We found 52452 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 52452 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
52452 item(s)/page
A Le Nove gilt-metal-mounted heart-shaped perfume flask, circa 1770Painted on one side with a seated amorous couple, the reverse with a gilt painted swag hung from the moulded shell on each side with trophies and a red-painted burning heart, one side with a gilt cypher LL, 5.5cm high (gilt arrow head on base and one shell restored, one shell chipped)For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman cobalt blue glass perfume bottle on three feet Circa early 1st Century A.D.9.1cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Sasson Ancient Art, Jerusalem, Israel.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 261), acquired from the above on the 16 January 2011.Cf. a similar flask in marbled glass formerly in the Oppenlaender collection and now at the Getty Museum, acc. no. 2003.285, and a green glass unguentarium in Princeton with similar tripod feet (A. Antonaras, Fire and Sand. Ancient Glass in the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, 2012, p. 213, no. 320).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman cobalt blue mould-blown glass grape bottle Circa late 1st Century A.D.7.5cm high Footnotes:Provenance:The Hans Benzian collection, Switzerland.The Benzian Collection of Ancient and Islamic Glass; Sotheby's, London, 7 July 1994, lot 65.Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 14-15 May 2002, lot 505.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 118), acquired from the above sale.Published:M. Kunz, ed., 3000 Jahre Glaskunst: von der Antike bis zum Jugendstil, Kunstmuseum Luzern, 1981, no. 298. Exhibited: Kunstmuseum Luzern, 'Dreitausend Jahre Glaskunst', 19 July-13 September 1981.Blown into a two-part mould to resemble a three-lobed bunch of small grapes, this flask belongs to one of the earliest groups produced, possibly along the Syro-Palestinian coast, with examples found in Greece and Italy by the third quarter of the 1st Century A.D. (M. Stern, Roman Mold-Blown Glass. The First Through Sixth Centuries, Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, 1995, p. 180, nos 109-10).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman green and white glass date flask Circa mid 1st-early 2nd Century A.D.6.4cm highFootnotes:Provenance: Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 3 July 1996, lot 291. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 025), acquired from the above sale.Published: J. v.d Groen & H. van Rossum, Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit, Utrecht, 2011, p. 86. Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam, 'Antiek Glas', film, 2001. R. van Beek, Antiek Glas: De Kunst van Het Vuur, Amsterdam, 2001, p. 13, pl. 41.Exhibited: Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam, 'Antiek Glas, de Kunst van Het Vuur', 17 May – 16 September 2001, exhibition no. 125.Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no. 146.These date-shaped bottles blown into two part moulds are most usually made in amber-coloured glass reflecting the colour of the dates that they are representing. This example, however, belongs to a more unusual group made in greenish or amber glass with some additional white glass on the interior towards the mouth. For a discussion on the group and other examples made in blue or purple glass cf. M. Stern, Roman Mold-Blown Glass. The First Through Sixth Centuries, Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo 1995, pp. 91-3.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale aubergine glass hexagonal flask Circa 2nd-4th Century A.D.11.7cm high Footnotes:Provenance: Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 25 November 1997, lot 76 (part lot). The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 062b), acquired from the above sale. Published:J. v.d. Groen & H. van Rossum, Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit, Utrecht, 2011, p. 108.Exhibited:Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no. 200.The moulded cross-hatched design on the underside of the base of this flask may be regarded as either as the glassmaker's mark or that of the merchant who traded its original contents. The colour of this bottle might suggest that it is a later piece, although prismatic square and hexagonal bottles of the 1st-2nd Century A.D. are more likely to bear Latin or Greek inscriptions or decorative motifs on their bases.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman aubergine glass grape flask Circa 3rd Century A.D.13.9cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Archaeological Center, Jaffa, Israel.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 245), acquired from the above on the 6 October 2009.For a similar example with rolled neck collar cf. E.M. Stern, The Toledo Museum of Art, Roman mold-blown glass, Toledo, 1995, p.192, fig. 122.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman green glass jar, a Roman pale green glass candlestick unguentarium and a Roman yellow-green piriform glass flask Circa 2nd-4th Century A.D.13.6cm; 18.5cm; 17.8cm high (3)Footnotes:Provenance:Jar: with Charles Ede Ltd, London (Ancient Glass; 2001, no. 39). The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection, acquired from the above on the 17 March 2001.Unguentarium: with Khader M. Baidun & Sons, Jerusalem.Mr & Mrs James DiBella collection, New York, acquired from the above on 27 March 2000.Arte Primitivo, Howard S. Rose Gallery, New York, 7 March 2017, lot 430.Flask: Auction 45; Archaeological Center Ltd, Jaffa, 6 October 2009, lot 201.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 102, 359 and 246), acquired from the above sales.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman olive green glass four-sided sprinkler flask Circa 2nd-3rd Century A.D.9.2cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Galerie Günter Puhze, Freiburg (katalog 17, 2003, no. 186). The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 149), acquired from the above 16 April 2003. Exhibited:Museum Dordts Patriciërshuis, Dordrecht, NL, 'Glas Door de Eeuwen Heen', 11 April – 11 November 2018.