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Lot 75

An interesting collection of silver and white metal including Georgian silver sugar tongs, Dutch silver serving items and various other flatware

Lot 755

A crackle glass lemonade jug with inner liner and silver plated lid together with a glass art vase

Lot 76

An interesting collection of cased and loose silver and white metal items including napkin rings, cup and saucers, spoons and other items

Lot 77

A quality silver toddy ladle with turned hardwood handle together with ivory and white metal spoons and forks and an unusual fish server

Lot 78

A collection of silver plated ware comprising a three piece silver tea set, a plated tray, a punch bowl, two smaller bowls and a meat cover dome

Lot 79

A collection of silver plated ware comprising a pair of candelabra, a pair of rectangular lidded serving dishes, a claret jug and a dish on stand

Lot 8

A quality English silver and mother of pearl baby's rattle and teether in the form of father Christmas bearing Birmingham hallmarks for 1903

Lot 80

A collection of items comprising fork and spoon pair, a white metal teaspoon, a cased German silver handled knife, a silver chain mail purse, small jewellery items and various cufflinks

Lot 81

A box containing a collection of cased and loose cutlery and flatware including a cased set of silver handled knives, and 19th century bone handled knives

Lot 82

A box containing an interesting collection of silver plated war including cutlery, flatware, glass and various other oddments

Lot 83

A silver plated five piece teaset

Lot 84

A tin containing silver and plated flatware, including a pair of silver salts and sewing odds

Lot 865

A collection of Victorian and latter glass ware Mary Gregory style including Claret jug,beakers with silver plated mounts and a flask

Lot 888

A small pair of silver rimmed vases, pair of bisque floral encrusted perfume bottle and glass dressing table set

Lot 9

An English novelty silver child's rattle of sun face form, with jade teether, Birmingham 1898

Lot 915

A collection of glassware comprising a pair of cut glass vases with silver rims together with a carnival glass dish

Lot 92

A silver vesta case together with a silver cigarette case

Lot 93

A collection of George III and later circulated silver coins and coinage

Lot 94

A twin handled silver plated tray together with a silver plated shell shaped dish

Lot 299

vintage suit bag & tray of silver plated metalware

Lot 587

A heavy gauge hallmarked silver rectangular dressing table tray, early 20th Century Having a cast rim, inscribed pat dated 25/12/25, made by Robert Chandler, marked possibly Birmingham, approx weight 19.4oz

Lot 589

An Edward VII hallmarked silver sauce boat Having cast scalloped rim, above three hoof feet, Birmingham, possibly 1901, weight approx. 7.8oz.

Lot 143

AUSTRALIA - ROYAL INTEREST SILVER PROOF COINS Twenty Five Dollars coins - Elizabeth II 40th Anniversary 1992, The Queen Mother; Princess Margaret; The Princess Royal and The Princess of Wales; Majestic Images 1999 One Dollar; Royal Visit 2000 Fifty Cent; Golden Jubilee 2002 One Dollar and 50th Anniversary Accession Fifty Cent, (8) Note: all with certificates, Majestic Images, Royal Visit and Accession coins also with boxes.

Lot 144

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA two Morgan Dollars* dated 1881(O) and 1882, Peace Dollar 1922*, silver Kennedy Half Dollar 1964*, Liberty Head 'Racketeer Nickel' 1883*, Buffalo Nickel 1936*, Mint 50 State Quarters Proof Sets 1999* and 2000*, and three Half Dollars 1945*, 1963 and 1969 Note: those marked * with certificates and/or packets/cases.

Lot 27

FOUR SILVER BANGLES of various sizes and designs, one a Mexican silver example with hammered decoration

Lot 41

SIX VARIOUS SILVER BRACELETS including a Thomas Sabo example and stone set examples, and another bracelet (7)

Lot 43

TWO SHELL CAMEO BROOCHES with female profiles, set in decorative silver gilt filigree mounts, sizes vary, one with safety chain

Lot 46

1930's SILVER PLATED TEA SERVICE comprising teapot; sugar basin and milk jug, with original box, period teaspoons with boxes, and various items of cutlery including preserve spoon and knife with fitted case

Lot 48

STERLING SILVER KING ROBERT THE BRUCE 700th ANNIVERSARY MEDAL with certificate stating it as number 56 of 2,500, in fitted box; together with two silver Prince Charles and Lady Diana commemorative pill boxes

