We found 62885 price guide item(s) matching your search
There are 62885 lots that match your search criteria. Subscribe now to get instant access to the full price guide service.
Click here to subscribe- List
- Grid
-
62885 item(s)/page
Two Chinese blue and white sauce boats, 18th century, of lobed oval form with plain loop handles, decorated with a typical riverscape scene within complex panel borders, 19.5cm wide (handles repaired), together with a further sauce boat of helmet shape with plain loop handle, decorated with flowering peonies, bamboo plants and rocks, 22cm wide (handle repaired). (3)All three handles have been visibly re-glued with no losses. All three also have some fritting to the rim.
A small collection of silver, comprising; a helmet cream jug, two silver topped glass dressing table jars, a miniature trophy cup, a cream jug, two egg cups and two silver mounted vases, together with a collection of silver plated wares, to include; a tea caddy, candle snuffers and a hip flask, total weighable silver approx 9oz
A late Victorian silver helmet shaped cream jug, engraved with a vacant shield shaped cartouche and floral garlands beneath a beaded rim, on a circular foot and square base, London 1897 by Spink & Son, height 16cm, and a George III silver cream jug of oval form with angular handle, London 1799, maker's mark indistinct, height 11.5cm, total weight 290.2g.Buyer’s Premium 29.4% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price. Lots purchased online via the-saleroom.com will attract an additional premium of 6% (including VAT @ 20%) of the hammer price.
A GEORGE III SILVER CREAM JUG AND THREE FURTHER ITEMS (4)Coleridge Collection, The helmet shaped cream jug with engraved decoration, London 1802, a pair of sauceboats, Birmingham 1918 and a silver rectangular pill box with engine turned decoration, Birmingham 1971, combined weight 360 gmsProvenanceThe Anthony & Marietta ColeridgeCollection
Meissen porcelain group, a couple and a drummer in 18th Century dress, blue crossed swords mark and incised number 1484, 26cm, on a bespoke blue agate geode and gold painted plinth.Condition report:There is a large firing rack running from the underside of the base, passing up below the seated drummer and ending in the scrolled modelled base. There is another fine firing crack at the back of the female's neck. There are professional restorations to the fringes of the drum between the drummer's legs, the drummer's lef leg, drumsticks, female's right hand, the implement in the other figure's hand and his sword, and dragon seated on top of the helmet to the ground.
Giacomo Agostini (Italy) signed Italian Moto GP ½ Scale Mini helmet, signed on helmet with black sharpie, Over a period of 17 years, Giacomo Agostini achieved an impressive 15 World Championship titles and 122 Grand Prix wins. Of these wins, 8 World Championships were amassed in the 500cc class (the forerunner to MotoGP). Giacomo (nicknamed Ago) dominated motorcycle racing for two decades, with two different manufacturers. Although he retired from racing in 1977, Giacomo remains to this day the most successful motorcycle champion in Grand Prix history. Also includes signed action 8”x10” photo and COA with exact photo proof. (3 items in total)
FOUR PIECE NEO CLASSICAL STYLE TEA & COFFEE SERVICE along with one Sheffield silver teaspoon and a quantity of EPNS and other metal ware spoons, the good quality set consists of teapot, coffee pot, swing handled sugar basin and helmet shape milk jug, all of classical segmented form with engraved floral garlands and pedestal bases, 25.5cms overall H the coffee pot
Early 8th century B.C. A Urartian or Assyrian broad hammered bronze helmet of conical form with high pointed apex, the front with a raised linear motif comprising two encircling ribs above the brim; to the front an incised image of winged sun; pierced holes to the sides for fastening rings for supporting cheek-pieces. Cf. Calmeyer, P., Datierbare Bronzen aus Luristan und Kirmanshah, Berlin, 1969, p.89; Borchardt, J., Homerische Helme: Helmenformen der Ág?is in ihren Beziehungen zu orientalischen und europäischen Helmen in der Bronze-und frühen Eisenzeit, Mainz, 1972, fig.12; Born H., Seidl U., Schutzwaffen aus Assyrien und Urartu, Sammlung Axel Guttmann IV, Mainz, 1995, fig.27, p.28; Christie’s, The art of the warfare, the Axel Guttmann collection, Part II, Wednesday 28 April 2004, London, 2004 nos.39, 46; Dezs?, T., Oriental influence in the Aegean and Eastern Mediterranean Helmet Traditions in the 9th-7th centuries B.C.: The Pattern of Orientalization, (British Archaeological Reports, S691), Oxford, 1998; other parallel in Gorelik, M., Weapons of Ancient East, IV millennium BC-IV century BC, Saint Petersburg (2003) in Russian, pl.LXI, no.86, from the surroundings of Karmin Blur (Teishebaini). 