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Y ANTI-SLAVERY IVORY PLAQUE EARLY 19TH CENTURY the rectangular panel depicting two relief figures of kneeling Africans in metal chains, beneath the motto 'O LORD SET US FREE' and a watchful eye, with two slave ships in the distance, set in a circular eglomise mount and moulded alabaster frame (10.5cm diameter overall) Footnote: Note: Please be aware that this lot contains material which may be subject to import/export restrictions, especially outside the EU, due to CITES regulations. Please note it is the buyer's sole responsibility to obtain any relevant export or import licence. For more information visit http://www.defra.gov.uk/ahvla-en/imports-exports/cites/
WW2 Medals and Ephemeera F Taylor RAFconsisting 1939/45 Star, Africa Star, Burma Star, Defence medal, War medal. All still in postal box named “F. Taylor”. Complete with slip marked “W/O 612389” and issue cert. Together with embroidery, KC RAF pilot wings ... 2 x embroidery W/O cuff badges ... Brass, KC W/O cuff badge ... Gilt, KC W/O 2 piece cap badge ... Small photo of him holding a card showing serial number “612389” ... Quantity of research including RAF flying clothing card.
WW2 RAF Original Four Various Lancaster Bomber Pilot Notes Bookletsconsisting Pilots Notes For Lancaster 1 printed 12/42 ... Pilots Notes For Lancaster III, printed 7/43 ... 2 x Pilots and Flight Engineers Notes Lancaster MK1 & MKIII, printed 4/44. Cover to one named “F/O Myatt W.G. No 9 Sqn”. Together with Bomber Command Standard Pilots Drills and Circuit Procedure Lancaster I & III. 5 items.
Selection of Various Aircraft Booksconsisting Armament Of British Aircraft 1909-1939 by H F King ... Vickers Aircraft Since 1908 by C F Andrews ... Handley Page Aircraft Since 1907 by C H Barnes ... Supermarine Aircraft Since 1914 by Andrews & Morgan ... Aircraft Of The RAF Since 1918 by O Thetford ... British Military Aircraft Serials 1911-1979 by B Robertson. 6 items.
Signed Limited Edition Print “Strike And Return”by Robert Taylor. Limited edition 40 of 150. Showing a Lancaster of 460 Squadron returning to base, signed by F/Lt Jerry Bateman DFC, F/O Hilary Bayliss DFC, F/Lt Phillip Coffey DFC. DFM, F/Lt John Gardner DFC, F/Lt Gordon Goodwin DSO.DSM. , Lawrence Woods DFC. Together with various other aircrew. Complete with numbered certificate. Unframed condition.
Signed Limited Edition Print “Bombing Up Yorker”by Robin Smith. Limited edition 201/500. Showing an Avro Lancaster of 44 Squadron being loaded for a raid. Signed by P/Officer Chatterton, its first skipper and F/O Parkin, its last skipper. Framed and glazed. Together with a copy photo of Chatterton in the cockpit of the aircraft.
Mark Postlethwaite Limited Edition Print “R6644 The Invisible Thread”limited edition 75/100, depicting a Spitfire R6644 over the Malvern Hills, flown by P/O F Surma of 308 Polish Sqn. Various pencil signatures including Pete Brothers, Jack Taylor, Johnnie Johnson and Dicky Bird. Framed and glazed.
WW2 Pattern RAF Officer’s Tunic.A good clean example of the regulation pattern tailored by “J.E. Carhart Ltd of Stoke-on-Trent. Complete with Pilot Officer rank lace, RAF brass buttons and medal ribbons of the MBE, BWM,VM, Russian Order of St.Vladimir, Order of St. Anne. Ink name of “P/O R.F. Shaw Jan 1946”.This tunic was worn by Captain, later Pilot Officer Reginald Frank Shaw MBE who served with the Tank Corps during WW1 and saw service in South Russia 1919/1920. See Bosleys Uniform Section for his Great War Tank uniform
Russells Liverpool; a 'Time O Day' silver cased open faced pocket watch, the white enamel dial set with Roman numerals and smaller subsidiary dial, the keyless movement numbered 144523, case hallmarked for Birmingham 1899, inner case inscribed with presentation details, in presentation case. CONDITION REPORT In going condition at time of testing.
