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Lot 325

Four Royal Crown Derby paperweights including Mandarin Duck, a Tabby cat and a Computer Mouse all with gold button and another cat with silver button Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 348

Two Royal Crown Derby cups and saucers, two plates in pattern no 2451, together with a Pheonix China Ancre pattern teaset Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 351

A Royal Crown Derby tablewares including tureen, sauce tureen, sauce boat and stand, pattern no 3973 Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 719C

A Royal Crown Derby Imari palette Porcelain paperweight of a Llama designed modelled and decorated by John Ablitt This figure was an Exclusive to the Royal Crown Derby Collectors Guild in 2000 and not produced beyond that year. It shows 1st quality red printed marks, the special backstamp, gold stopper and is accompanied by its original box Condition Report:Available upon request

Lot 164

A Royal Crown Derby "Derby Posies" tea for two set.

Lot 195

A small collection of Royal Crown Derby, comprising 2 large plates, teacup and saucer, 2 coffee cans each with saucer and pin tray.

Lot 63

A large collection of Royal Crown Derby "Derby Posies" china, various +/- 60 pieces.

Lot 360

ROYAL CROWN DERBY, gilded paper weight "Cockerel"

Lot 278

A collection of various china wares to include a Plant Tuscan China "Bathing Belle" figure (No. 177) 15.5 cm high, a Charlotte Rhead Crown Ducal tube lined spoutless jug in terracotta and creams 12 cm high, a Royal Doulton figure "Priscilla" (HN1340) (head very damaged and repaired), Wedgwood blue jasper sugar bowl with plated cover, Crown Derby coffee can, Royal Crown Derby two handled cup and side plate, Hamilton Derby Japan pattern plate 27 cm diameter, Dresden blue and white and gilt decorated oval mirror with cherubic surmount 37 cm high, German polychrome decorated miniature teapot, a pair of Bohemian ruby glass overlaid and gilt decorated vases of mallet form 14.5 cm high and a Doulton Burslem blue and gilt decorated miniature vase 6.5 cm high CONDITION REPORTS The Hamilton bone china Japan pattern plate appears to be in good condition throughout. Doulton "Priscilla" figure very damaged and repaired to the head, bonnet and neck and base. "Bathing Belle" figure appears to be in good condition. Charlotte Rhead jug appears in good condition. Overlaid ruby glass vases - one appears in basically good condition though with some wear and tear conducive with age and use, particularly to the gilding. The second has repaired damage to the neck. Miniature teapot appears to be in good condition though arguably in need of a clean. Crown Derby coffee can handle very broken. Three miniature pieces of Doulton harvestware: metalwork dented and very oxidised, pottery itself appears to be in good condition. Doulton gilt miniature vase basically appears in good condition. Two handled bowl with hairline crack to rim and also to base. Blue and white cherub decorated mirror with some damage, one cherub with wing missing and firing faults elsewhere, the gold foot at base bent, the easel support damaged and repaired, mirror with silvering gone in several areas and spotting elsewhere, gilding very worn. The Wedgwood plated mounted pot with oxidisation to the plating. The pot with large star crack to base, arguably in need of a good clean - see images for further detail. Please note : pair of Doulton Burslem blushware ewers are now withdrawn from this lot so therefore not available

Lot 400

Mixed group of ceramics to include a Queen Victoria jubilee plate , Royal crown Derby plates, Wedgwood biscuit barrel , Sylvac and other items.

Lot 403

A Royal Crown Derby table lamp, decorated with old imari pattern 1128

Lot 423

8 Royal Crown Derby Paperweights, varying dates ,7 with gold stoppers. Teddy bear is without. To Include a Puffin, a seated Panda bear, a Ram 2 cats a rabbit and a bunny.

Lot 436

5 x Royal Crown Derby Paper weights. 2 gold stopper and 3 silver stoppers, the small bird a collectors club edition.