681 grams, 26 cm high (10 1/4 in.). Acquired 1960s-1990s. Late Alison Barker collection, a retired London barrister. Accompanied by an academic report by Dr Raffaele D'Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate no.11385-190448. The shape of the helmet is typical of the neo-Assyrian period. Considering the similarity of the winged symbol with that of the helmet in the British Museum, published by Barnett and Calmeyer, which was found in Luristan but with all probability was produced in Urartu or Assyria. The winged sun is clearly visible on some Assyrian helmets in the Guttmann collection (Born, Seidl, 1995, pl.V), on the Assyrian helmets of the Giancarlo Ligabue collection in Venice and on helmets in private collection in Teheran (Born, Seidl, 1995, fig.40; Dezs?, 1998, III.10-13). It was the symbol of royalty for the Assyrian rulers (‘his own self, the Sun’, i.e., ‘His Majesty’), and appears in reliefs with them (Born, Seidl, 1995, fig.33). The winged sun symbol was connected with Shamash, the solar deity, god of justice and equity, judge of both gods and men. In the ‘Forum of the gods’ of Ashur he was venerated in a twin temple with his mother, the moon-goddess Sin, under the rule of Assur, the supreme god of the Assyrian pantheon.
8th century B.C. An Assyrian or Levantine domed bronze helmet of ovoid shape with slightly pointed top and integral cheek-pieces; chased low-relief decoration to both front and back depicting a pair of opposing ibexes flanking a small palm tree; the edge with regularly disposed holes for fastening of the leather lining. Cf. Barron, A.E., Late Assyrian Arms and Armour, Art versus Artefact, Toronto, 2010; Borchardt, J., Homerische Helme: Helmenformen der Ág?is in ihren Beziehungen zu orientalischen und europäischen Helmen in der Bronze-und frühen Eisenzeit, Mainz, 1972, p.99 and pls.31, 32, 3; Gorelik, M., Weapons of Ancient East, IV millennium BC-IV century BC, Saint Petersburg (2003) in Russian; Dezs?, T., The Assyrian Army, I. The structure of the Neo-Assyrian army as reconstructed from the Assyrian Palace Reliefs and Cuneiform Sources, 2. Cavalry and Chariotry, Budapest, 2012; similar helmets in Gorelik, 2003, pl.LXI, nos.45, 48, 78. 458 grams, 23 cm high (9 in.). Acquired 1960s-1990s. Late Alison Barker collection, a retired London barrister. Accompanied by an academic report by Dr. Raffaele D'Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate no.11386-190447. This rare and wonderful helmet is an unusual (probably early) example of conical strap-helmet, linked with similar Greek strap helmets, but until now in the Near East, known only from the Assyrian reliefs. It is shown together with the crested helmets, on the reliefs of Tiglapilaser III and Sennacherib.
6th-5th century B.C. The front of a scale armour coat composed of over five hundred overlapping bronze scales, each mounted onto a custom-made stand for purposes of display; the scales show to have formed different series, some having holes only in the upper part, some with three holes in the upper part and two holes to the left, and some showing three upper holes and one central hole. Cf. similar scales from Egypt, dated circa 590 B.C., in the Metropolitan Museum, discovered in the palace of Apries, accession no.09.183.7a–v; Chernenko, E.V., The Scythians 700-300 BC, Hong Kong, 1998, pp.7ff., pl.D & E; ???????? ?.?., ‘Elements of Scythian tradition in the complex of armament of the Altai forest-steppes population, in the 6th-3rd centuries B.C.’, in Russian Academy of science, The war and the military in the Scythian-Sarmatian world, Proceedings of International Scientific Conference in tribute to the memory of A.I. Melyukova (Kagal’nik, 26-29 April 2014), in Russian, pp.119-126 and pp.162-171, pl.3, p.126, fig.2, p.165. 9.6 kg total, 79 cm high including stand (31 in.). Acquired 1971-1972. From the collection of the vendor's father. Property of a London, UK, collector. Accompanied by an academic expertise by military specialist Dr Raffaele D'Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate no.11389-192359. The favourite armour of the Scythian noblemen was a protection composed of scales, usually protecting the torso, sometimes the entire body (kataphraktoi). The Scythians found the most efficient method of arranging the overlapping ‘fish-scales’ as a corselet made of a number of bronze and iron plates, able to protect against sword and spear thrusts. The scales were fixed to an organic backing in such a way that the edges were overlapping in a similar way to rooftiles creating a complete protection for the wearer. Our scales correspond well to bronze scales found in May 1961 in an accidentally destroyed burial in a barrow, near the village of Nadezhda Sovetsky district. They were discovered together with iron scales, a Greek Corinthian helmet, fragments of an amphora, five arrowheads and fragments of an iron sword. Most of these bronze scales were oblong in shape, with a sub-rectangular upper end and a rounded lower end, but slightly bigger than our scales.
