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Lot 612

A Waterford glass "Colleen" pattern part table service (thirty six pieces), and two claret and two wine decanters, a table bell and stand, and two jam pots and covers

Lot 64

An early 20th Century silver and orange enamel cased desk timepiece, retailed by W. Allemann of Montreux, the 1.5ins diameter metal dial with Arabic numerals and subsidiary seconds dial, to the timepiece movement, contained in octagonal case with re-entrant corners, 3.5ins x 2.875ins, stamped "925" standard (some damage), an early 20th Century Continental silver and orange enamel cigarette filter case, 2.75ins overall, with import mark for Stockwell & Co, London 1930, complete with ebonised and silver gilt mounted filter, and a similar desk bell base, 2.25ins diameter, stamped "925" standard (slight damage)

Lot 933

A late 17th Century French bronze bell, the upper part with a moulded cross and "IHS MARIA. 1679", with a raised founders mark of a cross, with original iron clapper, 7ins diameter x 6ins high, (now with wooden handle) 10.5ins high overall

Lot 94

An Elizabeth II silver table bell, the whole chased and cast with leaf and scroll ornament and with reeded mounts, 7ins high, by William Comyns & Sons Ltd, London 1983 (weight 14ozs), an Elizabeth II travelling communion set, comprising - chalice and cover, 2.75ins high, and circular host box, 1.75ins diameter, by Burt Ltd, London 1966 (weight 2.8ozs), and plated cylindrical case for same

Lot 1796

Four bottles Johnny Walker black label whisky (two low in neck), one bottle Glen Marnoch, one bottle Bells whisky in a Wade bell bottle and one bottle Beehive Napoleon Brandy

Lot 1947

19th Century American walnut parquetry inlaid dome topped wall clock, the painted enamel dial with Roman numerals, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 1983

19th Century French gilt metal figural mantel clock, the enamel dial with Roman numerals, the two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 1987

Late 19th / early 20th Century French gilt metal and white marble mantel clock having circular dial with Arabic numerals, the two train movement striking on a bell, inscribed Mougin

Lot 1991

Good quality 19th Century mahogany night watchman's clock, the lockable case enclosing a brass dial with Roman numerals inscribed Herbert Blockley, Duke Street, St. James, London, the single train fusée movement striking on a bell

Lot 1992

Good Edwardian mahogany and inlaid gilt brass mounted dome top mantel clock, the enamel dial with Roman and Arabic numerals, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 1995

Regency brass inlaid mahogany lancet clock, the enamel dial with Roman numerals, inscribed Grant, Fleet Street, London, with a two train movement, the back plate also inscribed Grant, striking on a bell

Lot 1996

Small 19th Century French ormolu mounted white marble mantel clock, the enamel dial with Roman and Arabic numerals, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 2005

George III mahogany longcase clock, the arched hood with shaped pediment above an arched door, the painted enamel dial with Roman and Arabic numerals, subsidiary seconds and calendar, inscribed Jeffery, Canterbury, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 2006

George III mahogany longcase clock, the arched hood flanked by turned columns above an arched door, the gilded and silvered dial inscribed William Franklin, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 2007

George III mahogany longcase clock, the arched hood above an arched door, the gilded and silvered dial inscribed Tempus Fugit, with Arabic and Roman numerals, subsidiary seconds and calendar aperture, with a two train movement striking on a bell

Lot 2020

19th Century French gilt brass and flecked white marble three piece clock garniture, the enamel dial with Arabic numerals and painted floral swags, the two train movement with outside count wheel, striking on a bell

Lot 2024

19th Century Belgian slate mantel clock having circular enamel dial with Roman numerals, the two train movement striking on a bell and inscribed with medallion Marti (case a/f)

Lot 2026

Good quality 19th Century French gilded spelter and onyx mantel clock in 18th Century style, the rococo design case mounted with two figures of cherubs, the enamel dial with Arabic numerals and painted floral swags, the two train movement striking on a bell, 16.5ins high

Lot 1583

With bell slot, 220 cm. tall.

