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Lot 130

A large painting depicting Old Court House Street, Calcutta, after the print by Thomas Daniell Chinese School, probably Canton, 19th Centurygouache on paper, Chinese patterned silk border, framed 137.5 x 210 cm.; with frame 150 x 225 cm.Footnotes:ProvenanceA private San Francisco collection, assembled in the 1960s and 70s.Bonhams, San Francisco, Fine Asian Works of Art, 29th June 2009, lot 8281.In the collection of Ed Hardy, San Francisco.Abell Auction Company, Los Angeles, USA, March 2023.Our painting was probably executed between 1820 and 1860, on the basis of comparison with the development of Chinese oil paintings depicting Canton. From the late 18th Century views of the waterfront there were produced by local artists for western merchants and ship owners visiting the port. At first they were painted in bodycolour on paper, fine linens or silk, but canvas and oil paints appear to have been introduced to the Cantonese artists' studios in the last quarter of the 18th century.William Sargent notes: 'Exactly how Chinese artists learned western techniques and what their attitudes were towards their customers is not known [...] There are no records of East Asian artists studying under western teachers, other than in schools established in Asia by the Church specifically for the production of religious art. However, European artists did visit Asia, and their presence in coastal trading ports eventually influenced local imitators. It is more likely, however, that Asian artists learned western techniques from copying prints, book illustrations or other secondary sources'. A watercolour from a series of one hundred, in the Victoria and Albert Museum, depicting trades, produced in Canton, circa 1790, shows a Chinese artist painting on to glass with a European engraving propped up in front of him (see William R. Sargent, 'Asia in Europe: Chinese Paintings for the West', in A. Jackson, A. Jaffer (edd.), Encounters: the Meeting of Asia and Europe, 1500-1800, London 2004, pp. 274-275, and plate 21.2). For another example, circa 1800, see P. Conner, Paintings of the China Trade: the Sze Yuan Tang Collection of Historic Paintings, Hong Kong 2013, p. 118, no. 103.A Chinese porcelain dish of circa 1795 bears a design derived from an English engraving of 1794 of Fort William (the Company settlement which became Calcutta); the service of which the dish was part was probably produced for export to India for the use of Company employees (see P. Conner, The China Trade, 1600-1860, Brighton 1986, pp. 100-101, nos. 135 and 136). A second example is a painting on linen or silk by a Chinese artist of the late 18th Century, after a print depicting Stockholm harbour by the Swedish artist Olaf Jacobsson Arre (1731-1809). Conner notes that 'while following the original engraving in most respects, the Cantonese export artist has lent a decidedly Chinese quality to some of the ships in the harbour' (see P. Conner, op. cit. (2013), p. 85, no. 74).The copying of a Daniell print here represents an interesting complication of the direction of influence, for the Daniells were amongst the first British artists to visit China (in their case, on their homeward journey from India in 1793-94 as part of a convoy including Lord Macartney, himself returning from an embassy). Thomas Daniell produced views of the waterfront at Canton (from which prints were derived): see P. Conner, The Hongs of Canton: Western Merchants in South China, 1700-1900, as seen in Chinese Export Paintings, London 2009, pp. 61-63, and figs. 2.33 and 2.34. However, as Sargent and Conner note, prints and illustrations seem to have been the main source for the Asian artists.The Cantonese artists, in their frequent depictions of the Hongs (waterfront offices and warehouses) at Canton and the European 'factories' there, were used to portraying streets and buildings, as well as the population filling them: see, most strikingly in relation to our painting, an 1807 work showing a street scene with officials arriving outside the hongs before the trial of European seamen in Canton (see P. Conner, 2013, p. 142, no. 127). Here then, in our painting, they combine their source in a European print with the sort of scenes they were already painting of their home background - while doubtless being aware of the commercial possibilities of producing a view of Calcutta for British consumption. While our painting is still in gouache on paper, its scale is clearly related to a new familiarity with Western oil paintings of the late 18th Century.The view in our painting is a close copy of the print (coloured etching with aquatint) depicting Old Court House Street from the north, no. 9 from Thomas Daniell's Views of Calcutta, 1788 (illustrated in, for example, M. Archer, Early Views of India: the Picturesque Journeys of Thomas and William Daniell 1786-1794, London 1980, fig. 12; or J. P. Losty, Calcutta: City of Palaces, London 1990, p. 57, fig. 27).Archer writes in his caption:Old Court House Street ran north-south from the Old Court House in Tank Square along the eastern side of Government House to the Maidan. Its comfortable mansions of many different designs are set in compounds on either side of the road. The street is busy with varying forms of Indian and British transport - an elephant, a canopied bullock carriage, sedan chairs, palanquins and carriages. People of many types, including an ascetic, mingle in the road.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 26