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman almost colourless wheel-cut glass flask Circa 2nd-3rd Century A.D.12.3cm highFootnotes:Provenance: Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 11 December 1996, lot 4 (part lot). The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 049a), acquired from the above sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale blue glass kuttrolf with blue-green handles Circa 3rd-4th Century A.D.13.3cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Gil Chaya, Biblical Antiquities, Jerusalem.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 176), acquired from the above on the 5 January 2005.Exhibited:Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no. 272.The centre of the body of this flask was tooled to create one central and four vertical tubes at the edges, separated by diaphragms, which would have restricted the flow of the contents. Vessels such as the above were made in the Roman period but as a form were also produced in Medieval and later times. For an example of a Roman Kuttrolf cf. D. Whitehouse, Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, vol. I , New York, 1997, p. 255, no. 436. Other two-handled examples are in the Israel Museum, Jerusalem (Y. Israeli, Ancient Glass in the Israel Museum: The Eliahu Dobkin Collection and Other Gifts, Jerusalem, 2003, p. 292, no. 388) and in the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts (B. Caron and E. P. Zoitopoulou, Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Collection of Mediterranean Antiquities, Vol. 1, The Ancient Glass, Leiden and Boston 2008, pp. 152-3, no. 143).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman turquoise glass two-handled flask Circa 3rd-4th Century A.D.14.6cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Gil Chaya, Biblical Antiquities, Jerusalem. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 186), acquired from the above on the 19 July 2005.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman amber glass pomegranate-shaped sprinkler flask Circa early 4th Century A.D.11.8cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Pierre Bergé, Paris, 29 May 2008, lot 713.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 220), acquired from the above sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman yellow glass unguentarium with concave base Circa 3rd Century A.D.14.3cm highFootnotes:Provenance:with Sheppard and Cooper Ltd, London.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 010), acquired from the above on the 12 December 1995.The function of this extremely unusual flask is unknown. The high domed kick on the interior means the capacity of the vessel is much less than usual, suggesting the original intended content was a highly prized luxury. There is also a hole drilled in the centre of the base, perhaps suggesting that it was used as a funnel later in antiquity. See A. Antonaras, Fire and Sand. Ancient Glass in the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, 2012, p. 230, nos 360-1 for other unguentaria with deeply concave bases.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman ribbed glass jar with zigzag trail Circa late 3rd-4th Century A.D.9.3cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 3 July 1996, lot 370 (part lot). The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 032a), acquired from the above sale. Exhibited:Museum Dordts Patriciërshuis, Dordrecht, NL, 'Glas Door de Eeuwen Heen', 11 April – 11 November 2018.For a similar jar with zig-zag trail decoration see D. Whitehouse, Roman Glass in the Corning Museum, vol. II, New York, 2001, no. 686, p. 161. The above example has a ribbed body while the Corning flask has a zig-zag ribbed body, both of which are a more unusual combination.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman green glass footed bulbous flask Reputedly from Krefeld, the Rhineland, circa late 1st-2nd Century A.D.16.1cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Schellingerhout collection, Landgraaf, Netherlands.Anonymous sale; Venduehuis Zwolle, 6 May 1996, no. 1070.Hans van Rossum collection, Dordrech, Netherlands, collection no. 21. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 106), acquired from the above on the 7 November 2001.This rare type of footed beaker, with a ridged shoulder, almost exclusively originate from the Western Empire (Northern France and Rhineland). An almost identical parallel is in the National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, acc. no. K.1949/5.12.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman aubergine glass grape flask Circa late 1st-2nd Century A.D.9.5cm highFootnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Millon Auctions, Paris, 22 June 2012, lot 875.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 275), acquired from the above sale.This two-handled flask, blown into a three-part mould, is part of the tradition of mould-blown grape flasks but this example is more naturalistic; the individual grapes are larger and not as tightly packed as on other examples. A similar slightly more compact naturalistic grape flask blown into a two-part mould is in the Ernesto Wolf Collection, Landesmuseum Wurttemberg, Stuttgart (M. Stern, Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass, 10 BCE - 700 CE. Ernesto Wolf Collection, Ostfildern, 2001, p. 175, no. 70).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman turquoise glass two-handled ribbed sprinkler flask Circa late 3rd-4th Century A.D.13.6cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Gil Chaya, Biblical Antiquities, Jerusalem.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 177), acquired from the above on the 5 January 2005.Published:J. v.d. Groen & H. van Rossum, Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit, Utrecht, 2011, p. 81.Exhibited: Thermenmuseum, Heerlen, NL, 'Romeins Glas uit Particulier Bezit', 29 April – 28 August 2011, exhibition no. 158.For a similar flask see F. Slitine, Histoire du Verre: l'Antiquité, Massin, 2005, p. 83.