Lot 1612

Depicting elf holding up smaller elf on top of bell, 14 cm. tall.

Lot 5794

Botussava, sitting on lotus bloom, with septer and bell in hands, marked on bottom, 14 cm. tall

Lot 236

A trio of 1960s dresses comprising of a BLANES floral print shift with back belt, and apple green linen shift with flared bell sleeves and a sleeveless shift by GLOBAL INSPIRATION. All aprox size 14 and great condition.

Lot 351

A 1950s navy gabardine coat and a 1950s grey wool swing coat with bell sleeves.

Lot 531

Commemorative Medals, Foreign, Italy, Bologna, Cardinal Luigi Capponi (1582–1659), laying the first stone for the new chapels at the Church of Santa Maria Lacrimosa degli Alemanni, bronze medal, unsigned, 1619, * ET LAPIS I TE VOCABITVR DOMVS DEI, half-length bust of the Cardinal l., blessing the stone, rev. legend around, PAVLI V …, and in 10 lines in centre, IN MARIAM VIRGINEM …., 92mm. (cf. M. Hall, II, Baldwin Auction, 29 June 2010, lot 1087), a contemporary cast from a pierced original, very fine, well patinated and very rare Luigi Capponi (1582–1659) was elevated to Cardinal in 1608 and in 1619 was Cardinal-Deacon of Sant’Angelo in Pescheria in Rome. The chapels of the Saints Teresa and Joseph were built between 1619-1625 and in 1621 Capponi was appointed Archbishop Emeritus of Ravenna. Today only the bell tower of the Alemanni church remains.