Lot 408

A Dresden desk stand, 19cm across, Herend egg box, Royal Crown Derby trinket dish and small bowl, Meissen dish etc

Lot 678

A Royal Crown Derby Imari design cat, height 6cm

Lot 80

THE 1926 ASCOT GOLD CUP: an 18 carat gold cup and coverSebastian Garrard, London 1926, inscribed under handle 'Chas. Sykes Sculpt' Of ovoid form, the whole hand-raised, a pull-off part domed cover featuring an organic style cast and chased six-pointed star wrythen finial, the main body with a rolled flaring upper rim transitioning into a gently waisted wide neck adjoining the main body, from the rounded shoulders two cast lug handles project horizontally, both ergonomically curved with fluting and ornamented in a kneeling ribbed character partly clothed by leaf forms, from which two slender arm-like strands return and attach to the main body, their ends curled within applied acanthus leaves, the smooth egg-shape form powerfully gripped at its base by four embossed spined acanthus leaves, a flanged pedestal beneath flowing into four embossed matching acanthus leaves in high and low relief, on a circular spreading foot, the patina of the gold to the whole warm and vibrant, presented on the original circular wooden plinth with applied lettering for 'ASCOT 1926' to one side, to the other a plaque inscribed 'Won by Sir John Rutherford's Solario', height cup without plinth 42cm, diameter handle to handle 34cm, weight 3041gms.Footnotes:ProvenanceAwarded to Sir John Rutherford in 1926 and thence by family descent to the present owners.Lot ResearchThe Ascot Gold Cup stands proudly as the showpiece event and trophy of Royal Ascot week, and is Britain's most prestigious horse racing occasion for 'stayers' – horses which specialise in racing over long distances. It is a Group 1 flat horse race, open to horses aged four years or older, covering a distance of 2½ miles. Ascot Racecourse itself is located in Berkshire, not far from Windsor Castle, and is located on Crown Estate Land. Founded by Queen Anne in 1711, it has a symbiotic relationship with the British Royal family, resulting in the reigning Monarch appointing a representative to run the administration of the racecourse on their behalf. Traditionally the racecourse had been run by the Master of the Royal Buckhounds, but in 1901 this changed and Lord Churchill (Victor Spencer, 1st Viscount Churchill, 1863-1934) was appointed by Edward VII as his first official Representative, becoming Chairman in 1913. In 1926, when this Gold Cup was awarded, Lord Churchill was still very much at the helm and was integral to the design of the trophy on offer.The Gold Cup was first run in 1807 when it was won by Master Jackey, and the first formal Royal procession, starting from Windsor Castle, was introduced in 1825 by George IV. Throughout Royal Ascot week, each race day begins with the Royal Procession, when the reigning Monarch and accompanying members of the Royal family arrive in horse-drawn carriages. While the Royal Standard is being raised, they are driven slowly along the track in full view of the expectant crowds. The Royals and invited guests then spend the day watching the races from the Royal Enclosure. The magnificent Ascot Gold Cup is the prize awarded to the owner of the winning horse by the reigning Monarch, and the cup design has to be approved by the Sovereign each year. It is one of only three perpetual trophies at the Royal meeting that are able to be kept on a permanent basis by the winners, the other two being the Royal Hunt Cup and the King's (or Queen's) Vase. As such, all three trophies are re-made every year, to a different design.Gold Cup Day is traditionally held on the third day of the Royal Ascot meeting held in June, which is known colloquially (but not officially) as 'Ladies' Day'; a day to see and be seen. The term seems to have been coined in 1823, when an anonymous poet described the Thursday of the Royal Meeting as 'Ladies' Day ... when the women, like angels, look sweetly divine.' A strict dress code underpins the spectacle, attracting