cased open-faced pocket watch, the white enamel dial with Roman numerals and subsidiary seconds dial on a 9ct gold curb-link watch chain, the chain approximately 20gm

Los 604

A gold plated half-hunter pocket watch, the white enamel dial with Roman numerals, signed A H Holyland, Humbra, Leicester, the cover with Roman numerals in black enamel on a gold plated curb link Albert watch chain

Los 606

A Dunhill "Captive" Art Déco sterling silver and Japanese lacquer travel watch, the dial signed "Dunhill, La Captive Tavannes Swiss Made", case stamped 925, 4.5cm wide Condition Report: Lot 606: Hinged doors have slight losses to lacquer at edges and a flake near one hinge. There is other wear and losses to enamel at corners of piece. Generally the lacquer is fairly intact but has light wear / scratches throughout.

Los 607

An 18ct gold half-hunter watch, the enamel dial with subsidiary seconds dial and a fine 18ct gold chain

Los 616

A George II silver pair cased pocket watch, the silver outer case marked I D, London 1734, the watch with Arabic numerals to the white enamel dial, the movement with outer cover marked Geo Lindsay Ser't to the Prince of Wales and numbered 329, the chain driven verge movement with profusely engraved decoration and signed G O Lindsay, London 329 Condition Report: Lot 616 - Outer case has later added catch. Clear marks and makers mark ID. Some small scratches and dents in line with age and usage. The enamel dial as hair cracks mostly issuing from centre. The glass cover catch is a little loose.

Los 928

A mid 19th Century timepiece in an ebonised case, the white enamel dial with chased and engraved gilt brass surround, 20cm high

Los 937

A Cartier alarm clock, the oval dial with Roman numerals within a burgundy enamel frame on an easel support, 9cm high and in original box

Los 11

A folding war department wooden canvas wash stand along with a swing handled enamel bucket and a red cross canvas field dressing bag.

Los 353

A Second World War era child's pram, together with an enamel bash tub (2)

Los 375

A child's four wheel pram, blue enamel with chromium handles and weather cover

Los 429

An Easiwork oak finished and enamel floor standing kitchen cabinet with internal flour shoot and glass jars (* PLEASE SEE IMPORTANT INFORMATION)

Los 432

A cream painted enamel top low kitchen cabinet along with an enamel bread bin (2)

Los 439

A set of white enamel scales for weighing babies and an oval baby bath on folding stand, child's chamber pot, crib on rocking wrought iron stand and a bentwood rocker

Los 445

A collection of kitchen sundries including butter pats, enamel jars, tins, etc

Los 8

A field casualty mannequin on stretcher in a WWII stretcher bag by M Co circa 1944 along with a lidded enamel tin of dressings, surgical instruments etc

Los 9

A W & G light II canvas gas mask, shoulder bag and gas mask along with two further canvas gas masks bags, a brown salt glazed ointment anti gas jar, a canteen, a one and three quarter ounce foot powder flask by R & C Ltd along with a foot powder container by boots, a further canvas bag, two enamel dishes, a size one field bandage and further bandages (qty)

Los 1080

18th century AD. A bronze sword suspension plate with recurved arm and knop finial, punched geometric designs with enamel detailing, transverse slot to accept the belt; Eastern European workmanship. 124 grams, 88mm (3 1/2"). [No Reserve] Fine condition. Property of a Hertfordshire, UK collector; acquired London art market, 1960s-1980s.

Los 277

1st century BC-1st century AD. A bronze flat-section terret with keyhole void to the centre, thickened lugs flanking the lower extension; to each face a series of graduated triangular recesses with enamel fill, beaded outer edge. 67 grams, 67mm (2 3/4"). Fine condition. Ex Kelway collection; formed between 1975 and 2015; found Lincolnshire, UK. Cf. MacGregor, M. Early Celtic Art in North Britain, vol.2, Leicester, 1976, item 56 for type. Exhibited at The Collection for the Society of Antiquaries Exhibition 2009-2010, Lincoln Museum, Lincolnshire, UK, exhibition number 4. Recorded with the Portable Antiquities Scheme with reference number PAS-84FAE6; accompanied by a print out of the PAS report. 

