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Lot 2

An inlaid mahogany corner chair with an upholstered seat and an inlaid mahogany open armchair, with a rush seat, circa 1900

Lot 420

A set of four Ercol oak and elm kitchen chairs, with triple splat back enclosing Prince of Wales Feather, over a solid seat, raised on turned legs, united by an H frame stretcher.

Lot 429

A Victorian walnut tub nursing chair, with button backed red upholstery and over stuffed seat, raised on turned legs.

Lot 484

A Victorian mahogany two seater sofa, with button back gold upholstery and shaped stuffed seat, raised on turned and fluted legs.

Lot 490

An early 20thC oak framed gout stool with upholstered seat, raised on ogee bracket feet.

Lot 497

A pair of Victorian rosewood and ivory inlaid salon chairs, with green patterned over stuffed back and seat, raised on square tapering legs, brass capped on castors.

Lot 500

A Charles II and later oak carver chair, the back with foliate carving, cane inset, flanked by barley twist supports, scrolling leaf carved arms, foliate carved seat rail with drop-in seat, raised on turned supports, united by a barley twist stretcher and carved front rail.

Lot 501

A pair of Victorian oak carver chairs, with patterned oval upholstered back and drop in seat, raised on turned legs united by an H framed stretcher.

Lot 179

A pair of American oak and pine Windsor chairs, by DR Dimes, with a continuous back and arms, shaped saddle seat, raised on turned legs united by H frame stretcher, impressed makers mark.

Lot 190

An oak stool, with a fabric seat decorated with exotic birds and flowers, raised on cabriole legs and ball and claw feet, together with a Victorian walnut footstool, by T Hughes Williams of Islington, similarly upholstered, (2).

Lot 195

A Victorian mahogany adjustable piano stool, by H J Fletcher, London, with overstuffed seat, cast iron adjustment mechanism, raised on cabriole legs

Lot 256

A Carolean style oak stool, of square form, with over stuffed seat, raised on spiral fluted and turned legs united by an H frame stretcher, 50cm x 50cm x 39cm.

Lot 635

A REPRODUCTION STAMFORD CAST TRACTOR SEAT

Lot 776

AN OAK TELEPHONE SEAT & A BOOKCASE (2)

Lot 727

A Regency style mahogany bar back carver dining chair with scroll arms and upholstered drop-in seat, on turned legs

Lot 739

A Sheraton style floral painted shield back elbow chair with grey and pink floral upholstered seat, on square tapered legs and spade feet, together with two 19th century occasional chairs with carved bar backs, on square tapered legs (one upholstered in blue fabric), (3)

Lot 917

A c WW1 military campaign fold-up seat.

Lot 500

Red and yellow Pickle child's tricycle with black saddle seat

Lot 688

Single chair with inlaid back and cream upholstered seat.

Lot 760

A set of vintage Salter child weigh scales with seat

Lot 805

EDWARDIAN SPOON BACK ARMCHAIR, a carved oak button back low armchair with serpentine fronted seat

Lot 888

FLEMISH HALL SEAT, a carved oak lift top hall seat, carved with 3 panels of tradesmen, 49" width

Lot 386

A Yorkshire oak 'X' chair with leather seat pad

Lot 1735A

Modern cream two seat sofa, width 165cm

Lot 1735B

Modern cream two seat sofa, width 165cm

Lot 1772

A child's teak two seat garden bench, width 89cm

Lot 1801

A set of ten (8 + 2) carved oak solid seat dining chairs

Lot 2052

Windsor armchair with elm seat

Lot 2062

A 19thC mahogany campaign day bed, folding construction with canvas seat and extendable leg rest

Lot 1486

An oak telephone seat, W84cm

Lot 1618

Oak mirror back hall stand with central seat, W92 x D30 x H201cm

Lot 1647

A contemporary garden or conservatory two seat bench sofa and coffee table with glass top, sofa width 122cm, table W120 x D60 x H54cm

Lot 621

An executive office chair, upholstered in leather on the seat and back and leather shaped arms; together with another office chair.

Lot 634A

19th Century rustic style cast iron garden bench seat with later wooden seat and back panel, (slightly in complete), 100cms.

Lot 640

A small oak cabinet with two carved panel doors raised on turned legs; together with a similar rectangular oak coffee table with turned legs; and a rustic style chair with rush seat.

Lot 660

A set of three mahogany balloon back dining chairs carved mid-rails and drop-in seats upholstered in brown velour (one seat pad missing).

Lot 661

A large modern three-piece suite by Steed, comprising: a three-seater settee with loose seat and back cushions, scatter cushions and arm protectors, and a pair of matching armchairs.

Lot 663

Ladies Victorian mahogany nursing chair with fiddle shaped back with exposed carved mahogany frame and buttoned back and seat upholstered in beige velour and raised on shaped legs terminating in castors.