Lot 606

Military Orders and Medals, Campaign Groups and Pairs, A 1916 Montauban/Dantzig Alley Officer Casualty, 8th Battalion Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment), awarded to 2nd Lieutenant T. R. Castle, a pre-war poet and associate of the Bloomsbury Group, comprising: 1914-1920 British War and Victory Medals (2.Lieut T. R. Castle); Memorial Plaque (Tudor Ralph Castle), War Medal lightly toned, Victory Medal as issued, Plaque very fine, housed in velvet mount (2) To Mrs Castle – Sandy Cross, Seale, Farnham, Surrey. ‘Deeply regret to inform you that 2/Lt T.R. Castle West Surreys killed in action – August 31st – The Army Council express their sympathy’ Tudor Ralph Castle was born on 28th December 1882 at ‘Woodlands Villa’, Brentford, London. He was the second son of Eleanor Wilhelmina (Sadleir) and William Henry Castle. The family later moved to Kensington, London Tudor was admitted to Harrow School in September 1896 and resided in Mr Moss’s House, Church Hill. He went up to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1901 and graduated with a B.A. Hons in Part II of the Historical Tripos in 1904. As an undergraduate Tudor joined two Trinity poetry societies, the X Society and the Shakespeare Society, serving successively as Secretary and President of the X Society. Following graduation, Tudor travelled to India, Spain and Germany. In 1910 he was associated with Toynbee Hall, a resettlement house in Whitechapel, East London. Tudor was engaged in secretarial and literary work and was the author of a volume of poems entitled ‘The Gentle Shepherd’, published in 1908 (a photocopy of this book is included with the lot.) During these years Tudor became involved with a set of writers, artists and intellectuals known as the Bloomsbury Group, that had its origins at Cambridge University. This group included among its members Virginia and Leonard Woolf, Lytton Strachey, E.M. Forster, Duncan Grant, John Maynard Keyes, Dora Carrington and Clive Bell. In 1910 he was associated with the Dreadnought Hoax. The Dreadnought Hoax was a practical joke pulled by Horace de Vere Cole. Cole tricked the Royal Navy into showing their flagship, the battleship HMS Dreadnought, to a fake delegation of Abyssinian royals. The hoax drew attention in Britain to the emergence of the Bloomsbury Group, among whom some of Cole’s collaborators numbered. The hoax was a repeat of a similar impersonation which Cole and Adrian Stephen had organised while they were students at Cambridge in 1905 when he posed as the Sultan of Zanzibar. The Dreadnought Hoax was a similar impersonation which was suggested to Cole by a friend who was an officer on HMS Hawke to hoax their rivals on HMS Dreadnought, including Commander Willie Fisher - Stephens’ cousin - who was on the staff of the Admiral. As Virginia Woolf later recounted ‘In those days the young officers had a gay time. They were always up to some lark; and one of their chief occupations it seemed was to play jokes on each other. There were a great many rivalries and intrigues in the navy. The officers like scoring off each other. And the officers of the Hawke and the Dreadnought had a feud. ... And Cole’s friend who was on the Hawke had come to Cole, and said to him, ‘You’re a great hand at hoaxing people; couldn’t you do something to pull the leg of the Dreadnought This involved Cole and five friends - writer Virginia Stephen (later Virginia Woolf), her brother Adrian Stephen, Guy Ridley, Anthony Buxton and artist Duncan Grant - who had themselves disguised ‘by the theatrical costumier Willy Clarkson with skin darkeners and turbans to resemble members of the Abyssinian royal family.’ The main limitation of the disguises was that the ‘royals’ could not eat anything or their make-up would be ruined. Adrian Stephen took the role of ‘interpreter’. On 7 February 1910 the hoax was set in motion. Cole organised for an accomplice to send a telegram to HMS Dreadnought which was then moored in Portland Harbour, Dorset. The message said that the ship must be prepared for the visit of a group of princes from Abyssinia and was purportedly signed by Foreign Office Under-secretary Sir Charles Hardinge. Cole with his entourage went to London’s Paddington station where Cole claimed that he was ‘Herbert Cholmondeley’ of the Foreign Office and demanded a special train to Weymouth; the stationmaster arranged a VIP coach. In Weymouth, the navy welcomed the princes with an honour guard. An Abyssinian flag was not found, so the navy proceeded to use that of Zanzibar and to play Zanzibar’s national anthem.The group inspected the fleet. To show their appreciation, they communicated in a gibberish of words drawn from Latin and Greek; they asked for prayer mats and attempted to bestow fake military honours on some of the officers. Commander Fisher failed to recognise either of his cousins. When the prank was uncovered in London, the ringleader Horace de Vere Cole contacted the press and sent a photo of the ‘princes’ to the Daily Mirror. The group’s pacifist views were considered a source of embarrassment, and the Royal Navy briefly became an object of ridicule. The Navy later demanded that Cole be arrested. However, Cole and his compatriots had not broken any law. During the visit to Dreadnought, the visitors had repeatedly shown amazement or appreciation by exclaiming ‘Bunga Bunga!’ In 1915 during the First World War, HMS Dreadnought rammed and sank a German submarine - the only battleship ever to do so. Among the telegrams of congratulation was one that read ‘BUNGA BUNGA’. For his role in this affair, Tudor was threatened with possible arrest, he was never formally charged but for this, or other reasons he left England shortly after to work on a Government survey of Australia. On October the 24th 1912 Tudor married Muriel Isabel Catherine Howard. Tudor was then employed as a Land Agent on his father-in-law’s Hampton House Lodge Estate, in Seale, West Surrey. With the outbreak of the Great War, Tudor enlisted in the 19th (Service) Battalion (2nd Public Schools) Royal Fusiliers on the 15th September 1914, being given Service Number 175. He served 152 days in the ranks before being discharged to Commission on the 13th February 1915, being granted a Regular Temporary Commission in the Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment). He was posted to the 8th Battalion on the 2nd July 1916, joining the battalion at Morlancourt sand pit where the Battalion was in tents training for its move to Guillemont on the 8th July. He took part in the unsuccessful attack by his Battalion on the Quarry near Guillemont, the Battalion losing 7 Officers and 89 Other Ranks, they moved out of the line after this attack returning to the Front area on the 31st August 1916 at Fricourt, moving up through Mametz to the village of Montauban and Danzig Alley Trench in preparation for their attack on Delville Wood on the 1st September. Whilst in this reserve position on the 31st August 1916 the Battalion was bombarded all day by the enemy, and it was during this bombardment that 2/Lt Castle was killed by a gas shell. He was 34 years old. He is buried in Plot 1, Row B, Grave 36 of Danzig Alley, British Cemetery, Mametz, France. His name is on the Harrow School War Memorial, the Memorial was built on the site of Mr. Moss’s House, Tudor’s House whilst he was at the school The lot is sold with copy service papers, copy of the 8th Battalion War Diary, a photocopy of his book ‘The Gentle Shepherd’, a letter from the archivist of Trinity College Cambridge and five copy photographs of Tudor, Muriel, a Battalion Officers’ photograph and an original photograph of his headstone in Dantzig Alley.