A Timurid underglaze-painted pottery tile Persia, second half of the 15th Centuryof hexagonal form, decorated in black under a green glaze with a series of palmettes and split palmettes forming a quatrefoil motif on a ground of scrolling tendrils 15.9 cm. diam.Footnotes:ProvenanceFormerly in the collection of Joseph Mott (d. 1952).His daughter, Helena Mott (d. 1997, the current owner's great-aunt).Joseph Mott was the Art Director of Doulton Lambeth in the late 19th/ early 20th centuries, and collected widely in the field of ceramics. Items from the collection of his daughter, Helena Mott, inherited from her father, were auctioned by Bonhams: see The Helena Mott Collection of Doulton and Related Items, 22 October 1997.A group of comparable tiles is in the British Museum, London (Accession No. G.495.1-14).Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: RR This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 111

A hardstone-hilted steel dagger (pesh-kabz) North India, 18th/ 19th Centurythe single-edged watered-steel blade of slightly curving form with flattened spine, decorated in silver overlay to both sides with inscription-filled cartouches, the forte with cartouches containing floral interlace, the spine with further inscription-filled cartouche and palmette motifs, the faceted moss agate hilt of pistol-grip form with silver hilt mount, the wood scabbard clad in red velvet with silver mounts 34.9 cm. longFootnotes:ProvenanceBonhams, Eastern Arms & Armour from the Richard R. Wagner Jr. Collection, 29 April 2015, lot 141.ExhibitedHiggins Armory Museum, Worcester, MA, September-December 1994LiteratureOliver S. Pinchot, Arms of the Paladins, The Richard R. Wagner Jr. Collection of Fine Eastern Weapons, Rhode Island, 2014, p. 50, fig. 3-108.Inscriptions: to one side of the blade, 'God, Muhammad, 'Ali'; to the other side, 'Shah Sri Sadafi, His Holiness Junayd'; to the spine, 'Aba (sic) Bakr, 'Umar, 'Uthman, Haydar (i.e. 'Ali).'For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 53

A fine Kashan underglaze-painted pottery bowl Persia, 13th Centuryof conical form on a tall foot, decorated in black and cobalt blue under a turquoise glaze with radiating bands of inscription interspersed by flowerheads and foliate designs, the exterior with waterweed motifs, with fitted box 21.2 cm. diam. max.Footnotes:ProvenanceHagop Kervorkian (1872-1962).Nasli M. Heeramaneck, donated by Joan Palevsky.Christie's, Islamic Art and Manuscripts, 15 October 2002, lot 69.Private Belgian Collection acquired at Mansour Gallery, London, on the 11th of December 2002, and thence by descent. PublishedPhyllis Ackerman, Guide to the Exhibition of Persian Art, The Iranian Institute, New York, 1940, p. 225.ExhibitedThe Exhibition of Persian Art, New York, 1940, Gallery VIII, case 17, H. Inscriptions: a Persian quatrain, found on many 13th century wares including a lustre bowl in the al-Sabah Collection dated Shawwal 610 (January-February 1218 AD) (see Oliver Watson, Ceramics from Islamic Lands, 2004, cat. o.15, pp. 356-7); and a benedictory couplet.Hagop Kevorkian was an archaeologist, collector and art connoisseur of Armenian descent. Having studied at the Robert College in Istanbul, he moved to Great Britain and established a business in Bishopsgate, London, before eventually settling in New York in 1920. Kevorkian organised several ceramics exhibitions in London and New York and was pivotal in developing American interest in 'oriental' art and artefacts, acting as a key intermediary between Middle Eastern governments, clients and museums. Pieces from his collection are preserved in museums such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Freer Gallery and the Cleveland Museum of Art. Kevorkian also donated objects to the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology and set up the Kevorkian Fund, enabling the facilitation of excavations and establishing research programmes.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 84

Fath Ali Shah Qajar (reg. 1797-1834) seated at a balcony window Qajar Persia, late 19th Centuryoil on canvas, nasta'liq inscription within cartouche at centre left 76.5 x 64 cm.Footnotes:The inscription reads: al-Sultan Fath'ali Shah Qajar.The portrait appears to derive from the depiction of Fath' Ali Shah enthroned, in a fresco in the Negarestan Palace, Tehran, in particular the crown with its patterning and the sarpech and the distinctive fan-like ornament above; the bazubands and other regalia on his upper body; and the hilt of the dagger.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: RR This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 51

A Kashan lustre pottery bowl Persia, 13th Centuryof deep rounded form on a tall flaring foot, decorated in a golden-brown lustre, cobalt blue and turquoise on a cream ground, the interior with a bird in flight on a ground of vegetal motifs, encircled by a band of concentric circular motifs, the rim with vegetal scrollwork, the exterior with vegetal motifs, the rim with a band of inscription, with old exhibition label to underside reading 'Persian Exhibition New York, 1940, KF9, 379' 15.1 cm. diam.Footnotes:ProvenanceFahim Kouchakji (1886-1976).Private Belgian Collection, acquired at Mansour Gallery, London, and thence by descent. PublishedPhyllis Ackerman, Guide to the Exhibition of Persian Art, The Iranian Institute, New York, 1940, p. 379. ExhibitedThe Exhibition of Persian Art, New York, 1940, Gallery XII, case 30, EE.Inscriptions: al-'izz al-da'im al-iqbal al-za'id a[l-nasr] al-ghalib al-ra'y al-thaqib ..., 'Perpetual glory, increasing prosperity, triumphant [victory], prudent advice ...'Fahim Joseph Kouchakji was an art dealer, collector and archaeologist. He was well known for the discovery of the Antioch Chalice which now resides in the collection of the Cloisters, New York.For an example of a Kashan lustre bowl featuring birds sold at Christie's, see Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds including Oriental Rugs and Carpets, 27 October 2022, lot 33.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 36