Lot 669

A continental three piece suite, comprising: a large three seater settee with carved and painted exposed framework, the seat and loose seat covers upholstered in cream and gold coloured pattern material; together with a pair of matching arm chairs.

Lot 675

Reproduction Chippendale style chair settee with decorative carved and pierced cresting rail and splats and shaped arms raised on carved cabriole legs with claw and ball feet (seat pad damaged).

Lot 676

Heavily carved oak oval draw leaf dining table in the Lea style; and a set of seven matching chairs (distressed), table 182cms overall (some seat pads missing or incomplete).

Lot 680

Early 20th Century rocking chair with curved cresting rails supported by slender spindles over a shaped solid elm seat and raised on turned legs joined by turned strechers.

Lot 681

An Edwardian inlaid mahogany corner occasional chair with shaped combined back and arms supported by inlaid splats over a shaped seat and fitted cabriole legs; and an inlaid mahogany bedroom occasional chair. (2)

Lot 692

A set of four reproduction Windsor styler polished pine chairs with spindle backs and solid seat raised on turned legs.

Lot 698

A set of four Victorian carved and stained oak dining chairs with carved and pierced cresting rails seat and back panel upholstered in blue leatherette and raised on square front legs joined by strechers.

Lot 706

A large Empire style three seater settee chair back framed by snake carved hardwood frame in three sections and over three seat sections raised on short scrolling legs decorative carved brackets, 110cms.

Lot 709

A set of four Victorian mahogany balloon back dining chairs the seat pads upholstered in modern dark cream trellis pattern material and raised on turned front legs.

Lot 718

A modern Chesterfield settee upholstered in buttoned brown leather (no seat cushions).

Lot 729

A Reproduction heavily carved and stained oak household cocktail bar flared cornice carved frieze above a counter with molded edge above carved arched panels and bullseye glass panels and panelled base, storage in the reverse, 158cms; together with a modern bar stool with buttoned green leather upholstered seat and back.

Lot 757

A 19th Century Windsor style elbow chair, with solid elm seat.

Lot 768

Early 19th Century dining chairs, comprising: a matched set of six + one matching carved mid-rails turned front legs and a similar carver with seat pad upholstered to match. (8)

Lot 779

An Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee throne chair made by Old Charm, with red leather upholstery seat the cresting rail inscribed "Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee 1977".

Lot 1222

An Antique child's rocking chair with rush seat.

Lot 1239

A small French oak hall seat, width 86cm.

Lot 1337

A set of 6 Arne Jacobsen 3701 stacking chairs by Fritz Hansen in laminated beech with chrome legs, makers labels and moulded marks under seat.

Lot 1338

A set of 6 Arne Jacobsen 3701 stacking chairs by Fritz Hansen in laminated beech with chrome legs, makers labels and moulded marks under seat.

Lot 1424

A black leather and chrome Tempus swivel armchair by Brunner, Germany with makers marks under seat.

Lot 697

An Oriental hexagonal glazed Stoneware garden seat/stand.