the very best in fashion, horses, trainers and quality of racegoers alike. Lord Churchill is reputed to have taken personal charge of vetting applications for entrance into the Royal Enclosure, sorting letters into three baskets marked 'Certainly' 'Perhaps' and 'Certainly Not.'On Thursday June 17th, 1926, the Gold Cup on offer was won by 'Solario' (1922-45), a four-year-old thoroughbred, ridden by the jockey Joe Childs (1884-1958) and owned by Blackburn's phenomenally wealthy Sir John Rutherford (1854-1932). George V, accompanied by his wife Queen Mary, awarded Sir John the trophy on offer in the presence of a huge cheering crowd – a design chosen by George V after much deliberation and angst, causing much controversy behind the scenes. This tension over the cup design has come to light since letters held in The Goldsmiths' Company archives, specifically on the design process behind the 1926 Gold Cup, were carefully perused.However, the drama that had played out behind closed doors was not in evidence on that sunny day in June, when 'Solario' reigned triumphant. Originally bred in Ireland by the 4th Earl of Dunraven, 'Solario' was the son of the Triple Crown winner, 'Gainsborough'. In 1923 he was bought as a yearling by Sir John for £3,675 at the Doncaster blood sales, as a handsome horse of elegant build in unmarked brown, with high withers, long legs and a short back – the perfect 'stayer' in form. Under the guidance of his trainer Reginald Day, 'Solario' went on to become one of the most famous racehorses of his day, undoubtedly the best Sir John Rutherford had ever owned, winning numerous prestigious races such as the Exeter Stakes in 1924, the St Leger Stakes in 1925 alongside the Ascot Derby and the Princess of Wales Stakes, and in 1926 the Ascot Gold Cup and the Coronation Cup. He retired to Terrace House Stud in Newmarket, commanding the highest stud fee in the land of 500 guineas a mare and winning the 'Leading Sire of Great Britain & Ireland' award in 1937. Indeed, he was immortalised in oils after his monumental win at Ascot in 1926 by Sir Alfred James Munnings (1878-1959), and in 1932 the painting was bequeathed to Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery by Sir John Rutherford, where it still resides today. His owner, Sir John Rutherford, died in 1932 and 'Solario' was offered in his dispersal at the Newmarket July sale that year. Amidst fear that he would be snatched up by a wealthy American syndicate, bidding was contentious, and a British syndicate headed by Lord Glanely won him at 47,000 guineas, a new record price for a horse at auction. He was returned to stud at Terrace House, where he died in 1945.Solario's owner Sir John Rutherford, 1st Baronet (1854-1936) was originally born in Annan Dumfriesshire, the only son of Mr John Rutherford J.P. of Blackburn, a town which he had a lifelong association with. Sir John was a man with true Northern grit, a multi-faceted character who had been one of Blackburn Rovers first-ever football players, later inheriting his father's partnership in Shaw's Brewery in Blackburn town centre. He gained a Commission into the Duke of Lancaster's Own Yeomanry regiment in 1881, which he commanded for six years, found time to serve as a Conservative Member of Parliament for Darwen, a seat he held for a total of twenty-seven years, and was appointed the Mayor of Blackburn in 1898. His elevation in social standing was cemented by being granted a baronetcy on 27 January 1916, owning the archetypal country estate in Scotland, as well as a now-vanished mansion at Beardwood in Blackburn. As a brewing tycoon, he was wealthy enough to afford to turn down the Aga Khan's offer of £100,000 - equal to more than £3.2 million today - for his colt 'Solario' after it won its first classic, the St Leger in 1925. His interest in horses had begun in 1880, when he originally showed an interest in show jumping and steeplechasing, but his true passion lay with ownership of thoroughbred... For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Lot 406