A Mamluk enamelled glass beaker Syria, 13th Centuryof pale yellow glass and flaring cylindrical form with slightly inverted rim, enamelled in polychrome with bands of vegetal design to the mouth and base, a band of repeating human figures and a flying bird to the body 14.5 cm. highFootnotes:ProvenanceGorny & Mosch, Sale 137, 2004, lot 873.Gorny & Mosch, Auktion Kunst der Antike, 19 June 2009, lot 586.Property from a Princely Collection.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: RR This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 50

A Timurid silhouette ware pottery jug Persia or Central Asia, 15th Centuryof globular form on a short foot with slightly waisted cylindrical neck and strap handle, decorated in black with sgraffiato on a turquoise ground with circle and foliate motifs interspersed by scrolling tendrils 17.4 cm. highFootnotes:ProvenancePrivate Belgian collection acquired at Christie's, Islamic Art and Manuscripts, 15 October 2002, lot 112, and thence by descent. Christie's, Arts of the Islamic and Indian Worlds Including Works from the Simon Digby Collection, 7 April 2011, lot 71.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 150

A Mughal prince standing in a landscape, holding a musket, sword and shield, formerly from an album made for William Fraser Mughal, Delhi, circa 1800pencil and gouache on paper, blue and orange gold-decorated inner borders, fine floral outer border painting 187 x 105 mm.; album page 312 x 208 mm.Footnotes:ProvenanceMalcolm R. Fraser, descendant of William and James Fraser.Sotheby's, Fine Oriental Manuscripts, Miniatures and Qajar Lacquer, 13th-14th October 1980, lot 211 (not illustrated).Formerly in the collection of Saeed Motamed (1925-2013).Christie's South Kensington, The Saeed Motamed Collection: Part II, 7th October 2013, lot 271.Private UK collection, 2013-present.Five pages from the same album, all but one with the same distinctive floral borders as the present lot, were sold at Sotheby's, Arts of the Islamic World, 3rd October 2012, lots 85-89, amongst a section (lots 81-102) of works formerly in his possession. The borders of lots 82 and 84-87 are particularly close to that of our painting, and imitate 'high' Mughal 17th Century album pages.All were formerly possessed by William Fraser (1784-1835), and remained in the Fraser family until the album was dispersed (as lots 183-211) in the 1980 Sotheby's sale mentioned above.For another example of such a painting, a portrait of Sayyid Abu'l Muzaffar Khan, an early 19th Century copy of a 17th Century original by Lalchand (in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), and with the same fine floral borders, see Sotheby's New York, Indian, Himalayan and Southeast Asian Art, 6th October 1990, lot 74.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 6

An illustrated leaf, and a text leaf, from Nizami's Kherad-nameh, the second book of the Iskandar-nameh, depicting Plato seated in the desert, attracting wild animals with his music Persia, perhaps Qazwin, late 16th Centurytwo leaves, framed together, the illustration in gouache and gold with some text above and below, text leaf written in four columns in nasta'liq script in black ink within cloudbands, outer margins of both leaves with wild beasts and mythical creatures amidst illuminated floral and vegetal motifs leaves 308 x 175 mm. eachFootnotes:For an illustrated leaf from a manuscript of Nizami's Kherad-nameh, the second book of the Iskandar-nameh, depicting Iskandar's meeting with the Seven philosophers, Persia, late 15th Century, see Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art Online Sale, 18th-26th May 2022, lot 7.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: RR This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 11

A large illuminated Qur'an, copied by Muhammad Rida Qajar Persia, dated 14th Jumada II 1245/11th December 1829Arabic manuscript on paper, 291 leaves (as numbered), 14 lines to the page written in black naskhi script with Persian interlinear translation in nasta'liq script in red, inner margins ruled in gold, blue and black, sura headings written in thuluth script in red ink, catchwords, double-page illuminated frontispiece in colours and gold, floral lacquer binding 405 x 275 mm.Footnotes:Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: • R• Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or the Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 207