A diamond solitaire ring, the stone weighing approx. 1.08 carats, band marked 'PLAT', gross wt. 3.23g, size O. Condition - sold without certificate however modern round brilliant cut stone appears lively and colourless, minor dark mineral inclusions visible with 10x loupe only, a few nibbles to girdle, one hidden under a claw, no surface reaching fractures/inclusions, minor wear to band and setting. UK P&P £6+VAT
A diamond solitaire ring, the stone weighing approx. 0.67 carats, band marked 'PLAT', gross wt. 3.12g, size O. Condition - sold without certificate, however, the modern round brilliant cut stone appears lively and colourless and with a few dark mineral inclusion off centre and just visible with naked eye, no surface reaching inclusions/fractures, no nibbles to girdle, minor wear to setting and band. UK P&P £6+VAT
An Art Deco spelter table lamp, modelled as a young girl next to a flame, after O. Mednat, flame shade is replacement, 15cm x 13cm, together with a resin Art Nouveau style wall light modelled as a winged cherub supporting an Art Nouveau style mottled tulip shade 25cm x 36cm drop (2) Spelter example^ shade is replacement and spelter is rubbed
Two Danish white metal planished spoons, the ovoid bowls and slender stems with tapering terminals, having lotus flower and leaf ends with all over planished finish bearing Danish strike marks to reverse with date code for Christian F. Heise, also in the lot a fork and spoon in the Art Nouveau taste with Danish marks and assay marks for Valdeair O. Berth and a German Art Nouveau white metal fork with ivy leaf, berry and sinuous stem design, total weight 6 ozt (5)
9th century AD. A double-edged sword of Petersen Type K, Sub Type 8, with broad tapering blade, shallow fullers, boat-shaped crossguard inlaid with copper and silver ringerike pattern, the large pommel bearing the same decoration. See Petersen, J., De Norske Vikingsverd, Oslo, 1919; see Peirce, I., Swords of the Viking Age, Suffolk, 2002; see Williams G., Weapons of the Viking Warriors, Oxford, 2019. 1.3 kg, 86.5cm (34"). Property of an East Anglian collector; formerly acquired on the European art market in the 1990s; accompanied by an archaeological report by military specialist Dr Raffaele D'Amato. The sword finds very few parallels, the best one being the specimen from Loten, Hedmark, published by Petersen (1919, p.144, fig.92"). Petersen regarded the type K typically characterised by its five and rarely seven lobed pommel, and ascribed its origin to the workmanship of the Frankish lands. He supported the thesis that the type came to Norway in the first half of the 9th century, as a consequence of Viking raids (Peirce, 2002, p. 20"). However, the find locations of type K are thoroughly distributed across Europe, having been found from as far south as the Balkans. The presence of two distinct upper hilt components is the most typical feature of this type, and in the later examples the upper guard and pommel may have been fused into a single piece, with only incised lines recalling the former boundary. In Norway, the type continued eto evolve into the second half of the ninth century, originating the type O in the late ninth-early tenth century. Fine condition.
Mid 10th-late 12th century AD. A long double-edged sword of Oakeshott Type Xa and Petersen Type X with tapering elegant blade, shallow fullers running down within few centimetres of the point, inlaid letter 'O' to one side; undecorated cruciform cross-guard of style 1; stout tang and cocked hat type pommel of Oakeshott style E; German workmanship. See Petersen, J., De Norske Vikingsverd, Oslo, 1919; Oakeshott, E., The Sword in the Age of the Chivalry, London, 1964(1994); Oakeshott,E.,Records of the Medieval Sword, Woodbridge, 1991; a similar specimen in Scalini, M., A bon droyt, spade di uomini liberi, cavalieri e santi, Milano, 2007, pp.104-105; for further examples of type Xa see Oakeshott, 1991, pp. 37 ff. 1.5 kg, 89.5cm (35 1/4"). From a 1980s collection, acquired by the vendor’s family; thence by descent; accompanied by an academic report by military specialist Dr Raffaele D'Amato. In 1980, Oakeshott created a sub-variant of the Type X, which he designated as Type Xa; originally all examples of this variant were put into the type XI classification. The new Type Xa does not, however, share the Type XI's long slender blade profile. While it has the same broad blade profile as the Type X, the fuller of this subtype is distinctly narrower in width, yet it maintains the same length. This may be a fine distinction, being judged by the singular detail of the fuller's width, but Oakeshott felt that it was important enough to create a new category to his typology. This type of swords were typical in the period between 1000-1050 AD, and were very common in the central Europe (Scalini, 2007, p. 104"). Fine condition.
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176068 item(s)/page