A Magnificent Victorian 18ct gold Racing Trophy Centrepiece: The 1877 Ascot Gold Cup, won by Lord Lonsdale’s ‘Petrarch’, by Charles Frederick Hancock, London 1876, the 18ct gold cup and cover of vase-shaped baluster design, the cover of wrythen lobed form, with cast finial of a rearing stallion attended by a classical youth, the twin handles both modelled as figures of Winged Victory, the rim fitting inscribed ‘RIDDEN BY T. CANNON 6 STARTED’, the knopped stem within a surround of four young male figures, kneeling, two holding wreaths, two holding shields engraved: ‘ASCOT GOLD CUP 1877 WON BY EARL OF LONSDALE’S ‘PETRARCH’ 4YRS’, on stepped foot, the trophy placed on circular stand chased with a border of amorini and horses, spaced by female masks, the centre engraved with the Royal Arms and inscribed: ‘ASCOT GOLD CUP 1877. WON BY EARL OF LONSDALE’S PETRARCH’ 4YRS, contained in a shaped and fitted dark green velvet case, within outer conical wooden carrying case, stencilled to the exterior ‘THE EARL OF LONSDALES TRUSTEES, PLATE CASE NO.1, trophy height 47.5cm, diameter of stand 36cm. £100,000-£120,000 --- The Ascot Gold Cup: “The most prestigious prize in flat racing since 1807” Gold has traditionally been associated with sporting glory and there is no more famous race at the Royal Meeting than the Ascot Cup. First staged in 1807, the inaugural race took place in the presence of King George III and Queen Charlotte. Originally open to horses aged three years and older, and taking place in June each year, the race was run over 2 miles 3 furlongs and 210 yards. The winner of the first race, Master Jackey, was awarded prize money of 100 guineas. In 1844, the race was attended by Emperor Nicholas I of Russia, who was making a state visit to England. That year's winner was unnamed at the time of his victory, but he was given the name ‘The Emperor’ in honour of the visiting monarch. In return Nicholas offered a new trophy for the race — the Emperor's Plate — and this became the title of the event for a short period. Its original name was however restored after nine years, in 1853. Today the race is the first leg of Britain’s Stayers’ Triple Crown followed by the Goodwood Cup and the Doncaster Cup, the last horse winning all three prestigious races in the same year being ‘Stradivarius’ in 2019. The 1877 race numbered six runners including the four-year-old bay Petrarch, ridden by Tom Cannon, trained by Joe Cannon, and owned by Lord Lonsdale. A contemporary account gives commentary on the race itself: “Considerable interest was occasioned on Cup Day by the presence of the Princes Albert Victor and George, it being their first appearance at a race meeting. Cannon rode a fine race for the Gold Cup on Lord Lonsdale’s Petrarch. When passing the Hotel turn, Petrarch attempted to stop, and made as if he would go to the stables, but Cannon managed him splendidly; and although at Swinley Bottom he was six lengths behind, fortune favoured him. At this point, Sugar Loaf bolted and jumped the ditch, and Petrarch slipped into third place, increasing his advantage until at the bend into the straight, he took the lead from Skylark and Coomassie and won easily by four lengths”. Regarding the winning owner’s trophy cup, The Auckland Star (6 September 1877) enthused: “This year the cup is of real gold, and a most magnificent piece of plate, worth, with the stakes, £2,070”. The magnificent gold trophy was one of only three Royal Ascot races where the winner’s cup was retained in perpetuity by the winning owners (the Royal Hunt Cup and the Queen’s Vase being the other two). ‘Petrarch’ Petrarch was foaled in 1873, his sire Lord Clifden was the St Leger winner of 1863, his dam Laura was a successful brood mare whose other foals included the Doncaster Cup winner Fraulein and the Craven Stakes winner Laureate. Petrarch was described as an extremely handsome rich bay horse. Alexander Scott, author of Turf Memories of Sixty Years, remarked, "Whenever I am asked to give my opinion of the grandest looking Thoroughbred of the past sixty years, I always declare unhesitatingly for Petrarch." Petrarch was bred by J. E Gosden at Midhurst, West Sussex, and as a three-year-old, stood 15.3 hands high. The colt was sent into training with John Dawson, the younger brother of Mathew Dawson, at Warren House stables at Newmarket, Suffolk. Dawson was best known as the private trainer of Prince Batthyany, for whom he trained the 1875 Epsom Derby winner Galopin. Between October 1875 - October 1878 Petrarch ran sixteen times and won eight races. In 1875, Petrarch won the Middle Park Stakes on his only appearance of the season. In 1876 he won two of the three races which comprise the Triple Crown, taking the 2000 Guineas at Newmarket and the St Leger at Doncaster. During the winter of 1876, he was purchased by Lord Lonsdale and as a four-year-old in 1877, he won three races including the two and a half mile Ascot Gold Cup which at that time was regarded as the most important weight-for-age race in the world. Petrarch was troubled with recurring kidney ailments, making his health precarious at times. Dawson, his trainer, remarked on his successful four-year career competing at the highest levels of racing, as being “testament to his courage and quality”. Petrarch retired to stud in 1878, where he became a successful sire of winners. Lord Lonsdale St George Henry Lowther, 4th Earl of Lonsdale (1855 – 1882) was the eldest son of Henry Lowther, 3rd Earl of Lonsdale, and had a keen interest in travel, science and racing. During the winter of 1876, Lord Lonsdale purchased Petrarch from Viscount Dupplin, and lost no time in securing successes for the four-year old in 1877, winning at Newmarket, at Epsom in the High Level Handicap, and easily taking the Ascot Gold Cup. Petrarch finished just a head behind Snail in the Liverpool Summer Cup. In 1878 at the age of just 23, after the death of his father, St George inherited the earldom and the Lowther Estates in Westmorland. He died just a few years later in 1882, and was succeeded to the earldom by his younger brother Hugh.