A group of books, letters and ephemera relating to Prince Frederick Duleep Singh (1868-1926) and Princess Bamba (1869-1957), daughter of Maharajah Duleep Singh England, late 19th/early 20th Centurycomprising:A. Portraits in Norfolk Houses, by the late Prince Frederick Duleep Singh, vol. II only, Norwich, Jarrold & Sons, n.d. [but 1928], pp. 443, no. 115 of 500 copies, photographic frontispiece portrait of Prince Frederick in 1912, biographical preface by Princess Bamba, his sister, numerous plates, publisher's cream cloth, gilt, 293 x 235 mm.B. Original Papers published under the direction of the Committee of the Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society, Vol. 23, Pt. 1, Norwich 1927, 228 x 147 mm.C. The Princess Bamba Collection: Antiquities of Sikh Period, Department of Archaeology, Ministry of Education & Scientific Research, Pakistan, 1961, catalogue, by Dr F. A. Khan, Director of Archaeology in Pakistan, 17 pages, colour and black and white plates, paper covers, 240 x 185 mm.D. Map of the Punjab and Cashmere, showing the extent of Maharajah Duleep Singh's Territories, W. H. Allen & Co., London, circa 1860, linen-backed, folding, 665 x 708 mm., owned by Princess Bamba.E. A group of ten letters addressed to Prince Frederick from various correspondents, dated between 1898 and 1917, responding to queries on history, genealogy, portraiture etc., presumably as part of his antiquarian research relating to Norfolk, including two envelopes embossed with the Duleep Singh crestF. Whitaker's Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage and Companionage for the Year 1913, initialled CDS at front, entries for Prince Frederick and Prince Victor Duleep Singh on p. 321, blue and mauve cloth gilt, 4to (193 x 130 mm.)G. The Poetical Works of William Wordsworth, London, George Routledge & Sons, n.d. [but circa 1894], 4to (190 x 130 mm.), illustrated, inscribed For Dear Sophie, with Evelyn's best love, April 16, 1894, visting card of Princess Sophia Duleep Singh, Faraday House, Hampton Court, inscribed With best wishes for a happy Christmas & New Year, loose insideH. A silver chamberstick, with marks for London 1908, T R for Theodore Rossi, Norwich 8 cm. high; 218 g.(17)Footnotes:A. (Portraits): as stated on the title page, Prince Frederick was President of the Norfolk and Norwich Archaeological Society between 1925-26.B. (Papers): under the Society's Proceedings for 1926, there is an account of a speech given by a Mr W. R. Rudd about the late Prince Frederick. He 'spoke sympathetically of the loss the Society had sustained through the death of Prince Frederick Duleep Singh, and on his proposition it was agreed to send a letter of condolence to the family. All the members, he was sure, deeply regretted the untimely death of their President. When the Prince was elected there was a feeling that the Society had departed from its usual practice of choosing not only a good antiquary, but a Norfolk man. But in this case they had been most fortunate, for they had had in the presidency one who not only inherited the charming manners of his Oriental forebears, but had many of the attributes of an English gentleman. Prince Frederick's interest in Norfolk and everything pertaining to Norfolk was almost pathetic in its intensity. He was an antiquary with a reputation that spread far beyond the borders of Norfolk; and, above all, he was a modest man. He was one of the most popular presidents the Society ever had, and all the members felt that by his death they had lost a friend' (p. viii).For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 10

An illuminated Qur'an, commissioned by Amir Guneh Khan Qajar, and completed for his son Nasrullah Qajar, copied by Ibn Muhammad Shafi' al-Tabrizi Qajar Persia, dated 20th Shawwal 1239/30th June 1823, interlinear translation and marginal commentaries dated 13th Safar 1252/30th May 1836Arabic and Persian manuscript on paper, 383 leaves, 12 lines to the page written in naskhi script in black ink within cloudbands on a gold ground, interlinear Persian translation written in nasta'liq script in red ink, interlinear rules in gold, inner margins ruled in blue and gold, gold roundels with blue dots marking verse-endings, illuminated marginal devices, marginal commentary written in shikasteh script throughout, sura headings written in gold thuluth within illuminated panels, fine double-page illuminated frontispiece in colours and gold, preceded by a double-page with illuminated shamsas, contemporary floral lacquer binding, lacquer doublures with calligraphic medallions on a floral ground 258 x 170 mm.Footnotes:ProvenanceSotheby's, Arts of the Islamic World, 22nd April 1999, lot 17, where acquired by the current owner.This Qur'an was commissioned by Amir Guneh Khan Qajar, known as Amir Khan Sardar, an uncle of 'Abbas Mirza Na'ib al-Saltanah, known for his involvement in the wars against Russia. The main text was copied by Muhammad Shafi' al-Tabrizi, son of Muhammad 'Ali on 20th Shawwal 1238/30th June 1823. The interlinear Persian translations and marginal commentaries, in clear shikasteh, were commissioned by Nasrullah Khan Qajar (the son of Amir Guneh) and copied by the scribe 'Abdullah (or perhaps 'Aynullah), a resident of Tabriz, on 13th Safar 1252/30th May 1836 (not identified). The lacquered covers were also commissioned by Nasrullah Khan, referred to here as the Chief Commander of the Qajar tribes and the Chief of the Guards (sar-keshik-bashi), with no date given.The scribe, Muhammad Shafi' al-Tabrizi, son of Muhammad 'Ali, is recorded as one of the best naskhi scribes of the Qajar period. His recorded works, which include Qur'ans, prayer books and calligraphic pieces, with many in the Royal Library in Tehran, are dated between AH 1217/AD 1802-03 and AH 1262/AD 1845-46. See Mehdi Bayani, Ahval va Athar-e Khoshnavisan, vol. 4, Tehran 1358 sh/1979, pp. 163-165. For other recorded work by him, see Hamidreza Ghelichkhani, Fifty Years with the Legacy of Dr. Mahdi Bayani (1968-2018), National Library and Archives of I. R. Iran, 2018, p. 86-87. Nasrullah Khan Qajar, a son of Amir Guneh, known as Amir Khan Sardar, was one of the officials of the Muhammad Shah period and held the post of the Chief of Guards (sar-keshik-bashi). He was sent by Muhammad Shah to quell rebellions in Kashan and Isfahan, given the title Sahib Ikhtiyar and appointed Governor of Fars in late AH 1255/AD 1839-40, shortly before his death. See Bamdad, Dictionary of National Biography of Iran, 1700-1900, vol. 4, Tehran, 1966, pp. 244-245.A note on f. 1r by Bayan al-Saltanah states that this Qur'an was purchased in Tehran, and that he gives it to his daughter Fakhri Jahan, dated 12th Jumadi I, 1327/1st June 1909.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: • R• Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or the Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 48