Lot 49

PAIR OF EDWARDIAN SILVER RIM SPILL VASES with hobnail cut bodies, Birmingham 1905; an Edward VIII silver top and hobnail cut dressing table tidy, Birmingham 1936; silver plated epergne with a shaped removable central dish flanked by a pair of scrolled arms with removable dishes, on a tapering central column and circular base, 35.5cm high; a silver plated circular galleried tray on three bun feet and a silver plated bottle coaster with pierced decoration

Lot 205

WALL MIRROR, in a silver frame with bevelled plate, 168cm x 114cm.

Lot 259

MIRROR, in silver painted frame with an antique effect finish, 157cm x 101cm.

Lot 280

STORM LANTERNS, two pairs, in silver distressed finish in a hexagonal form, largest 62cm H and smallest 46cm H. (4)

Lot 487

TABLE LAMPS, a pair, silver plate of reeded column form with black shades, 80cm H x 40cm. (2)

Lot 492

CUTLERY SET, Sheffield silver plate in a four drawer fitted table top cabinet, 42cm W x 19cm H x 30cm D. (with faults to cabinet)

Lot 59

JULIAN CHICHESTER BREAKFAST TABLE, circular top with square silver leaf inset top with interlaced gilt border on triform cream and silver Greek Key legs, 100cm diam.

Lot 145

Akarnania, Leukas AR Stater. Circa 435-380 BC. Pegasos flying right; ? below / Helmeted head of Athena right; kerykeion and ? behind. Pegasi 95; BCD Akarnania 221. 8.44g, 22mm, 12h. Near Extremely Fine. Some horn silver deposits.

Lot 148

Akarnania, Leukas AR Stater. Circa 350 BC. Pegasos flying right; ? below / Head of Athena right, wearing Corinthian helmet; ithyphallic herm right, caduceus, and ? behind. Pegasi 102. 8.53g, 22mm, 10h. Good Very Fine. Some horn silver deposits.

Lot 180

Attica, Athens AR Tetradrachm. Circa 490-482 BC. Archaic head of Athena right wearing crested helmet decorated with chevron and dot pattern / Owl standing right, head facing, olive sprig behind, ??? before. Cf. Svoronos Pl. 4, 26. 17.44g, 23mm, 6h. Near Extremely Fine. In unusually good condition for the issue, with a full crest; struck and preserved on sound, lustrous metal. Very Rare. Athens was one of the few Greek cities with significant silver deposits in their immediate territory, a remarkable stroke of fortune upon which Xenophon reflected: 'The Divine Bounty has bestowed upon us inexhaustible mines of silver, and advantages which we enjoy above all our neighbouring cities, who never yet could discover one vein of silver ore in all their dominions.' The mines at Laurion had been worked since the bronze age, but it would be only later in 483 that a massive new vein of ore would be discovered that enabled Athens to finance grand new schemes such as the construction of a fleet of 200 triremes, a fleet that would later prove decisive in defending Greece at the Battle of Salamis. This coin was produced in the period before the discovery of the new deposits at Laurion, around the time of the Ionian Revolt and the subsequent first Persian invasion of Greece. Athens aided the Ionian Greeks in their rebellion against Persian tyranny with both coin and soldiers, participating in the 498 BC march on Sardes which resulted in the capture and sack of that city – the only significant offensive action taken by the Ionians, who were pushed back onto the defensive and eventually subjugated once more. Vowing to punish Athens for their support of the doomed rebellion, the Persian king Darius launched an invasion of Greece, landing at Marathon in 490 BC. Just twenty five miles from Athens, a vastly outnumbered Athenian hoplite army inflicted a crushing defeat on the Persians, who after suffering horrendous casualties turned to their ships and fled.