Los 297

1st century BC-2nd century AD. A mixed group of bronze brooches and fibulas comprising: a La Tène 1 fibula ‘Wessex Type’ (pin absent) with remains of iron spindle; a La Tène III, Hull type 19 fibula with openwork catch plate; a La Tène III fibula fragment with offset vertical decorative groove on upper section; a Nauheim-derivative type brooch (pin and spring absent); a La Tène II fibula; a composite brooch with dark enamel crescent and white enamel central lozenge (mostly lost), zoomorphic terminal, pin detached; a Colchester-type two-piece brooch with median ridge and tremolier ornament; a hinge-headed brooch with orange enamel (pin absent); a trumpet-headed 'fly' brooch with red enamel inlay and some tinning (pin absent); a plate brooch with pierced quatrefoil, some tinning and gilding, pellet detailing. 40 grams total, 40-46mm (1 1/2 - 1 3/4"). [12, No Reserve] Fine condition. Some rare types. All found at various sites in Essex, UK. Cf. Hattatt, R. Brooches of Antiquity, Oxford, 1987, item 724; Hattatt, R. Ancient Brooches and Other Artefacts, Oxford, 1989, item 1536, 1614. 

Los 379

2nd century AD. A mixed group of bronze plate brooches with polychrome enamel detailing, one with loop to the lower edge. 24 grams total, 27-45mm (1 - 1 3/4"). [3] Very fine condition. Property of a Surrey collector; acquired in the early 1970s. Cf. Hattatt, R. Iron Age and Roman Brooches, Oxford, 1985, item 600; Hattatt, R. Ancient Brooches and Other Artefacts, Oxford, 1989, item 1611.

Los 381

2nd century AD. A mixed group of blue and white enamelled bronze plate brooches comprising: a disc with four satellite roundels, each with enamel fill and incised saltire, hinged pin and pierced catch to the reverse; a larger similar example with smaller satellite roundels, hinged pin and pierced catch to the reverse; a rectangular bar with arch to one long edge and lateral lobes, bands of enamel squares and triangles, hinged pin and pierced catch to the reverse. 36 grams total, 33-42mm (1 1/4 - 1 3/4").[3] Very fine condition. Property of a Surrey collector; acquired in the early 1970s. Cf. Hattatt, R. Iron Age and Roman Brooches, Oxford, 1985, item 545. 

Los 549

2nd century AD. A bronze plate brooch in the form of a frog with extended legs, D-shaped lugs to the eyes, recesses to the upper face filled with white enamel and six dark blue pellets; pin-lugs and catchplate to the reverse. 7.39 grams, 36 mm (1 1/4"). Fine condition. Found near Peterborough, Cambridgeshire, UK; in 2006. Cf. The zoomorphic plate brooches in Hattatt, R. Brooches of Antiquity, Oxford, 1987, nos.1193, 1194, 1196, 1197.

Los 558

2nd century AD. A pair of tinned-bronze plate brooches comprising: ovoid plaque with radiating green and yellow enamel bars, raised centre with red enamel fill, pin-lug and catchplate to the reverse; one similar with blue and white enamel to the plaque. 16 grams total, 27mm (1").[2, No Reserve] Fine condition. Property of a Suffolk lady; acquired on the UK art market. Cf. Mackreth, D.F. Brooches in Late Iron Age and Roman Britain, Oxford, 2011, vol.2, item 10842. 

Los 846

14th-15th century AD. An unglazed squat ceramic box with basal ring, green enamel spots to the lid crescents and pellets to the body. 116 grams, 62mm (2 1/2"). Fine condition. Property of a London gentleman; salvaged by Oxford University; sunk off the coast of Hoi An in about 1490 AD. Annamese Hoi An pottery was made in what is now modern day Vietnam, in the kilns at Chu Dou, being the largest and most important kilns in the fourteenth to fifteenth century in kingdom of Annam. 