A Kashan silhouette ware pottery jug Persia, 12th/ 13th Centuryof globular form on a short foot, with cylindrical neck and rounded handle, the decoration carved through a black slip under a transparent glaze, the upper body with foliate scrollwork, below a band of panels radiating from the base, the neck with vertical lines 13.8 cm. highFootnotes:ProvenanceThe Idemitsu Museum of Arts, Tokyo.Poulin Le Fur, 19 September 2000, lot 163. Private Belgian collection, acquired at Mansour Gallery, London, in 2001, and thence by descent.Christie's, Arts of the Islamic and Indian Worlds Including Works from the Simon Digby Collection, 7 April 2011, lot 60.For a comparable calligraphic jug sold in these rooms, see Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 5 April 2011, lot 117.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 49

A Kashan silhouette ware pottery jug Persia, 12th Centuryof globular form on a slightly flaring foot, with conical neck and rounded handle, the decoration carved through a black slip under a turquoise glaze with a band of inscriptions to the shoulder, with fitted box 15.1 cm. highFootnotes:ProvenancePrivate Belgian collection acquired at Mansour Gallery, London, on the 26th of March 2002, and thence by descent.Inscriptions: possibly Barakah wa yumn wa ..., 'Blessing and good-fortune and ...'.A similar jar is in the David Collection, Copenhagen (inv. no. 3/1975) noted, like the present example, for its technical execution and for the splendid play of colours. For a comparable black and white jug, see Jean Soustiel, La Ceramique Islamique Le Guide du Connaisseur, Switzerland, 1985, p. 87.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 124

A rare underglaze-painted pottery tile from the Portuguese Convent of Santa Monica in Goa (built 1627) North India, Probably Sindh, 16th Centuryof rectangular form, decorated in cobalt blue and turquoise on a white ground with a pomegranate tree with hatched trunk, three pomegranates and two large flowers, simple border, in wood frame with handwritten note pasted to reverse dated 27 November 1956 describing the history of the tile the tile 19.5 x 21.5 cm.Footnotes:ProvenanceCollection of Robert R. Lewis, according to the handwritten note dated 1956, to the reverse.Private UK collection, acquired in London in the early 1980s and thence by descent. The Convent of Santa Monica was constructed in 1627 and rebuilt after a fire in the mid 17th Century. Whilst Portuguese tiles were imported, Indian tiles were also used in the colonial buildings of Goa, and the group of tiles to which the present lot belongs were most likely produced in Sindh the century before they were installed in the convent. For further discussion and comparable examples of tiles from the Convent of Santa Monica, including a panel of tiles in situ, see Arthur Milner, Indian Tiles, London 2021, pp. 163-165, Figs. 4.40, 4.41, and 4.42. Another similar tile is in the National Tile Museum, Lisbon.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 35

A Fatimid mould-blown glass beaker Egypt, 10th Centuryof amber glass and deep cylindrical form, a raised boss to the centre of the base, decorated with five staggered rows of ten lozenges arranged in diaper design 8.9 cm. max. highFootnotes:ProvenanceProperty from a Princely Collection, acquired at Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 15 April 2010, lot 146.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 85