Lot 207

Kingdom of Macedon, Alexander III ‘the Great’ AV Distater. Amphipolis, circa 325-323 BC. Head of Athena right, wearing triple crested Corinthian helmet decorated with coiled serpent / Nike standing to left, holding wreath in outstretched right hand and stylis over left shoulder; thunderbolt to left, ?????????? to right. Price 163; Müller 1; for the date, see Troxell, p. 128. 17.23g, 22mm, 8h. Good Extremely Fine. Exceptionally well preserved for the issue; one of the very finest surviving distaters. Alexander’s stunning conquest of the Persian Achaemenid Empire delivered into his hands a vast wealth of proportions so incredible that it was scarcely believable. At the time of the death of Alexander’s father Philip II in 336 BC the Macedonian state was indebted to the sum of five hundred talents of silver. Yet less than five years later Alexander was the wealthiest man on the face of the earth and the Macedonian kingdom spanned some three thousand miles at its greatest length. The treasuries of Susa, Babylon and Persepolis rendered a treasure estimated at some one hundred and eighty thousand talents. A significant quanity of the captured gold was sent back to Amphipolis where a part was used for the striking of the Alexandrine distaters, the heaviest gold coins the world had yet known. Valued at forty silver drachms, this new denomination meant that Alexander’s discharged veteran soldiers could be paid out their one talent in 120 distaters. In practice, the relatively low output of gold distaters compared with the staters seems to suggest that perhaps they fulfilled a more ceremonial than practical role.

Lot 24

Lucania, Poseidonia AR Stater. Circa 470-445 BC. ?????, Poseidon standing right, wearing chlamys around shoulders, brandishing trident / Bull standing left, ?OME (retrograde) above. HN Italy 1114; SNG ANS 651-654 var. 7.49g, 18mm, 1h. About Very Fine. Harshly cleaned surfaces, some horn silver still present. From the Mark Gibbons Collection; Ex HD Rauch 87, 8 December 2010, lot 43.

Lot 293

Ionia, Smyrna AR Tetradrachm. Circa 150-143 BC. Metrodoros, magistrate. Turreted head of Tyche right / ???? ????? and magistrate's monogram within laurel wreath. Milne, Silver 5a corr. (monogram), obv. die D; Milne, Autonomous 165a corr. (same); SNG Copenhagen –; SNG von Aulock 2162 var. (different monogram); SNG Fitzwilliam 4575; Boston MFA 1933 = Warren 1129. 16.80g, 35mm, 12h. Good Very Fine.

Lot 294

Ionia, Teos AR Stater. Circa 478-449 BC. Female griffin with curved wings crouching to right on semicircle and pellet ornamented base, left forepaw raised; panther’s head below paw, THION around / Quadripartite incuse square. J.M. Balcer, The Early Silver Coinage of Teos, SNR 47 1968, 103; BMC 19. 11.68g, 24mm. Good Extremely Fine. An exceptional example, well struck on a very broad flan. Rare; 20 specimens are present in CoinArchives, of which this is by a considerable margin the finest. Ex Künker 216, 8 October 2012, lot 425; Ex Lanz 30, 26 November 1984, lot 267. Teos was founded by Minyans from Orchomenus along with Ionians and Boiotians perhaps as early as the ninth century BC. On account of its outstanding position between two perfect harbours Teos was a flourishing seaport with strong trade relations throughout the Aegean and eastern Mediterranean until the middle of the sixth century BC when Cyrus the Great invaded Lydia and Ionia. Fearing conquest and enslavement, the inhabitants of Teos fled overseas to the newly founded colonies of Abdera in Thrace and Phanagoria on the Asian side of the Cimmerian Bosporus. Abdera took the principal type of the griffin for its coinage, though the monster now faced to the left, or West, perhaps a consequence of their people’s flight from their homeland. However, Teos appears to have recovered fairly quickly; it seems that Teos was refounded by Abdera sometime soon after the Persian conquest of c. 545. Though this refoundation is not explicitly attested in any extant literature, an intriguing passage in the inscription of public imprecations from Teos (see P. Herrmann, ‘Teos und Abdera im 5. Jahrhundert v. Chr’, Chiron xi, 1981) alludes to ‘my mother’ being Abdera and ‘the mother of my mother’ being Teos, thus providing the only evidence for the refounding of Teos by Abdera. Strabo supports the refoundation hypothesis by stating that some of the colonists of Abdera later returned to Teos (xiv 1.30), and it is highly plausible since the city soon after contributed 17 ships to the Ionian revolt, and the Teians were present at the ill-fated battle of Lade in 494 BC in the centre of the line next to the large Chian navy. This is further supported by the numismatic evidence which shows that Teos’ first coinage was contemporary with that of Abdera, and Abdera’s were struck only soon after its colonization by the refugees from Teos; Kraay (Archaic and Classical Greek Coins, 1976) suggests that the coinages were started in planned conjunction. The present coin is an exemplary specimen of the early classical coinage of Teos, being exceptionally well engraved with a multitude of fine details in a beautiful archaizing style which leaves us in no doubt about the talent of the die cutter; of particular note are the fierce head of the beast and its splendid curved wings. Careful attention has been paid even to the panther head adjunct and the ornate base upon which the griffin crouches.

