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Ceramics - a Royal Standard Indian Summer pattern part tea service, comprising twelve cups, saucers and side plates, milk jug and sugar bowl; a pair of Royal Crown Derby Red Aves Heraldic Border tea cups and saucers; cabinet plates, including Royal Crown Derby, Royal Worcester, Aynsley, etc; a Coalport Ming Rose teapot; Hammersley, Old Foley; etc
9th-11th century AD. A gold pendant with flat bottom, flat-section wall and handle, ornamented with filigree ropework detailing. See Meaney, A. Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones, Oxford, BAR British Series 96, 1981, p.166-168 for discussion of similar types. 2.62 grams, 19mm (3/4"). Property of a West London businessman, formed his collection in the late 1980s-early 1990s. Pendants in the form of miniature buckets or drinking vessels have been found in a number of pagan Anglo-Saxon and Viking contexts and are generally made of bronze or iron, with gold examples being rare; three gold examples were found with the hoard from Hoen, Norway. Bronze bucket amulets have been found at Driffield in Yorkshire, and Vimose bog in Denmark, among other places. In form they represent wooden buckets bound with bronze or iron bands which have been found in Anglo-Saxon and Viking graves and are believed to have held mead or ale and were used to replenish the cups from which warriors drank. As amulets they probably represent the ecstatic power of alcoholic drink and the role of women as the dispensers of these precious beverages. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
9th-11th century AD. A gold pendant with flat bottom, flat-section wall and handle, ornamented with panels of granulation and filigree rim. See Meaney, A. Anglo-Saxon Amulets and Curing Stones, Oxford, BAR British Series 96, 1981, p.166-168 for discussion of similar types. 0.94 grams, 19mm (3/4"). Property of a West London businessman, formed his collection in the late 1980s-early 1990s. Pendants in the form of miniature buckets or drinking vessels have been found in a number of pagan Anglo-Saxon and Viking contexts and are generally made of bronze or iron, with gold examples being rare; three gold examples were found with the hoard from Hoen, Norway. Bronze bucket amulets have been found at Driffield in Yorkshire, and Vimose bog in Denmark, among other places. In form they represent wooden buckets bound with bronze or iron bands which have been found in Anglo-Saxon and Viking graves and are believed to have held mead or ale and were used to replenish the cups from which warriors drank. As amulets they probably represent the ecstatic power of alcoholic drink and the role of women as the dispensers of these precious beverages. [No Reserve] Fine condition.
Circa 1350 AD. A gilded sheet-silver double-cup or doppelkopf comprising two shallow bowls with rims designed to lock together and each with a curved ledge handle forming a loop upon closure; the lower cup being slightly smaller than the upper, featuring a tiered foot with carinated profile and gilt beaded rim, inset roundel to the underside with similar gilt and beaded rim and low-relief engraved scene depicting a robed lady (perhaps representing Eve in the Garden of Eden?) kneeling on her right knee to pick one of two sprays of flowers in a dense foliage field, her left hand resting on the raised left knee; the handle a curved rectangular tab with gilt incised borders; the upper cup similar in form with indented roundel to the centre, lacking the applied foot, and beaded band to the shoulder. Eight other examples of this object type are known to exist all dating to the 14th century: one held at the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; one held at the Metropolitan Museum, New York, being part of the Cloisters collection acquired in 1983; one part of the Lingenfeld Treasure, unearthed 1894 and now in the Historisches Museum der Pfatz, Speyer; one part of the Colmar Treasure, found 1863, and now held at the Musée de Cluny, Alsace; one discovered in the garden of the Seedorf Convent, found 1606, and now held at the Historisches Museum, Basel; one as part of the Erfurt Treasure, unearthed 1998, and held at the Erfurt Synagogue; one held at the National Museum, Zurich, and the last example held at the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, acquired in 1960; see Treasures of the Black Death exhibition catalogue, p.72-3; also Meyer, G. L'Orfèvrerie médiévale au musée d'Unterlinden à Colmar, Cahiers alsaciens d'archéologie, d'art et d'histoire, vol.XXIV, 1981; Fritz, J.M. Goldschmiedekunst der Gotik in Mitteleuropa, Munich, 1982; Taburet-Delahaye, E. L'Orfèvrerie gothique, XIIIe-XVe siècle au musée de Cluny, Paris, 1989; and Taburet-Delahaye, E. Les Bijoux du trésor de Colmar in Le Trésor de Colmar, Paris, 1999. 385 grams total, 13.5cm each (5 1/4"). Property of a London collector; found in a gravel pit near to the River Danube, at Donauwoerth, Western Bavaria, in the 1960s; accompanied by an academic report and photographs, plus images of the other eight examples known; three found as part of treasures, and all held in museum collections. The doppelkopf is a pair of vessels which fit together so that the upper serves as a cover during storage and as a second drinking vessel when removed. It is a specific type of vessel which is known to have come into use in the 14th century. The place in which they were manufactured is presently uncertain but the majority of known surviving examples were discovered in the Rhineland and Switzerland. Examples were present in both the Erfurt and Colmar treasures dating from the early 14th century. It is understood that the format of two open shallow vessels forming an enclosed space may have been copied from wooden exemplars and others in more exotic materials such as ostrich