Los 968

6th century AD. A carinated D-section gold hoop with discoid cell bezel and gusset to the rim, set with a transparent insert over a repousse gold nimbate figure on a white enamel field with legend '(?)TO??S' for St. Thomas the Apostle. 11 grams, 25mm overall, 18.67mm internal diameter (approximate size British Q 1/2, USA 8 1/2, Europe 18.62, Japan 18) (1"). Property of a Mayfair gentleman; acquired by the family during the 1970s. Supplied with a positive X-Ray Fluorescence metal analysis certificate. The appearance of enamelled ring and pendant bezels covered with a crystal or similar in a closed cell form is seen from Anglo-Saxon work such as the Alfred Jewel; this follows the Byzantine originals of which this is a fine example. St Thomas, surnamed Didymus ('The Twin'), was one of the twelve Apostles and is renowned for not believing in the resurrection of Christ but later achieving faith; he gives his name to the expression 'Doubting Thomas'. Very fine condition. A large wearable size. Rare.

Los 1103

A vintage enamel sign of rectangular form advertising Puritan Soap Is Pure Soap, 92 x 61 cm approx

Los 1128

One lot of miscellaneous items to include a selection of vintage kitchen enamel wares, galvanised buckets, a crate of vintage and later printed tins, a selection of wooden crates with printed lettering, a 19th century cast iron boot scraper, etc

Los 1720

Mid-16th century AD. A broad gold hoop with ribbed bands flanking the text in seriffed capitals '+ LEX . EST . ARMA . REGVM' (law is the armour of kings); traces of back enamel within the lettering. 4.98 grams, 19mm overall, 17.48mm internal diameter (approximate size British N 1/2, USA 7, Europe 14.51, Japan 14) (3/4"). Very fine condition. Extremely rare. Property of a Cambridgeshire lady; acquired by her mother from a private collection in Chester, UK, 1980s; by descent 2007. Supplied with a positive X-Ray Fluorescence metal analysis certificate. Cf. Oman, C.C. Victoria and Albert Museum Catalogue of Rings, reprinted Ipswich, 1993, item 916. The ring is inscribed 'Lex est Arma Regum' (Law is the armour of kings) and is similar to one made for the general call of 1555, believed to have been made by the goldsmith Nicholas Deering and now in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London (accession number M.54-1960"). From at least the fifteenth century, candidates who were to be admitted to the ranks of Serjeants-at-Law (from whom judges were appointed) were obliged to present rings bearing a suitable motto to the monarch and various dignitaries. The tradition ended when the rank of Serjeant-at-Law was abolished by the Judicature Act of 1875.

Los 1767

13th century AD. A very large parcel-gilt bronze heraldic heater-shaped plaque with incuse lion rampant and enamel fill, blazoned 'or a lion rampant gules', the arms of Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn. 28 grams, 71mm (2 3/4"). Fine condition. Property of a Suffolk lady; acquired on the UK art market. Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn was a Welsh prince, lord of the district of Powys Wenwynwyn. Having grown up in exile in England with his father, he sided with King Edward I of England against the Welsh prince Llewelyn ap Gruffudd. In return, the king returned Gruffydd's father's estates. [No Reserve]

Los 1768

14th-15th century AD. A mixed group of gilt-bronze harness pendants comprising: a horizontal bar with scallop pendant; a cruciform plaque with expanding-arm cross pendant; a keyhole plaque with scallop pendant; a bar with two lozengiform enamelled heraldic panels; a starburst pendant with blue enamel. 72 grams total, 29-88mm (1 1/4 - 3 1/2"). Fine condition. Property of a Suffolk lady; acquired on the UK art market. [5, No Reserve]