Lot 31

Royal Crown Derby boxed early morning tea service, early to mid 20th century, printed green marks, RD. No. 839692, printed with loose flower sprays on a fluted ground, comprising two teacups and saucers, a milk jug, a sugar bowl, two side plates and an oval teapot and cover, within the original Royal Crown Derby China gilt and blue presentation box 

Lot 48

W & R (Stoke-on-Trent) Carlton pattern pottery butter dish and cover, 22cm wide, a Royal Worcester brush ivory ground vase, various items of Royal Crown Derby porcelain and other items including a shaped pin tray painted with flowers, two Imari pattern miniature jugs and other items

Lot 56

Royal Crown Derby porcelain campana vase, two-handled and lidded, 17cm high (damage to cover), a Royal Crown Derby hexagonal lidded trinket pot, Imari pattern and a similar afternoon tea plate (3) 

Lot 64

Royal Crown Derby Imari pattern octagonal shaped plate, 25.5cm wide, an old Imari patterned small circular plate and a Burtondale bone china Imari pattern dinner plate, printed iron red marks, 20th/21st century

Lot 65

Five Royal Crown Derby Imari pattern small dishes, printed pink and iron red marks, comprising two footed old Imari pattern lobed circular dishes, with pierced handles, pattern no. 1128, 15.3cm wide, two Imari pattern lobed circular dishes, pattern 1128 and a small circular dish with petal shaped rim, pattern no. 2451 (cracked and re-stuck) 

Lot 106

A pair of Royal Crown Derby Old Imari pattern porcelain 10½” plates, each marked “1128, XLVI” & “1128, XLIII”.

Lot 406

ROYAL CROWN DERBY TAZZA - shaped oval form and on pierced oval foot, 8704 pattern, 12.5cms H, 27cms W, 20cms D and a similar oval bowl, 1546/6199 pattern, 10cms H, 13cms W, 9.5cms D

Lot 407

ROYAL CROWN DERBY 1128 PATTERN TEA SERVICE - ornately gilded, 3 x 23cms diameter plates, 11 x 18cms diameter plates and 8 cups and saucers

Lot 420

LATE 19TH CENTURY OVAL MAJOLICA TWO-HANDLED DISHES - with leaf moulded decoration, 31 x 23cms, a Belleek two-handled cauldron decorated with shamrocks, black backstamp, 8cms H, Royal Crown Derby Cobalt Blue vase, panel painted with floral sprays and with gilded highlights and side handles, 17cms H, ETC

Lot 448

CHINA ITEMS - a Royal Crown Derby gilded Imari lidded box, 11 x 10 x 4cms, a Crown Devon Fieldings musical rectangular trinket box decorated with a hunting scene, signed, 13 x 8.5 x 7cms, Royal Crown Derby 'Derby Posies' jug, 13cms H, a Wedgwood Bayeux Tapestry tankard, 12cms H, ETC

Lot 459

PORTMEIRION POTTERY "PHOENIX" COFFEE SERVICE by John Cuffley, fifteen pieces, two Royal Crown Derby gilded Imari pattern cups and saucers with one side plate and a mixed collection of other cups and saucers ETC

Lot 479

ROYAL DOULTON FIGURINES (10), various, Royal Crown Derby wren paperweight, gold coloured stopper, Coalport 'Age of Elegance' figure 'Spanish Serenade' and a Capodimonte type figure 'Lovers', on gilded metal base, 21cms H

Lot 356

Two Royal Crown Derby Imari Paperweights, Bird and Fox Together with Unrelated Box

Lot 69

Three pieces of Royal Crown Derby Imari pattern china including ring stand, miniature twin handled vase and bowl.