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman yellow-amber glass ribbed lentoid flask with blue handles Circa 3rd-4th Century A.D.14.5cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Collection de verres antiques de Monsieur L; Ader Nordman, Paris, 27 November 2018, lot 26.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 379), acquired at the above sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A large Roman pale green glass ribbed flask Circa 4th-early 5th Century A.D.25cm high Footnotes:Provenance: Anonymous sale; Bonhams, London, 12 July 2000, lot 64 (unsold). with Archea Ancient Art, Amsterdam. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 100), acquired from the above on the 29 September 2000.Published:R. van Beek, Antiek Glas: De Kunst van Het Vuur, Amsterdam, 2001, p. 16, pl. 51. Exhibited: Allard Pierson Museum of Antiquities, Amsterdam, 'Antiek Glas, de Kunst van Het Vuur', 17 May – 16 September 2001, exhibition no. 62.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A large Late Roman pale olive green glass flask Circa 5th-6th Century A.D.23.3cm high Footnotes:Provenance:W. van Bokhoven (1915-1983) collection, Delft.Anonymous sale; Peerdeman Auctions, Utrecht, 19 Septenber 2021, lot 232 (Magazine VIND, no.43, 2021, p.184 & p.197).The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 400), acquired from the above sale.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman pale blue-green glass wheel-engraved flask Possibly Egypt, circa 4th-5th Century A.D.22.2cm high Footnotes:Provenance: Property of H.J.P Bomford, Esq.; Sotheby's, London, 3 July 1978, lot 58.The Benzian collection, Switzerland. The Benzian Collection of Ancient and Islamic glass; Sotheby's, London, 7 July 1994, lot 143.Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, New York, 12 June 2001, lot 159. The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 104), acquired from the above sale.Published: M. Kunz (ed.), 3000 Jahre Glaskunst: von der Antike bis zum Jugendstil, Kunstmuseum Luzern, 1981, p. 95, no. 348.Exhibited: Kunstmuseum Luzern, 'Dreitausend Jahre Glaskunst', 19 July – 13 September 1981, no. 348.The National Museum of Antiquities, Leiden, NL, 'Glass', 1 June 2020 – 28 February 2021.Cf. a wheel-engraved flask with similar design, formerly in the Constable-Maxwell collection (Sotheby's, London, 4-5 June 1979, no. 264).This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman yellow-green glass flask with aquamarine handles and trails Circa 4th-5th Century A.D.20cm high Footnotes:Provenance:Anonymous sale; Millon & Associés, Paris, 22 June 2012, lot 836.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 273), acquired from the above sale.For two similar flasks see E. M. Stern, Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass from the Ernesto Wolf Collection, Ostfildern, 2001, p.307, no. 170 and N. Kunina, Ancient Glass in the Hermitage Collection, St Petersburg, 1997, pp. 303-304, no. 405.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman green glass hexagonal two-handled flask Circa late 6th-early 7th Century A.D.18cm high Footnotes:Provenance:with Abraham Antiquities, Jerusalem, Israel.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 262), acquired from the above on the 28 March 2011.Cf. a closely-related example in the Corning Museum of Glass, with the same design on the relief panels (D. Whitehouse, Roman Glass in the Corning Museum of Glass, vol. II, Corning, 2001, p.105, no. 597); for discussion and further parallels cf. M. Newby, Byzantine Mould-Blown Glass from the Holy Land with Jewish and Christian Symbols, London, 2008, pp. 280-1, no. 92. Glasses with the same mould-blown decoration as this are mostly executed as one-handled jugs, making these two-handled examples rare.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
A Roman blue-green glass flask with internal threads Circa 5th-6th Century A.D.19.8cm high Footnotes:Provenance:The Alfred Wolkenberg (d. 1990) collection, New York.The Alfred Wolkenberg Collection of Ancient Glass, Christie's, London, 9 July 1991, lot 50.Anonymous sale; Christie's, London, 14-15 May 2002, lot 527.The Nico F. Bijnsdorp Collection (NFB 120), acquired from the above sale.This lot is a remarkable survival. At first glance this is a typical late Roman flask with a bulbous body and tall cylindrical neck decorated with applied trailing. However, in addition, there are four internal delicate hollow spikes or trails of glass that extend from the lower body to the shoulders that are still intact. Their function remains a mystery but certainly serve as a vehicle to display the skill of the master glassmaker who would have jabbed the initial bubble of glass with a sharp instrument before inflating it to create these hollow taught threads. For a long-necked flask with a spherical body containing five threads in the Bomford Collection and a smaller flask with eight internal threads but without the decorative trailing on the neck in the British Museum see N. Thomas, Ancient Glass. The Bomford Collection of Pre-Roman & Roman Glass on loan to the City of Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, Bristol, 1976, p. 34, no.159 and D.Harden et al., Masterpieces of Glass, British Museum, London, 1968, p. 90, no. 125. For further examples of flasks with internal threads see The Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio, obj. nos. 1923.534 and 1923.1239 as well as E. M. Stern, Roman, Byzantine, and Early Medieval Glass from the Ernesto Wolf Collection, Ostfildern, 2001, p.302, no. 165.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: ** VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com
W.S.Y.C ENGRAVED SILVER HIP FLASK A superbly crafted hip flask with hinged lid and silver base cup, engraved ''W.S.Y.C Taunton Troop 1st Prize Sword Exercise Presented by Capt Nicol won by Sergt. Farrier J.Oaten 1900''. Hallmarked Sheffield 1899. Makers mark G & JWH. Together with large black and white framed photograph of recipient on horseback.