Los 1769

13th-15th century AD. A mixed bronze group comprising: a heater-shaped pendant with reserved lion rampant; a heater-shaped pendant with three lions passant gardant reserved on a red enamel field; a heater-shaped stud divided per fess with red enamel to the upper cell; a discoid pendant with eight radiating arms, central roundel with reserved eagle on an enamel field; a gilt scabbard mount(?) with crenellated lower edge, repousse heater shield flanked by wyverns, lion rampant. 50 grams total, 22-53mm (1 - 2 1/4"). Fine condition. Property of a Suffolk lady; acquired on the UK art market. [5, No Reserve]

Los 1784

14th century AD. A substantial D-section silver hoop with pad to the underside, discoid plaque with deckled edge, central reserved cross on a hatched field with enamel fill. 11 grams, 22mm overall, 19.65 x 16.86mm internal diameter (approximate size British M, USA 6 1/4, Europe 12.56, Japan 12) (1"). Very fine condition. From a private collection; formed 1965-1975. 

Los 1824

14th-15th century AD. A gilt-bronze heater-shaped harness pendant with hinged suspension mount and peg; the field with red enamel and reserved cross blazoned 'Gules a cross indented or'. 15 grams, 51mm (2").Fair condition, enamel restored. Found near Kenilworth, Warwickshire, UK; in 1991. Cf. Ashley, S. Medieval Armorial Horse Furniture in Norfolk, East Anglian Archaeology 101, Dereham, 2002, item 42. The Dering Roll records the arms 'Gules a cross indented or' for Simon de Cray, lord warden of the Cinque Ports. 

Los 1831

14th-15th century AD. A bronze domed octofoil mount with cruciform motif, enamel cells, stud to the reverse. 7.81 grams, 32mm (1 1/4"). [No Reserve] Fine condition. Property of a UK gentleman; previously in a collection since before 2000. 

Los 1833

13th century AD. A gilt-bronze discoid pendant with recessed face, reserved lion passant gardant reversed with crown(?) on a red enamel field. 8.72 grams, 28mm (1"). Fine condition; enamel enhanced. Found near Warwick, Warwickshire, UK; in 1985. The lion facing to the right is 'reversed' from its usual left-facing attitude. 

Los 1881

Late 17th-Early 18th century AD. A D-section gold hoop with shoulders formed as the upper ends of femurs flanking a skull-shaped bezel with inlaid white enamel line to the brow, white enamel to the teeth, inset rose-cut diamonds to the eye sockets. 2.96 grams, 21mm overall, 17.01 x 19.30mm internal diameter (approximate size British M 1/2, USA 6 1/2, Europe 13.41, Japan 13) (3/4"). Property of a Suffolk lady; acquired on the UK art market. Cf. Oman, C.C. British Rings 800-1914, London, 1974, plate 87(A"). Fine condition.

Los 1882

Dated 29 December 1768 AD. A narrow D-section gold hoop, the outer surface engraved with a floral design reserved against black enamel background; the inner surface engraved in script 'Sr Frans. Gosling Kt. Ald. ob : 29 Dec 1768 æt 49' for Sir Francis Gosling, Knight and Alderman. 1.47 grams, 18mm overall, 15.56mm internal diameter (approximate size British J, USA 4 3/4, Europe 8.69, Japan 8) (3/4"). Very fine condition. Property of a Suffolk collector; previously in a family collection, by descent. Sir Francis Gosling (died 1768) was an Alderman of the City of London and a private City banker based at 19 Fleet Street; in 1742 he joined a banking partnership that had its roots from its foundation by Henry Pinckney in around 1650; the partnership became known as Goslings and Sharpe from 1794 and was one of the largest (and the oldest) of the original banks that joined to establish Barclay & Co in 1896 (the present day Barclays Bank); to this day, Barclays holds many records of Goslings in its archives; his will is held at the National Archives, Kew, London. 