Lot 347

Mysia, Lampsakos EL Stater. Circa 480-450 BC. Forepart of Pegasos with curved wings to left, vine with bunches of grapes around / Quadripartite incuse square. A. Baldwin, Period I, pl. I, 11; BMC 9; Traité pl. 8, 2. 15.22g, 20mm. Good Extremely Fine. Lampsakos was founded in around 654/3 BC by Phokaian colonists, and in the sixth century became a dependency of Lydia; when the Lampsakenes had captured Miltiades, the Athenian tyrant of the Chersonesos, they were forced by Kroisos to set him free. After the fall of the Lydian kingdom in 547, the city then fell under the dominion of Persia. Lampsakos joined the Ionian cities in revolt in 499, but was conquered by Daurises in 498 or 497, and thereafter remained under Persian control until it was given by Artaxerxes to the exiled Athenian general Themistokles as part of the governorship of the Magnesian district. Themistokles' district also included the cities of Myos, and Magnesia itself, who along with Lampsakos paid him revenue of 50 talents per year, for 'meat', 'bread' and 'wine' respectively. At an uncertain date after the death of Themistokles in 459 BC, Lampsakos joined the Delian League, and is recorded in the tribute lists from 453/2, paying a phoros of fifteen talents. The dating of this issue has long proven to be difficult, with earlier scholars having attributed it to as far back as 525-500, though this has been shown to be unlikely, not least on account of the style being of a more dynamic and baroque nature than the rather static designs of the Archaic period. At the time Baldwin published her study of the electrum coinage of Lampsakos in 1914, she knew of just fourteen varieties encompassing approximately forty specimens of all of Lampsakene electrum. As for coins from the first period under which this coin falls, she knew of just thirteen specimens. Of course while additional specimens have appeared over the past century, this coin is still a rarity. The style is much more refined than the earliest issues of the period, and while it is tempting to perceive the Pegasos motif as one symbolising freedom, and thus try to place this as a product of the Ionian revolt, the general modern consensus is that the issue should belong to the period of 480-450. This being the case, it should reasonably be viewed within the context of Themistokles' control of the city – under his control, Lampsakos was required to pay tribute, for which purpose a substantial issue of coinage was necessary. The subsequent issue has the same types and is also of a highly refined engraving style, but shows the letter ? below the winged horse of the obverse, thus tying it to the Athenian Coinage Decree and the banning of the use of non-Athenian silver soon after 450 BC.

Lot 441

Baktria, Indo-Greek Kingdom, Strato I Soter AR Tetradrachm. Circa 105-85/0 BC. BA?I?E?? ??????? KAI ??????? ?????????, helmeted, diademed, and draped bust right / 'Maharajasa pracachasa dhramikasa Stratasa' in Kharosthi, Athena Alkidemos standing left, brandishing thunderbolt and aegis; monogram to left. Bopearachchi 23A; Haughton, Silver 14; Bopearachchi & Rahman -; SNG ANS 996 (same dies). 9.89g, 28mm, 12h. Good Extremely Fine. Exceptional condition and metal quality for the issue. Very Rare.

Lot 52

Bruttium, Kroton AR Stater. Circa 530-500 BC. Tripod, legs terminating in lion's feet; to right, heron standing left; QPO to left / Incuse tripod; to right, heron standing left; QPO to left. SNG ANS 248-50; HN Italy 2081. 7.98g, 25mm, 12h. Very Fine. Horn silver encrustations, areas of corrosion.

