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SHOTGUNS "VINTAGE MODEL 1892 MARLIN LEVER ACTION 22 RIFLE No 206669, Deactivated and certificated by the Birmingham gun barrel proof house, this is a genuine old weapon manufactured in 1900 ( confirmed by marlin serial numbers records) Deactivation Certificat" "e (No Licence required)"
SHOTGUNS A 7 x 57 CALIBRE MODEL 1896 MAUSER RIFLE of South African Boer origin, having bolt action and adjustable sight with carved stock names, A.J.A. Cronje Witbanklate de bejhlehem, Jan 29th 1900 OVS, no.A4860, stamped Ludw. Loewe & Cie, Berlin (Firearms C ertificate required)
A set of four Royal Doulton limited edition Evacuee figures comprising "The Boy Evacuee", Model HN3202, No. 2332/9500, "The Girl Evacuee", Model HN3203, No. 2172/9500, "Welcome Home", Model HN3299, No. 496/9500 and "The Homecoming", Model HN3295, No. 2119/9500, all modelled by Adrian Hughes, tallest figure 22 cm, with Certificates and paperwork (ILLUSTRATED)
Eleven items of 18th and 19th century white metal or un-marked silver including an embossed two handled taste de vin, miniature chamber stick with parrot decoration to base, nutmeg grater, miniature warming pan with pierced cover, plain miniature plate, miniature goblet of tapering reeded form, miniature funnel, miniature sieve with associated reeded tripod stand, miniature Chinese incense burner/oil lamp, engraved Chinese hair slide and a Chinese white metal model of a three masted sailing vessel
Civil War – passport – deed of banishment by Oliver Cromwell remarkable ms document being an obligation bond for William Frankland of Ellerton (N Yorks) dated July 18th 1656 written in English on a single page folio signed by Frankland and various witnesses to base. Frankland agrees by this document to pay the sum of 1000 pounds (say 1million in today’s money) as a bond to ensure that he has the liberty to ‘passe beyond the seas’ and that ‘he depart from ye Commonwealth of England Scotland and Ireland and the dominions thereunto belonging & doe not returne into any of them without licence first obtained from his Highnesse the Lord Protector (ie Cromwell) & the Councill and doe not either before or after his departure art or consent to arting of anything injudicial or against the son of his Highnesse nor the Commonwealthe...’ This document seems to act a dual purpose – in the first instance it is a very early example of a kind of passport – providing Frankland with safe passage beyond the seas. On another level it is also a deed of banishment ensuring that he gets out of the country and does not return. We have had considerable difficulty in pinpointing the identity of Frankland which seemed initially curious. He was obviously considered too dangerous to be allowed to stay in the Commonwealth which suggests immediately that he was a leading Royalist. However he was clearly evading punishment or execution and this document points to some sort of political ‘deal’ whereby he agrees to leave the country but still has his head intact ! Records show that there was a Sir William Frankland 1st Baronet who was created as such in 1660 – the year of the Restoration of Charles II. He was described as from Thirkelby North Yorks and he went on to be a long serving MP for Thirsk. There is every possibility that the two are the same. This document also seems to suggest that Frankland may have been involved in some sort of violent conduct by this curious reference to his agreement not to do anything injurious to Cromwell’s son. This is possibly a reference to Henry Cromwell a General in the New Model Army and by this time Lord Lieutenant in Ireland. If this is the case then it would seem that Frankland was too much of a threat to be allowed to remain in the Commonwealth but too important to be dealt with by punishment imprisonment or execution. It may be that Frankland was one of many Royalists who rallied to the edicts of the exiled Charles II to raise troops to fight against the Parliamentary forces. The fact that he received a hereditary title only a few months after Charles had been restored to the throne suggests that he was certainly rewarded for his services to the exiled King. Together with a ms family pedigree with a note relating to this document and the comment, even then that : ‘[this] is all we know of said Wm Frankland’. There is also the ms will of an Anthony Frankland dated 1714 – he appears to be a great grandson of William.

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