Los 195

Late 4th-late 3rd century BC. A gold diadem consisting of a twisted rope border with a series of heart shaped scrolls with applied acanthus leaves and flowers with gold wire detail and tear drop shaped settings with blue enamel, flowers recessed for red enamel inlay; central wire motif in the form of a Hercules knot with applied flowers and acanthus leaves with tear drop shaped setting with blue enamel; in the centre a amethyst cameo with the bust of a woman wearing a diadem and robes held at the shoulder by a brooch; one small flower element present but detached. 84 grams, 16cm (6 1/4").  Fine condition. Property of a Mayfair, London, UK, businessman; previously in an important South German collection since the beginning of the 20th century. Supplied with a positive X-Ray Fluorescence metal analysis certificate. Cf. for another diadem of similar design and construction see an example in the Athens National Archaeological Museum, ex Helene Stathatos collection and said to be from Thessaly. Ref. Aikaterini Despini, Greek Art: Ancient Gold Jewellery, Athens, 2006 (text in English), pl.29-30, dated to the last quarter of the 4th century BC, and with further bibliography. There is a diadem of similar technique from Canosa, Southern Italy in the Tarentum Museo Archelogico Nationale, inventory number: 22.437, ref. Despini, Op. Cit. No.38, dated to circa 200 BC, and with further bibliography; for another example of similar design and construction refer to the example of a fragment of a diadem (about a third) from the Erotes Tomb, Eretria, Northern Greece, dated to the late 3d century BC, now in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Inv. No. 98.798), ref. Herbert Hoffmann & Patricia F. Davidson, Greek Gold: Jewellery from the Age of Alexander, Brooklyn, 1965, p.60, no.3. Accompanied by an Art Loss Register certificate. Ancient Greek colonisation began at an early date, during the so-called Geometric period of about 900 to 700 BC, when many seminal elements of ancient Greek society were also established, such as city-states, major sanctuaries, and the Panhellenic festivals. The ancient Greeks were active seafarers seeking opportunities for trade and founding new independent cities at coastal sites across the Mediterranean Sea. By the seventh and sixth centuries BC, Greek colonies and settlements stretched all the way from western Asia Minor to southern Italy, Sicily, North Africa, and even to the coasts of southern France and Spain. Regional schools of artists exhibited a rich variety of styles and preferences at this time. Trading stations played an important role as the furthest outposts of Greek culture. Here, Greek goods, such as pottery, bronze, silver and gold vessels, olive oil, wine, and textiles, were exchanged for luxury items and exotic raw materials that were in turn worked by Greek craftsmen. After the unprecedented military campaign of Alexander the Great, more extensive trade routes were opened across Asia, extending as far as Afghanistan and the Indus River Valley. These new trade routes introduced Greek art to cultures in the East, and also exposed Greek artists to a host of artistic styles and techniques, as well as precious stones. Garnets, emeralds, rubies, and amethysts were incorporated into new types of Hellenistic jewellery, more stunning than ever before. The most important of the Black Sea colonies were Kyzikos, Sinope, Pantikapaion, and Olbia. The colonies along the shores of the northern Black Sea interacted with the local Scythian and Sarmatian peoples who prized the workmanship of the Greek goldsmiths with many examples having been found in the kurgans, or burial mounds, of the aristocracy. This diadem shows many similarities to work found in the Pontic region, as well as the diadem found with the female buried in the tomb of Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, at Vergina in Greece. The gold pectoral from Thick Barrow, Dnipropetrovsk Region, Ukraine, now in the Hermitage Museum, shares many similarities in style and technique with this diadem, particularly the use of fine wires and the scrolling flowers. The closest parallel to this piece is a gold diadem from Thessaly and dating to the fourth century BC, which is now in the Getty Museum, Malibu. The use of cameos on the front of diadems seems to be particularly associated with the eastern Greek craftsmen and their patrons, with the best known example being the Sarmatian crown from Khokhlach kurgan, now in the Hermitage. The image on this cameo could well be a portrait of the original owner, a highly important individual of the Pontic aristocracy.

Los 1976

18th-19th century AD. A rectangular bronze icon with raised border, inner band of grapes and leaves reserved against a blue enamel field, facing image of a nimbate saint in robe and mantle unfurling a scroll, Cyrillic text to the sides. 352 grams, 11.5cm (4 1/2"). [No Reserve] Fine condition. From the Alexandra collection, Somerset, UK; previously acquired by a Russian art collector from Sotheby's Amsterdam in 2004; formerly acquired between 1970 and 1972 by one of the largest industrialists from East Germany, who made his fortune in selling cement to Russia, and was subsequently part-paid in icons and other important works of art by the Russian government. 