Lot 656

Trajan AV Aureus. Rome, AD 106. IMP TRAIANO AVG GER DAC P M TR P COS V P P, laureate, draped and cuirassed bust right / SPQR OPTIMO PRINCIPI, Trajan as triumphator in slow quadriga to left, holding branch and sceptre; car ornamented with Victory bearing wreath. Calicó -; RIC -; BMC -; Woytek 195n. 7.29g, 20mm, 6h. Good Extremely Fine. Extremely Rare, possibly only the second known example. The reverse of this coin depicts Trajan’s second triumph in AD 106, which he celebrated for his great victory earlier that year in the Second Dacian War. Trajan had in 101-102 launched an offensive against the powerful Dacian king Decebalus with whom Domitian had signed an unfavourable (and some would argue shameful) treaty some twenty years before, the price of which was the payment of an annual ‘subsidy’ of eight million sestertii and the presentation of a diadem from Domitian to Decebalus. In that war, Trajan succeeded in defeating the Dacians in a series of pitched battles, and reduced Decebalus to the status of client king. The victory was celebrated with a triumph (Trajan’s first), and later by the construction of the Tropaeum Traiani. Although this victory had greatly eroded Decebalus’ power, he nonetheless began to rearm straight away, to harbour Roman runaways and to pressure the neighbouring barbarian tribes to ally themselves with him. In 104 he organised a failed attempt on Trajan’s life by means of some Roman deserters, as well as capturing Trajan’s legate Longinus who he tried to use as a bargaining chip; Longinus however took poison to avoid compromising his country and emperor. Then finally in 105 Decebalus launched an invasion of the Roman-held territories north of the Danube. Trajan was not unprepared; by 105 the concentration of Roman troops assembled in the middle and lower Danube regions amounted to fourteen legions – half of the entire Roman army. Trajan ordered the construction of a massive bridge over the Danube designed by Apollodorus of Damascus, which for over 1,000 years was the longest arch bridge ever built both in terms of total and span length. The counter-offensive consisted mostly of the reduction of the Dacian fortress network which the Romans systematically stormed while denying the Dacians the ability to manoeuvre in the open. At last Decebalus’ main stronghold of Sarmizegetusa was taken by storm and razed to the ground. Decebalus himself escaped, but soon after committed suicide as a Roman cavalry scout named Tiberius Claudius Maximus was closing on him. Maximus delivered the head and right hand of the enemy king to his emperor, by whom he was decorated and immortalised in a relief on Trajan’s column. Trajan’s second triumph was understandably a grand affair, which was accompanied by spectacular games that the emperor held in celebration: ten thousand gladiators fought in these games, and ten thousand animals were sacrificed in thanks to the gods. The riches of Dacia (estimated recently at 165 tons of gold and 331 tons of silver) were invested in a series of important public works, the jewels of which were the forum and great market in Rome which bore his name, and the magnificent celebratory column depicting the glorious achievements of the campaign.

Lot 743

Didia Clara, Daughter of Didius Julianus, AV Aureus. March-May AD 193. DIDIA CLARA AVG, draped bust right / HILAR TEMPOR, Hilaritas standing left, holding palm branch in right hand and cornucopiae in left. C. 2; BMC 13 (Didius Julianus); RIC 10 (same); Calicó 2402. Very Fine. Scattered marks and scratches. Extremely Rare. Ex Sotheby's 'Collection of Highly Important Greek and Roman Coins', 20 June 1979; lot 123; Ex Münzen & Medaillen XXI, 9 March 1960, lot 64; Ex Vicomte de Quelen Collection, Rollin-Feuardent, 7 May 1888, lot 1267. This aureus, struck in the year her father bought the throne of the Roman Empire at auction, shows Didia Clara as the proud bearer of the title Augusta which she and her mother Manlia Scantilla had assumed. Although she was allegedly the most beautiful woman in all of Rome, we know hardly anything about her life. She was married to Cornelius Repentinus, who served as a prefect of Rome during her father’s brief reign. Silver coins of this enigmatic Augusta are rare, and in gold they are very seldom seen.

Lot 754

Septimius Severus AV Aureus. Contemporary Indian imitation, circa AD 202-210. SEVERVS PIVS AVG, laureate head right / LIBERALITAS AVGG V, Liberalitas standing left holding scales and cornucopiae. Cf. RIC 277; Cf. Calicó 2478. 7.27g, 20mm, 12h. Good Extremely Fine. There was significant trade between Rome and India in the first two centuries AD, with India's perfumes, spices and gems exchanged for Rome's linen, glass and wine. Large quantities of Roman gold and silver coins have been found in South India alongside many examples of local imitations, some faithful to the original style, others not so. Many of these coins display indications of having been mounted for jewellery, suggesting that the style of Roman coins (as well as the precious metal they were made from) was deemed fashionable by the wealthy citizens of India. From the early third century onwards, direct Indo-Roman trade declined, and communications with India passed into the hands of intermediaries, making the this coin among the latest of its kind.