Momoyama and Edo Periods, late 16th-early 18th century A.D. A complete lacquered Samurai armour comprising: akoda-nari kabuto helmet with itamono-shikoro neck guard, Etchū-bo menpō iron face mask, nuinobe d? torso armour, oda gote vambraces with tekk? gauntlets, sode slightly curved shoulder guards, haidate thigh guards, with fusa-gusari mail and shino-suneate greaves with fusa-gusari mail; inscriptions and numbers are seen to various parts of the armour; accompanied by a traditional pattern wood stand and base box, additionally with an optional purpose-made glazed full height oak display case (this 80cm deep x 70cm wide x 191cm tall). Cf. Robinson, R., Oriental Armour, pp.183ff., figs.95 no.12, 96 lett.F, 101, 105 lett.F, pl.XXXII, lett.B., 107; Turnbull, S., Samurai Warriors, Poole, 1987; Bryant, A.J., The Samurai, London, 1989; Bryant, A.J., Samurai, 1550-1600, London, 1994, p.54, for a near identical nuinobe d?; Turnbull, S., Samurai Warfare, London, 1996. Armour 8.30 kg total (with case, 99 kg total), 145cm tall as displayed (57 in.). Acquired from an Essex, UK collector by exchange. Property of an Essex gentleman. Accompanied by an academic report by military specialist Dr. Raffaele D'Amato. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate no.11401-191752. This suit of armour is accompanied by a purpose-made early 20th century oak framed and glazed display cabinet; the successful bidder may freely choose whether or not to have this case included within the purchase and will not be obligated to receive it.
20th century A.D. A miniature model of red-laced ?-Yoroi armour of Kamakura period, comprising: 1. a helmet (hoshi-kabuto) with shinodare frontal plates, fukigayeshi raised side protections, terminating on the top with a tehen no kanamono of typical chrysanthemum form, the bowl (hachi) fitted with star-rivets hoshi, a mabezashi, (integral peak visor), lined with green silk; the neck of the helmet is protected by a very wide laminated yellow-laced shikoro neck guard, with orange braid spaced lacing; the helmet is fitted with a kabuto no o chin-strap); 2. a fine russet lacquered menpō face mask, with flared nostrils and open mouth, gold lacquered teeth, hair moustache and chin tuft, to which is attached a laminated yodare-kake, (throat guard), made of two plates; 3. a splendid O-Yoroi armour constructed with a separate protection for the right side waidate and facsimile of laced kozane lamellar armour, watagami shoulder-straps; attached to it a kusazuri protection made from four laced panels hanging from the front and back of the d? to protect the lower body and upper leg; a yoshitsune-gote vambraces; ?-sode, shoulder guards, composed from six suspending plates; hiza-yoroi haidate, thighguards; suneate, greaves. Cf. Robinson, R., Oriental Armour, pp.173ff., figs.91-92, 94-95 no.7, 96 lett.B,105 lett.F, 107 lett. A, pl.XXIX. 1.74 kg total, 67 cm high including stand (26 3/8 in.). Acquired from an Essex, UK collector by exchange. Property of an Essex gentleman. From the end of the Heian era and especially during the Kamakura period this was the armour of warriors of high rank, as the Samurai wore in their victorious war against the Mongols of Qubilai Qhan, in 1271-1281. The helmet and cuirass (katchu) were accompanied by the kogusoku 'small complete', that is the set of accessories waidate, suneate, kote, haidate, kusazuri, etc.. - added a protection of the whole body. These miniature sets were often made for the Children's Festivals, held annually.