Los 2012

11th century AD. A fabricated cruciform Greek cross pendant with champ leve design to the obverse, lateral filigree borders, plain reverse, ribbed suspension loop with flange ends; the obverse with dark blue field, image of the nimbate Corpus Christi with extended arms and 'reserved 'IC' above. 14 grams, 62 mm (2 1/2"). Fine condition, enamel chipped, pierced to lower edge of left arm, loop displaced. Property of a retired sculptor; from a collection formed in the 1980s. 

Los 2084

Cretaceous Period, 145-65 million years BP. A large example of a fossil tooth with serration clearly visible and some enamel from Carcharodontosaurus saharicus dinosaur, the African equivalent of Tyrannosaurus rex, from the Tegana formation of the Sahara desert, Morocco. 16 grams, 57mm (2 1/4"). From the collection of the palaeontologist R Gledhill; collected between 1930 and 1960. The Carcharodontosaurus saharicus dinosaur was one of the largest predators of all time- larger than its distant North American Tyrannosaurus rex cousin - related to Allosaurus and to the South American Gigantosaurus. Fine condition.

Los 2085

Cretaceous Period, 145-65 million years BP. A large fossil tooth with good serrated edges and enamel from Bahariasaurus ingens, a mid-sized carnivore dinosaur from Morocco. 12 grams, 48mm (2"). From the collection of the palaeontologist R Gledhill; collected between 1930 and 1960. Although rare, the teeth are different from Carcharodontosaurus in being thinner but having a thicker more triangular X-section. Fine condition.

Los 2100

Miocene Period, 23-5.3 million years BP. A fossil tooth of Carcharocles megalodon with good serrations and tooth enamel from the Hawthorn Formation, Beaufort, South Carolina, U.S.A. 234 grams, 11.5cm (4 1/2"). From the Pradi Collection, Boston, USA; acquired during 1980s. Fine condition.

Los 2124

Pleistocene Period, 90,000-35,000 years BP. A complete juvenile molar tooth from an extinct mammoth, Mammuthus primigenius showing the characteristic enamel ridges, and retaining some root structure. 1.42 kg, 15cm (6"). Property of a Hampshire collector; collected by the vendor's father in the 1930s. See Adams, A. Leith, Monograph on the British Fossil Elephants, Palaeontographical Society, 1877. [No Reserve] Fine condition.

Los 385

A late 19th century brass carriage clock with enamel dial, the 8 day movement striking on a bell, the back plate stamped B possibly Brunelot in a red leather travel case

Los 391

A 19th century walnut Vienna regulator style wall clock with engraved enamel dial and two train weight driven movement, the case work with carved and fluted column supports

Los 399

An Edwardian oak mantle clock, the shaped case with carved detail with convex enamel dial and 8 day time piece together with a mahogany and brass banded box containing four miniature tankards with anchor detail

Los 618

An extensive miscellaneous collection to include a mahogany cased De Maelzei metronome, a heavy cast metal vase with classical figure decoration, a pair of green ground Chinese cloisonné enamel vases, antique spectacles, a clay pipe decorated with a fox, a brass framed wall clock with tile setting, a large quantity of Ronson and other cigarette lighters, photographic equipment, a quantity of good quality cut glass and other toilet water bottles, etc

Los 89

A miscellaneous box containing enamel flour bin, plated goblets, ceramics and flatware

Los 12

QIANLONG-STYLE ENAMELED GLASS SNUFF BOTTLEOld Chinese enameled glass snuff bottle, imitating enamel on copper style; of short compressed form, with European figural pastoral scenes to either side, with lotus on yellow ground to the faceted sides; Qianlong mark but probably Early Republic Period; coral-glass stopper; H: 1 3/4"

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