A miniature portrait of Nasr al-Din Shah Qajar (reg. 1848-96) in a diamond-set silver frame Persia, 19th Centurycomprising an oval portrait of the Shah in gouache on ivory behind glass, set in a openwork silver foliate scrollwork frame set with diamonds, hinged stand to back 8.6 cm. highFootnotes:ProvenancePrivate UK collection. The present lot relates closely to the Order of the Imperial Effigy, though it lacks the one, two or three rows of diamonds surrounding the portrait which denoted the three classes of the order. The practice of awarding jewel set decorations bearing the Imperial Effigy can be seen as part application of imperial statecraft; part projection of Qajar dynastic power; and as the personal award of the sovereign in exchange for services of the highest degree. It was awarded to the most senior courtiers of the highest distinction, such as ambassadors and envoys extraordinary, in Persia and occasionally to foreigners of exalted rank. Deriving from exchanges of diplomatic gifts of miniature portraiture between Napoleonic France, Tsarist Russia, and rival Ottoman Turkey, the Qajar Order of the Imperial Effigy was a useful tool in the gift of the Shah both nationally and internationally. However, in the early 19th Century it was seen as secondary to the supreme grade of the Order of the Lion and Sun. Such occurred in 1828-29 when the British diplomat Sir John Kinneir Macdonald was presented with First Class of the Order of the Lion and Sun. The Shah, Fath Ali, intended to give the same award to Macdonald's assistant, Dr John McNeill, but Macdonald objected and McNeill was given instead a portrait of Fath 'Ali Shah in traditional dress set within a frame of diamonds. As a projection of dynastic power, it was Muhammad Shah Qajar (ruled 1834-48) who adopted the custom of wearing a portrait miniature of his father, Fath 'Ali Shah, as part of his recently adopted European-style uniform (cf Julian Raby, Qajar Portraits, London, 1999). In so doing he was reinforcing Qajar dynastic legitimacy and setting a precedent for his son Nasr al-Din Shah who continued the practice by wearing the effigy of his father. As a decoration, it was Nasr al-Din Shah who established its primacy within the Order of the Lion and Sun, when, in 1848, the Imperial Portrait was formally instituted as the highest class of the Order of the Lion and Sun. From 1907 it was awarded in three classes with three, two and one rows of diamonds surrounding the portrait.The item within this lot containing ivory has been registered in accordance with the Ivory Act (Section 10), reference no. G8K7HVXZ.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: Y Ф RY Subject to CITES regulations when exporting items outside of the UK, see clause 13.Ф This lot contains or is made of ivory and cannot be imported into the USA or any country within the EU.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 21

A Kashan lustre pottery vessel Persia, 12th/13th centuryof squat globular form on a short foot with slightly flaring neck and two zoomorphic handles in the form of felines, decorated in a golden-brown lustre with a band of inscription to the neck, the body with panels of vegetal decoration interspersed by bands of inscription, further vegetal decoration to the underside of body, the interior of the neck with a band of inscription, with collection and exhibition labels from the George Eumorfopoulos Collection; the Nicholas Argenti Collection; the Manchester Art Gallery; and the London Exhibition of Persian Art approx. 14 cm. tallFootnotes:ProvenanceCollection of George Eumorfopoulos.Collection of Nicholas Argenti, acquired from the Eumorfopoulos sale, 20 April 1944, lot 103 (£23).Private UK collection.PublishedR.L. Hobson, The Catalogue of the George Eumorfopoulos Collection of Chinese, Corean, and Persian Pottery and Porcelain, London, 1925-28.ExhibitedGemeente-Museum, Exhibition of Islamic Art, The Hague, 1927, Cat. No. 172.International Exhibition of Persian Art, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1931.City of Manchester Art Galleries, 1931, Cat. No. 135.Inscriptions: around the neck, al-'izz wa al-daw[lah] wa, 'Glory and prosperity and'; then the repeat of al-'izz wa, 'Glory and'; to the body, including al-'izz, 'Glory'; the rest undeciphered.For an example of a turquoise Kashan spouted vessel of similar form with comparable zoomorphic handles sold at Sotheby's, see Arts of the Islamic World, including Fine Carpets and Textiles, 24 October 2007, lot 119. For a further example of a Kashan lustre vessel of similar form with zoomorphic handles sold in these rooms, see Bonhams, Islamic and Indian Art, 19 April 2007, lot 80.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: RR This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 54

Two Kashan lustre moulded calligraphic pottery tiles Persia, 13th Centuryeach of rectangular form, decorated in cobalt blue, turquoise and a golden brown lustre on a cream ground with inscriptions in thuluth on a ground of scrolling foliate tendrils, framed together the tiles 56.4 x 21.4 cm.Footnotes:ProvenanceChristie's, Islamic Art and Manuscripts, 10 October 2000, lot 232. Private Belgian collection acquired at Mansour Gallery, London, on the 16th of October 2000, and thence by descent. Inscriptions: Qur'an, Chapter XLI (Fusilat), parts of verses 30 and 31.Important Notice to BuyersSome countries, e.g., the US, prohibit or restrict the purchase by its citizens (wherever located) and/or the import of certain types of works of particular origins. As a convenience to buyers, Bonhams has marked with the symbol R all lots of Iranian (Persian) and Syrian origin. It is each buyer's responsibility to ensure that they do not bid on or import a lot in contravention of the sanctions or trade embargoes that apply to them.This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * R* VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium.R This lot is subject to import restrictions when shipped to the United States.For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 3140

United Kingdom, The Royal Mint, 2016 Her Majesty the Queen 1 kilo silver £500 coin, obv: fifth, crowned head of Queen Elizabeth II right; JC below, rev: crowned monogram of Elizabeth II 'E II R' and '90' within circular wreath, set within a frame of nine roses, PF 69 Ultra Cameo one of first 200 struck, in NGC plastic slab. (1)

Lot 2733

A yellow metal diamond half hoop eternity ring, featuring four round brilliant cut diamonds in tension settings alternating with double bar detail, diamond diameters between approx 3.2 and 3.3mm, total weight estimated as 0.47 carats, assessed mounted collectively colour H to I and clarity VS2 to SI1, size R½, gross weight 3.3g, stamped and tested as 14ctSome stones loose.