eggs or coconuts. There are illustrations of the wooden forms from Freiburg in Brisgau in Taburet-Delahaye (1999"). The significance of the specific form of the vessel derives from the importance in medieval Germanic culture of taking strong drink in the making of celebrations (toasts) and the customs and rituals surrounding these celebrations and amuletic (even supernatural) powers ascribed to them. The custom of Minnetrinken in which commemorative celebrations were made to invoke the memory of dead family members and loved ones, was especially associated with weddings with the fictive inclusion of the dead 'ancestors' of both families as witnesses to the matrimonial act. In this connection, these cups appear to be connected specially with Jewish weddings where two drinks of wine are taken as part of the ceremony of blessing. In Christian contexts, the list of persons celebrated could be extended to saints, martyrs, Christ and the Virgin Mary - not always approved or sanctioned by the ecclesiastical authorities but firmly entrenched in secular custom and folklore. Over time, the church came to accept the custom of Johannesminne in honour of St. John the Evangelist. The double-cups can never have been numerous and indeed only a handful are known to survive; all but the present example being in museum collections. The circumstances of its discovery are intriguing: it was recovered in the 1960s from a gravel pit near the town of Donauwerth, western Bavaria, near the banks of the River Danube. The pit held many finds which were duly preserved by the landowners, including from Bronze Age down to Roman artefacts of bronze and iron with a smaller quantity of medieval items suggesting that the pit area was in use over many centuries (indeed, millennia) either as a place of deliberate deposition or perhaps a location where a difficult river crossing made casual loss unavoidable. The town of Donauwerth stands at the junction of the rivers Danube (Donau) and Wörnitz. A riverine trading port, the town became the last call for ships travelling inland from eastern Europe and Vienna. Its near neighbour is the city of Augsburg, which was granted the status of a Free Imperial City in 1276. Originally a Swabian settlement, political power in Donauwerth was held by the dukes of Upper Bavaria in the mid-13th century and in the 14th century, Donauwerth was made an imperial city. It adopted the Reformation in 1555. [2] Fair condition. Excessively rare, all other known examples held in museum collections.
A good quality 19th century Copeland tray with Imari type floral decoration and moulded handles with impressed mark to base, 49cm approx., together with a collection of matching Copeland China tea wares of fluted form comprising a teapot, milk jug and sugar basin (all AF) four cups, four saucers and four tea plates (a collection)
A collection of Marcol art deco tea wares with hollyhock detail comprising milk jug, sugar bowl, cake plate, six cups, six saucers and six tea plates, together with nine Hummel figures, four boxed Swarovski crystal animals comprising a seal, a fox, a cat and a hedgehog and four Bell's Royal Commemorative Scotch Whiskey flasks (2 boxed)
A collection of 19th century Staffordshire wares including a watch holder surmounted by a pair of highland characters and a greyhound, an outsized sheep accompanied by a further highland character, a pair of poodles, etc, a pair of 19th century blue ground cups and saucer with painted and gilded floral decoration, together with a further matching saucer (10)
An extensive collection of Paragon China, Roslyn China and Royal Standard China decorative tea and coffee wares, all with printed decoration of roses from the Harry Wheatcroft series, including teapot, coffee pot, two sugar bowls and two milk jugs, five cake plates, 30+ cups of different size, 35+ saucers including examples with integral plate, eighteen tea plates, etc, together with an autograph of Harry Wheatcroft, etc (a collection)
An interesting collection of 19th century floral encrusted miniature wares including continental examples, comprising a ewer and stopper, a bottle shaped vase, three teapots, sucrier and cover, two jugs, four cups and four saucers, some pieces with blue crossed swords mark to base, approx. max size of ewer and stopper 10cm (16)
A collection of James Kent art deco tea wares with sponged pale blue glaze and with moulded floral handles, comprising a pair of cake plates, milk jug, sugar bowl, seven cups, twelve saucers, twelve tea plates (two sizes) together with a collection of Johnson Brothers Mosaic pattern dessert wares, a 19th century toby jug in the form of a snuff taking toby (af) etc (collection)
A quantity of Royal Albert Old Country Roses pattern wares including oval meat plate, pair of rectangular sandwich trays, pair of oval serving bowls, further shaped serving dishes, nine dinner plates, eight dessert plates, seven dessert bowls, two milk jugs, six tea cups, six tea saucers and six tea plates, six coffee cups and eight coffee saucers, etc (a collection)
A collection of Royal Albert Crown china tea wares with Art Deco type floral decoration comprising milk jug, sugar bowl, cake plate, six cups, six saucers and six tea plates, together with further earlier 20th century Royal Albert Crown china tea wares in the Lovain pattern comprising milk jug, sugar bowl, two serving plates, six cups, six saucers, eleven plates (two sizes) (collection)
A collection of 19th century and later ceramics including pink lustred tea wares comprising two bowls, ten cups, twelve saucers and a dish, a Royal Doulton Temple pattern dessert set comprising a comport and six dishes, blue and white printed wares, two jelly moulds, small collection of studio pottery vases, etc (a collection)

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162746 item(s)/page