A group of Chinese blue and white, mainly Qing Dynasty, comprising three vases, a moon flask, a soup bowl, a 'Dragon' bowl, two other bowls and a 20th century 'dragon' stem cup and a vase lid, together with an English Delft charger, a Dutch Delft vase and cover and two 20th century Delft items, various sizes, the largest Chinese vase 30cm high and the English Delft Charger 36cm diameter (14) Condition Report: the 30cm Chinese vase in good condition but the other three Chinese vases all damaged ad the soup bowl with long crack and the dragon bowl with two hair cracks and the other two bowls one with damage and the other with rim chips and hair cracks the English blue and white charger with some rim chips and some filled chips and some loss to glaze and the three Dutch Delft items all with damage Condition Report Disclaimer
A group of Doulton stoneware smoking-related items, comprising a Royal Doulton tobacco jar and cover, decorated with three roundels depicting a monk smoking in various poses, against a floral ground coloured with tones of browns, 14.5cm high (cover broken into two and re-glued); three Doulton Silicon tobacco jars, one with a cover (one badly cracked); a Royal Doulton Whitbread's Ale and Stout advertising ashtray, impressed model number 4527, 10cm diameter and a further, large Royal Doulton ash tray, twin green and blue glaze, applied with foliate hearts, impressed factory and X7262 / 5071 marks, 13cm diameter, together with further Doulton stoneware, comprising a Royal Doulton Turney & Son 20-year-old 'Royal Kilty Liqueur Whisky' decanter, with applied seal, impressed factory marks, Turney & Co Ltd, 108 West Regent Street, Glasgow black printed mark and remnants of old paper label, 18.5cm high; a Doulton Lambeth temperance jug, decorated with three panels with verses 'The Smaller the Drink / The Cooler the Blood / The Clearer the Head', 15cm high; a Royal Doulton small Art Nouveau style vase, impressed factory marks and '198Y / BB5', 10.5cm high; a Slater's Patent vase, 18cm and jug, 8.5cm high; a teapot and cover, spirit flask with stopper, vases with crimped rims, etc together with a Torquay motto ware dish, 14.5cm diameter (qty)
A silver hip flask (by Mappin & Webb, London 1911) 13 cm long, 7.25 oz CONDITION REPORTS Unable to guarantee if leak proof, however, have just put a small amount of water in the flask and turned it upside down. Nothing appears to be pouring out but this was only for a short space of time. The cork will need to be replaced as unknown what has been in the flask previously. There are some light surface scratches. No initialled engravings, etc. Some scuff marks and in need of a clean. General wear and tear conducive with age and use. See images for further detail. Additional info: there does not appear to be a repair to the base of the right hand corner. This is indeed a reflection in the image
A 19th century spelter figure of a mariner, modelled standing on the bow of his ship, on a socle base, height 60cm, a spelter figure titled 'L'Industrie', modelled as a young man riding the crest of a wave with three horses at his feet, on a socle base, height 67cm and a further 19th century figure titled 'Le Depart', modelled as a man holding aloft a shotgun, with a powder flask around his neck, height 29cm (3)
A group of football related memorabilia including a miniature decanter and two glasses for the Scottish Football Association, a boxed hip flask inscribed 'Presented in Friendship UEFA Cup Quarter Final, First Leg, Celtic FC vs Liverpool FC 13th March 2008', a silver plated photograph frame inscribed 'International Match England V Uruguay Anfield, Liverpool FC 1st March 2006' and two FA handbag mirrors.

-
52452 item(s)/page