Lot 124

British Coins, James I, second coinage, unite, mm. bell (1610-1611), crowned fourth bust r., holding orb and shouldering sceptre, rev. crowned shield of arms, IR at sides, wt. 9.96gms. (S.2619; N.2084), good very fine or better, scarce

Lot 339

A quantity of WWII military photographs to inc the Memphis Bell etc

Lot 205

Quantity of BELL filters etc. [NO RESERVE]

Lot 193

A vintage GPO TE28/234 No.21/MK3 bell ringer ideal home decoration

Lot 242

A Canon AE1 and a Canon AV1, Bell and Howell zoom lens, Canon zoom lens x2, Star blitz flash gun, Pentax MZ50 camera in box and Pentax F35 lens in box. All in blue camera bag.

Lot 292

A Bell & Howell XL Movie camera and a Plusmatic super 8 Z-20 cine camera

Lot 372

Oak based brass waiting room bell

Lot 1235

WW2 British ARP Brass Bell. Maker marked "JB 39". Varnished turned wood handle. Working order.

Lot 1247

WW2 British No 4. MKII Bayonets all without scabbards and a 1/93 dated British Lee Metford Bayonet which has been converted into a trench knife. Blade has been cut down to 135mm with a Bowie style point. Plus a large penknife with Horn grips and two blades (90mm and 40mm) by Joseph Allen of Sheffield and a horn grip pen knife by Alexander, 3 Bell St. Birmingham, with one 70mm blade and one tool. (7)

Lot 1310

WW2 British WD Broad Arrow marked military brass hand bell. No date. Approx 26cm in height. Turned wooden handle.

Lot 777

North Wales Frith's Series Album of 16 views published Wilkinson & Thompson Llandudno hardback-The Right Preparation for a Journey London Religious Tract Society pub 1835 35pp-Denton Rev W The Christians in Turkey pub Bell & Daldy 1863 106 pp no cover scruffy-John Bull Magazine No I second edition published July 1824 printed James Smith the Strand 40 pp no cover

Lot 174

Military (possible ARP) brass bell with crows foot. 27cm

Lot 27

Nailsea Victorian glass bell, height- 27cm

Lot 49

George Campbell RHA (1917-1979) COCO THE CLOWN oil on board signed with dedication [to Martin] lower right; with Bell Gallery label on reverse Bell Gallery, Belfast;Private collection;Christie's, 9 May 1996, lot 137;Private collection Nicolai Poliakoff (1900-1974) was the creator of Coco the Clown, the most famous circus clown in Britain and Ireland in the mid-20th century, touring mainly with the Bertram Mills Circus. Campbell met Coco in Dublin in 1961 and their meeting inspired a series of works which incorporated the figure of the clown. 22.50 by 12.75in. (57.2 by 32.4cm)

Lot 1015

'BLESSING SCHOLASTIC' TROMBONE BY ELKHART impressed maker's mark to bell, no. 280105, with Yamaha 42B mouthpiece, approximately 120cm long

Lot 491

CLOCK GARINTURE SET, in French style, gilt metal and marble, comprising a clock with bell striking movement, 60cm H plus a pair of candelabras, 69cm H. (3)

Lot 495

LATE 19TH CENTURY FRENCH GILT METAL CLOCK, with cherub mounted case, the dial inscribed 'Leroy Freres, Paris', bell striking movement, 52cm x 34cm H max.