Lot 29

Royal Crown Derby 1128 saucer, two Crown Derby paperweights Sky Blue Budgerigar and Squirrel, boxed, three boxed Lladro figurines and three Royal Copenhagen figures.

Lot 876

Four Royal Crown Derby cups, saucers and plates, together with a quantity of other tea ware, glassware and pottery

Lot 929

Royal Crown Derby small baluster form vase, oval Imari two handled dish and a Continental Majolica oval stand

Lot 940

Royal Crown Derby miniature teapot and kettle and a cabinet cup and saucer

Lot 119

Royal Crown Derby two tier cake plate

Lot 108

Royal Crown Derby bone china paperweights to include Birds, Dragon, seahorse, fish etc (7)

Lot 148

Two ceramic Robins, the first by Royal Crown Derby approx 10cm in height, the second by Goebel approx 12cm in height

Lot 92

Collection of Royal Crown Derby 'Posies' ceramic trinket dishes, vases etc (10)

Lot 160

Royal crown derby goldcrest (firsts)

Lot 161

Royal crown derby britannia bird (firsts)

Lot 97

Royal crown derby 1128 cup & saucer

Lot 525

A boxed Royal Crown Derby paperweight formed as a Lion. With silver stopper.

Lot 526

A Royal Crown Derby paperweight formed as an Eagle. With silver stopper.

Lot 527

A boxed Royal Crown Derby vase in the Imari pattern. 1128 LIII to the base.

Lot 528

A Royal Crown Derby paperweight One Hundred Royal Years 1890-1990.

Lot 531

Two Royal Crown Derby paperweights. One formed as a cat and the other a turtle.

Lot 533

A Royal Crown Derby paperweight formed as a dolphin.

Lot 17

A collection of various blue and white china to include Burleigh ware willow pattern, Wedgwood willow pattern, Grimwades onion pattern, a pair of Royal Crown Derby shaped dishes

Lot 53

A collection of Wedgwood Beaconsfield coffee cans and saucers, Royal Crown Derby Green Derby Panel coffee cans and saucers etc

Lot 260

Three pieces of Royal Crown Derby Imari patterned porcelain, comprising: a plate, dated 1976, pattern no. 1128, diameter 23cm; a scalloped rimmed dish, dated 1934, pattern no. 1128, diameter 15.7cm and a sugar bowl & cover, pattern no. 2451, no date cipher, width 14.5cmscalloped rimmed dish with chip to foot rim

Lot 1439

Derby and Royal Crown Derby Imari pattern coffee and tea wares and other manufacturers

Lot 1503

A Royal Crown Derby Millennium globe thermometer and a Millennium globe aneroid barometer, 13cms high

Lot 1601

A small Royal Crown Derby vase, painted with boats by WEJ Dean, 11 cms high,

Lot 1642

A Royal Crown Derby 'Olde Avesbury' part dinner service

Lot 134

A ROYAL CROWN DERBY IMARI 2469 (SCISSOR) PATTERN WAVY CIRCULAR CABARET TRAY AND SIX MATCHING COFFEE CUPS AND SAUCERS, the wavy circular tray printed and tinted with floral decoration, bears green printed factory marks, impressed marks and date cypher for 1895, diameter 43.5cm, the cups and saucers with iron red factory marks and date cyphers for 1916 (13) (Condition report: one cup has riveted repairs and crude restoration to the handle, all other pieces appear to be in good condition)

Lot 516

2 ROYAL CROWN DERBY PAPERWEIGHTS

Lot 591

3 BOXED ROYAL CROWN DERBY PAPERWEIGHT ORNAMENTS

Lot 328

Royal Crown Derby Collectors Guild cat, Misty, with gold stopper, L: 90 mm, no cracks or chips. P&P Group 1 (£14+VAT for the first lot and £1+VAT for subsequent lots)

Lot 341

Royal Crown Derby first quality cockerel, with gold stopper, H: 10 cm, no cracks or chips. P&P Group 1 (£14+VAT for the first lot and £1+VAT for subsequent lots)

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