Lot 81

ƟThe Canterbury ‘Trussel’ Bible, with prologues of Jerome and Interpretation of Hebrew Names, in Latin, illuminated manuscript on fine parchment [southern England, or perhaps northern France, third quarter of the thirteenth century] 690 leaves (plus two original endleaves at front, and two at back), foliated in modern hand to include endleaves and followed here, uncollatable in usual fashion, but entire text checked and only one leaf missing (that with 3 Kings, end of 22-opening 23), else complete, double column of 44 lines of a legible and professional university hand in dark black ink, capitals touched in brick-red, occasional marginalia set within coloured penwork boxes, versal initials in alternate red or blue set both in edge of column and in adjacent margin, running titles in alternate red or blue capitals at head of page with penwork extensions, 2-line initials in red or blue with elaborate contrasting penwork encasing them and filling margins with vine-like foliage curls and jagged edged lines along the innermost edges of their descenders, sixty-six decorated initials in blue or soft pink, heightened with white penwork, often enclosing lacertine dragon-headed drollery creatures, with foliate shoots and gold bezants at corners pushing into margins, all on contrasting coloured grounds with tiny white penwork, seventy-two historiated initials in blue or soft pink enclosing Bible scenes and figures, with thin gold bars used as frame to their grounds, these often with thick bodied foliate extensions terminating in tiny leaves and gold bezants in borders (that opening prologue to Genesis with decorated bar borders in same on three sides of text), ten very large historiated initials containing figures with castle turrents, curled animals and other devices, with space filled within the bodies of the initial with lacertine winged dragons curling around to bite their own bodies and sprouting foliage from their tails, one full-page Genesis initial with seven scenes of the life of Christ set within quadrilobed gold frames with sharp points at the intersections of their lobes, all set on a single blue and pink decorated band and with elaborate head and foot pieces in margin or swirling and interlocking foliage terminating in small leaves and gold bezants, many leaves with original alphabetical quire and leaf signatures, smudging to details of two initials, white paint of faces partly oxidised to grey in places, natural flaw to parchment on fol. 263, small number of mistakes by the painter of the versal initials (in form: missing numeral on fol. 184v, subsequently corrected by dropping ‘xvii’ later in text; and ‘xxxii’ on fol. 344v where he should have written “xxxiv’, thus ‘xlii’ repeated twice on fols. 347v-48r), small dark spotting in inner gutter on fols. 325v-326r, small losses to top of leaf in opening text of John (affecting only a few characters in uppermost 8 lines), two or three wormholes in first leaf, trimmed at edges with losses to running titles, else in very good condition, 174 by 115mm.; early nineteenth-century blue morocco, tooled with frames of rollstamps around a central rectangle of angular floral bosses, the outermost frame profusely gilt with floral designs, spine gilt tooled in compartments with “BIBLIA LATINA / MS / CIRC. 1353” (see below), outermost edges of inside of boards also profusely gilt, pale blue watered silk pastedowns and doublures (so close to the binding of another Bible ex Yates Thompson collection, and sold last in our rooms, 9 December 2015, lot 111, to suggest the same binder), the width and weight of the volume causing the binding to separate from the book block at front and back, now nearly loose in binding and held in place only by silk doublures (these with tears where binding attaches to volume), two thongs snapped in Pauline Epistles, but overall in solid and presentable state, gilt edgesThis is a fine thirteenth-century Bible, produced in a de luxe format with nearly one hundred and fifty decorated initials, probably in England. Only the tiniest handful of such Bibles surviving today have any secure medieval provenance, but this was demonstrably in the library of Canterbury Cathedral, the absolute epicentre of Christian worship in the British Isles, throughout the Middle Ages; and bears on its endleaf the signature of one of the last members of the community before the Reformation, who presumably took it with him. From there it passed through the hands of Thomas Rawlinson, “the Leviathan of book collectors”, and thereafter to the libraries of an important British theologian, a Liberal politician and a Mayfair aristocrat. It has not appeared on the open market in nearly forty years and is now the very last recorded manuscript codex in private hands from this most important of English monastic libraries Provenance:1. The Cathedral Priory of the Holy Trinity or Christ Church, Canterbury, the mother church of the English people and the central site of English Christian life: with an erased inscription on front original endleaf, but read with ultra-violet light: “Eccl[es]ie chr[isti] cantuarie” (most probably very late thirteenth or fourteenth century). The cathedral was founded by St. Augustine in 598 as his own seat and that of his successors, within the structure of the royal palace of King Æthelberht of Kent, itself reportedly of Roman origin. As a church rather than a monastery, Christ Church’s community consisted of secular canons up to the Norman Conquest, with monks introduced after the Norman Conquest by Archbishop Lanfranc. Since then, it has been the mother church of Christianity in the British Isles, perhaps the most important pilgrimage site in England, the site of the martyrdom of St. Thomas Becket, as well as the burial place of the archbishops of Canterbury and Edward Plantagenet the Black Prince, and Henry IV. As the absolute focus for English devotions, it has loomed large in the English-speaking imagination, with William of Malmesbury in his Gesta Pontificum claiming of it that, “Nothing like it could be seen in England either for the light of its glass windows, the gleaming of its marble pavements, or the many-coloured paintings which led the eyes to the panelled ceiling above”, and Chaucer using it as the ultimate destination of his fictitious pilgrims in his Canterbury Tales. The present manuscript is probably English in origin (see below), and was published as such by Sotheby’s in 1967 and the late Jeremy Griffiths in 1995. If this is correct, then it must come from a large scribal and intellectual centre, such as Oxford or Canterbury. It may be identifiable as one of a small number of complete bibles in the early fourteenth-century booklist of the community (edited by M.R. James, The Ancient Libraries of Canterbury and Dover, 1903, no. II) as item 600 (“Biblia”), or among the additional material at the end of that list, recording books of former members bequeathed to the community. Of these, only six Bibles were given by men who lived after the present manuscript was copied: (i & ii) items 1639-40, two bibles from the collection of Archbishop Robert Winchelsey (reigned 1245-1313); (iii) item 1722, from ‘John of Thanet’ (presumably the early fourteenth-century monk of the same name from whose cope a panel still survives, embroidered with his name and profession, now Victoria & Albert Museum T.337-1921); (iv) item 1731, from ‘Robert Poucin’; (v) item 1773, from ‘William of Ledbury’; and (vi) III:1, that from the collection of Prior William of Eastry (held office 1285-1331).  Ɵ Indicates that the lot is subject to buyer’s premium of 24% exclusive of VAT (0% VAT).  

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