Lot 497

LATE 19TH CENTURY FRENCH GILT METAL AND BLUE CERAMIC MANTEL CLOCK, with urn surmount, bell striking movement, 34cm H x 19ocm overall. (crack to glazed inspection door)

Lot 499

LATE 19TH CENTURY FRENCH MANTEL CLOCK, the decorative gilt metal case with pink painted panels and dial, bell striking movement, 34cm H x 22cm.

Lot 1002

A carved oak glove box, mahogany writing box, mahogany banjo barometer British made by Shortland, along with a ARP hand bell.

Lot 1209

An antique babies mother of pearl and silver teething ring/rattle formed as a bell.

Lot 963

A brass porthole and a brass wall mounted bell.

Lot 584

A Bernard Leach (1887-1979) bell tile, framed in metal. Impressed St. Ives marks. 10cm square.

Lot 157

Georgian Bell bowl wine glass with folded foot C1750

Lot 290

A collection of 18th century English porcelain decorated in coloured enamels. Comprising; a saucer with pineapple moulding, a Chelsea bell shaped coffee cup and two Derby plates decorated in the manner of the cotton stem painter. Vase 13.5cm, (4). Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. All pieces extensively damaged.

Lot 348

A late 19th century French brass cased carriage alarm clock. With enamel dial incorporating a subsidiary dial for an alarm function and striking on a bell, 17.75cm. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Running. With key. Lower corner chips to the right side panel only.

Lot 471

A 19th century French slate mantel clock. Surmounted with a bronze urn with bird finial, with enamel dial signed Lefebvre, Rue de Rivoli 106. Housing an 8 day cylinder movement striking half hourly on a bell, 37.5cm. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Bronze oxidised. Chip to the enamel dial near the left winding hole. Some chips to the slate. Sold with pendulum, no key.

Lot 473

A 19th century Islamic metal candlestick of bell form. With niello inlay depicting a foliate ground with birds and buildings, 14.5cm. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Good condition.

Lot 478

A George V silver inkwell of bell form and with glass liner by A & J Zimmerman Ltd. Assayed Birmingham 1914, 11cm (2). Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Some minor dents only.

Lot 521

A 19th century silvered brass three part clock garniture. With pierced decoration and enamelled chapter ring signed Trouille, Amiens. Housing an 8 day movement striking on a bell 31cm (3). Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Sold with key and pendulum. Time function running, the strike is currently not. The left spring is wound to maximum so probably just needs releasing an a service. No damage to the metal or dial.

Lot 537

A vintage novelty metal desk bell formed as a tortoise and having mother of pearl shell, 14cm. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Good condition. Working.

Lot 552

A 19th century brass single fusee skeleton clock on rosewood plinth by J. Sharp, Bawtry. With anchor escapement, six spoke wheels and striking on a top mounted bell, 33.5cm. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Pendulum feather broken. Hands need slight adjustment to stop them catching. The dome is lacking.

Lot 564

A 19th century French gilt bronze mantel clock surmounted with the figure of a maiden. With 8 day cylinder movement having silk suspension pendulum, stamped Leporati and striking half hourly on a bell, 46cm high. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. No pendulum or key. Some pitting. Case and dial in good order.

Lot 576

A 19th century French gilt bronze and antico verde marble mantel clock. Surmounted with the figure of a putti playing pan pipes. With enamel dial and housing an 8 day Japy movement stamped C. J & Co. 50cm wide. Condition Report. To be used as a guide only. Pendulum, bell and one hand lacking. No key.

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