1st century B.C.-early 1st century A.D. A British Iron Age vessel mount in the form of a hollow Celtic male head with large, elongated eyes having pierced pupils, possibly once with inlays, a triangular nose and slash mouth; the chin protruding slightly and the hair moulded around the brow and swept back over the scalp and around the sides with the head pierced at the rear to receive a swivel handle terminal and the breast formed to fit snugly to the vessel rim, with a rivet at front for holding it in place. See Brailsford, J.W., Later Prehistoric Antiquities of the British Isles, British Museum, 1953; p.70 and pl.XXII, item 2, for a similar mount; see Jope, E.M., Early Celtic Art in the British Isles, Oxford, 2000, pl.182, item d, for another example; see MacGregor, M., Early Celtic Art in North Britain, LUP, 1976, nos.315-320, for examples of the commoner bovine type. See British Museum's Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS), report number SUR-D01AF2 (this item). 29.4 grams, 42 mm high (45.6 grams total, 65 mm high including stand) (1 5/8 in.(2 1/2 in.)). Found whilst searching with a metal detector near Guildford, Surrey, UK, on Saturday 22nd August 2020, by Stuart Cameron. Accompanied by a copy of the British Museum's Portable Antiquities Scheme (PAS) report number SUR-D01AF2, where it is described as 'A rare and important discovery' and 'This is a find of note and has been designated: Potential for inclusion in Britannia (Cambridge University Press)'. Accompanied by an original handwritten note explaining the circumstances of finding by Stuart Cameron dated 23 May 2022. This lot has been checked against the Interpol Database of stolen works of art and is accompanied by AIAD certificate no.11402-191635. The PAS report comments: 'This bucket mount is one of only a handful to exhibit human representations from late Iron Age Britain, and as such is a rare and important discovery. The majority of late Iron Age bucket mounts depict bovines, and where they do appear in human form, depict the figure wearing a horned helmet or with horns protruding from the head. This example differs markedly as there are no bovine features.' [A video of this lot is available to view on Timeline Auctions Website.]
A 9CT GOLD HEMATITE INTAGLIO SIGNET RING, of an oval form depicting a side profile of a soldier wearing a helmet, collet set, openwork detailed shoulders leading onto a polished band, hallmarked 9ct Sheffield, ring size U, approximate gross weight 3.9 grams (condition report: general light wear, overall condition good)
A LARGE GEORGE III IRISH SILVER SAUCEBOAT, Dublin, maker's mark 'SW', of helmet form, with punched rim, the body chased and embossed with foliate and floral decoration, with applied acanthus wrapped c-scroll handle, raised on stylised shell capped hoof feet (c.12 troy ozs). 24cm wide over handle and spout
AN IRISH GEORGE III SILVER SAUCEBOAT, Dublin c.1780 (lacking date mark), makers mark of Matthew West, of helmet shape, the body with punched rim and chased and embossed pheasant pattern, raised on shell capped hoof feet, with applied c-scroll handles (c.5.6 troy ozs). 16.5cm wide over handle and spout
MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS: SHATTERED GRID #1 & BLADE RUNNER 2019 #1 (2 in Lot) - (2018/19 - Boom Studios & TITAN COMICS) - RARE - Goni Montes San Diego Comic Con Pink Helmet Variant (Virgin) cover + Artgerm (Stanley Lau) Special Convention Variant (Virgin) cover - Flat/Unfolded - a photographic condition report is available on request
Star Wars - a collection of x5 original vintage Kenner / Palitoy made Star Wars action figures - all main characters - comprising; Han Solo in Bespin Outfit (1980 LFL, Made In Hong Kong COO. With blaster. Figure VG to VG+), Lando Calrissian (1980 LFL Hong Kong COO. With blaster and cape. Figure EX to NM), Princess Leia in Combat Poncho (LFL 1984, no COO. With blaster, helmet, poncho and belt. Figure VG+ to EX), and Han Solo in Trench Coat (LFL 1984, no COO. With blaster and coat. Figure G+ to VG). All 100% complete.
-
62885 item(s)/page