Lot 2541

A modern gent's 9ct gold and black onyx set signet ring, 9.1g, sponsor P&G, size R

Lot 2415

A Victorian style engine turned 9ct gold tooth-pick, with propelling action, sponsor R&R, 6.5g, 5cm (closed)

Lot 2870

A gent's 18ct gold diamond three-stone ring, the flush set graduated old cushion cuts total weight estimated as 0.54 carats, inside of shank inscribed David W Scott, 8.7g, size ROne outer stone with small scratch.Requires a polish, otherwise excellent.

Lot 2760

A Frey Wille gilt metal and enamel bangle, decorated in the Art Nouveau style, signed to the inside, dia.7cm; together with a matching ring, size R, both boxed (2)

Lot 2546

An 18ct gold bloodstone set signet ring, the slice-cut and polished bloodstone measuring approx 12 x 9mm, sponsor WHH & Co, 5.6g, size R

Lot 2427

A yellow metal gent's signet ring, the oval top signed Steve, with tapering fluted shoulders, marks worn and evidence of re-sizing to base of shank, tests as 18ct gold, 18.6g, size R/S

Lot 2649

A 9ct gold tanzanite single stone pendant, featuring a cushion cut tanzanite in claw setting, tanzanite dimensions approx 6.6 x 6.45 x 5.39mm, weight estimated as 1.63 carats, gross weight 1.6g, hallmarked 9ct, Birmingham, sponsor R&C; together with a 14ct yellow gold tanzanite single stone ring, featuring an oval cut tanzanite in a four-claw setting, tanzanite dimensions approx 8.35 x 6.25 x 3.95mm, weight estimated as 1.5 carats, size N½, gross weight 2.3g, hallmarked 14ct, Birmingham 2013, sponsor CR (2)Ring with surface chip to edge.Otherwise good condition throughout but would benefit from a clean.

Lot 2416

An 18ct gold and bloodstone set gent's signet ring, the bloodstone with relief carved armorial, the shoulders with leaf carving, sponsor CG, 10.5g, size RSurface scratches to bloodstone.

Lot 36

Rene Lalique, four ' Pouilly' design Madeira glasses, designed 1931, heightened with light blue staining, etched 'R LALIQUE', 7cm.Qty: 4Condition report:All four glasses remain in very good condition, no chips, cracks or evidence of polishing. The staining remains good. Very light surface wear.

Lot 137

R Rossi,Figure in a broad-brimmed hat,oil on wooden panel,18x12cm.

Lot 7099

A Telsada (Hong Kong) Model 25021 plastic and friction driven Vanden Plas Austin Princess 4 litre R with speedboat on trailer, dark blue body, pale blue interior, faux chrome trim, boxed

Lot 52

An early 20th century salt glazed stoneware jelly mould, with lion, 20cm wide;  others, various;    F & R Pratt pot lids - Peace and Wedding;  two side plates

Lot 214

An 18ct white gold floral ring, set with round diamonds, emeralds and rubies, size R, 3.75g gross; a rose yellow metal part ring set with turqoise, rubies and seed pearls, 2.08g gross; a pair of 9ct gold heart shaped earrings set with a round pibk stone, 1.59g gross;

Lot 200

A 14ct gold gentleman's signet ring, set with an emerald cut red stone approx. 9 x 11.3mm, size R, hallmarked, 4.62g gross

Lot 570

The Hobbit, An Unexpected Journey - Chronicles II. Creatures & Characters. First Printing, Falconer, Daniel; Foreword by Serkis, Andy and Introduction by Letteri, Joe / [J.R.R. Tolkien];  Inside HBO's Game of Thrones, Bryan Cogman, DaviBenioff (Introduction), D.B. Weiss;  others;  Martin, (George R. R.). A Song of Ice and Fire box set;  etc

Lot 144

R E M Cameron, Loch, Scotland, signed, watercolour, 14cm x 24cm

Lot 203

An 18ct gold, ruby & diamond ring, the central claw set round ruby between four round diamonds, size R, 2.96g gross; a 9ct gold floral ring, set with eight round garnets (one loss), size L, 2.11g gross; a 9ct gold & pearl solitaire ring, size K, 2.08g gross (3)

Lot 322

18ct gold and diamond cluster ring, having nine stones, circa 1920's  Condition Report Ring size - R/SGood overall condition. Light surface scratches to gem stones. We are not gemologists, as such we cannot comment on clarity/quality etc. of the gem stones. General wear and tear.

Lot 188

'The Laws of Honour: or a Compendious Account of the Ancient Derivation of all Titles. Dignities, Offices, &c.......' London, Printed for R. Gosling at the Mitre and Crown...1714, engraved frontis, and two other engraved plates, some discolouration to centre pages, contemporary calf, panelled and tooled boards, front board detached, book plate for Chillingham Castle, and Frost, John ( ed. ) 'Bingley's Practical Introduction to Botany...' London, printed for Baldwin and Cradock 1831.coloured plates, blind stamped cloth, front board and frontis detaching ( 2)

Lot 367

J Boydell Handcoloured engraving  "View of Shepperton", depicting horses and figures by the river, 25.5cm x 41cm  J Boydell Handcoloured engraving "A View of Sunbury Up the River Thames", printed 1740, 25cm x 40cm  After W Davison by R Havell  "A View of the Village of Shepperton", 34cm x 46cm, all framed and glazed (3) 

Lot 233

Collection of medals including a WWI Victory medal named for Pte R Kennett, no.242257, a WWII medal group comprising the George VI Star, Atlantic Star, Burma Star and War medal, all with ribbons and a 1916 Royal Warrant, two seaman's collars RN Class 2, various Royal Navy patches, ribbons, a collection of Viewmaster Seven Wonders of the World and other items 

Lot 554

R. Hope, Oil on Canvas, Woman in a Green Waistcoat, 35x25cm

Lot 388

Victorian Scottish Silver Cream Jug, Edinburgh Maker R & W, date letter obscured, 252g

Lot 169

A WWI 1914-1918 Medal Awarded 285701 Pte R King of The Oxford Regiment

Lot 389

A Torque Acoustics T 50 R electric guitar amp plus a Bose SoundDock. Amp L51cm x D27cm x H51cm

Lot 339

Volumes 1-12 of 'The Standard Cyclopedia of Modern Agriculture'. Edited by Professor R Patrick Wright, Gresham Publishing Co.

Lot 1

A Georgian mourning ring, 18th century, the small miniature depicting a tree and the initials MH, in hair, with a closed back setting, on a plain band, unmarked,1.20gRing size RCondition ReportGood condition for age, minor wear.

Lot 67

An Art Deco sapphire and diamond monogram, with the letter 'L' channel set with a row of calibré cut sapphires, and the letter 'R' grain set with a row of old eight cut and old Swiss cut diamonds. Tested as platinum. 15.60 x 13.60mm, 2.71g Condition ReportThere are remaining spurs to the reverse, from the original pegs that mounted the monogram. These could be used to very easily convert the monogram into a pendant or re-attach it to a larger jewel. Diamonds bright and lively. Gemstones bright and lively. Light surface marks commensurate with its age. Minor marks to the table or crown facet edges under 10x magnification to the sapphires.

Lot 1299

R. Welsh, Dalkeith, late 18th century 8 day longcase clock with brass and silvered arched dial with two subsidiary dials in mahogany case with swan neck pediment, pendulum and two weights present, 220cm high

Lot 385

19th century mahogany wheel barometer by R. Bone, Fakenham, 95cm

Lot 85

A collection of Hornby Tri-ang OO gauge locomotives, passenger cars and tenders, many boxed, including R.855N LNER Flying Scotsman with steam exhaust noise, together with assorted railway track, buildings, etc.

Lot 415

A George III silver sauceboat, R M, London 1795, of helmet-shape with reeded rim, on an oval foot, initialled, 14cm high, approximately 428g

Lot 238

A Lalique large Poissons shallow dish, iridescent, the base stamped R. Lalique, France 28.5cm diameter, 5cm high

Lot 257

A René Lalique coquille opalescent bowl, the pattern featuring interlocking shells, stamped R Lalique, 23.5cm diameterA few surface scratches otherwise in good condition

Lot 236

A Lalique Coquilles pattern small bowl iridescent, the base incised mark R Lalique, France, No 4204, 13cm diameter, 6cm high

Lot 318

Ian Gregory (1942-2021) a stoneware bowl, in greens and purples, impressed mark to side, 29cm in diameter x 8cm high and another studio pottery dish in cream, impressed mark to base R?, 28.5cm in diameter (2)

Lot 237

A Lalique Pissenlit pattern bowl decorated with ferns, stamped R. Lalique, 13cm diameter, 5cm high

Lot 85

A FINE CHINESE PALE CELADON JADE BELTHOOK QIANLONG/JIAQING Carved in low relief with an archaistic bird facing a kui-dragon, terminating with a high-relief dragon head, the underside with a circular button and a paper label reading 'Ex Collectis Erik Hancock', the stone with faint white veining, 12cm. Provenance: previously in the collection of Erik Hancock. See, R Davids and D Jellinek, Provenance, p.217, for more information about Erik Hancock. 清乾隆/嘉慶 青白玉雕蒼龍教子紋帶鉤 來源:Erik Hancock舊藏,R Davids and Jellinek的《來源》一書中有關於藏家Hancock的記載,頁217。

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