Lot 826

Constantine I AV Solidus. Trier, AD 312-313. CONSTANTINVS PF AVG, laurel and jewel diademed head right / VIRTVS EXERCITVS GALL, Mars walking to right, carrying spear and trophy, chlamys over left shoulder; TR in exergue. RIC -; Depeyrot 26/1. 4.39g, 20mm, 6h. Good Extremely Fine. Extremely Rare, Depeyrot notes only one example. The reverse of this coin honours the army of Gaul which was responsible for supporting Constantine's (illegal) elevation to the purple upon the death of his father at Eboracum (York) in AD 306, fought under him against the Frankish and Germanic tribes in several campaigns between 306 and 310, and which ultimately delivered him Rome and sole rule of the West in 312. The army of Gaul was a battle-hardened and effective force, regularly tested against the barbarian tribes which at this time made frequent incursions into Roman lands. They had also demonstrated a strong sense of loyalty to Constantine in 308 when the former emperor Maximian, then an exile in his realm, attempted to subvert a contingent of the army by declaring that Constantine was dead, taking the purple and pledging a large donative to any who would support him. Maximian failed to win them over and was forced to flee, and then commit suicide. It was on account of this devoted and veteran army that Constantine was able to win a crushing victory over the numerically superior force of Maxentius at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge. The army of Gaul was drawn up in two lines, according to their customary tactics, but Constantine, perceiving that the opposing force outnumbered him and could envelop his line, suddenly reduced the second line and extended the front of his first to match that of Maxentius. Such manoeuvres in the moment of danger can only be executed without confusion by experienced troops, and commonly prove decisive. Yet because the battle was begun towards the end of the day and was contested with great obstinacy throughout the night there was, in the words of E. Gibbon, 'less room for the conduct of the generals than for the courage of the soldiers' (Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. 1, Ch. XIV, 150). Maxentius' units were forced back until he had no choice but to attempt a desperate retreat over the wooden pontoon bridge he had hastily built across the Tiber, the stone one having been destroyed in the course of siege preparations. This bridge collapsed, trapping Maxentius' soldiers who either surrendered or, like his Praetorian cohorts, were killed to a man. Maxentius himself drowned while trying to swim across the river in desperation for escape. Thus from the very moment he had defeated Maxentius, gold, silver and bronze coins were struck at Constantine's former capital and stronghold of Augusta Treverorum (Trier) celebrating the glory and heroism of the Gallic Army ('GLORIA EXERCITVS GALL' and 'VIRTVS EXERCITVS GALL').

Lot 925

Byzantine circa 4th century AD Æ weight of three nomismata. Cross above large N ?; all within ornate archway / Two concentric circles. Bendall 99. 17mm, 12.62g. Very Fine, some silver inlay remaining. From the Mark Gibbons Collection.

Lot 926

Byzantine 5th-6th Century AD Weight of 3 Unciae. Uniface, square weight with slightly curved edges leading to a slightly bevelled top edge ornamented with engraved designs. At the centre, on a double line base enriched with garlands below, are the facing busts of two nimbate, crowned and draped imperial figures, their faces inlaid with silver and their robes with copper; around the busts is an inlaid copper laurel wreath and there are inlaid silver ornaments at 12, 3, 6 and 9 o’clock; in each of the two upper corners of the weight is an engraved flower with an inlaid silver centre; in each of the bottom two corners is the inlaid silver letter ? (= 3) The reverse is plain with some file marks as made. C.f. Bendall 61 ff. L. Holland, 'An Unusual Bronze Coin-Weight from Caesarea-Maritima,' IAPN p. 94 and pl. 30, 2 (this piece). 80.40g, 34 x 35 x 9mm. Extremely Fine, displaying original patina as found but with the top surface cleaned to reveal the design and the original golden-brown colour of the bronze, the red of the copper and the grey silver. Very Rare. A remarkable example of late Roman - early Byzantine metal work. Ex LHS 102, 29 April 2008, lot 473.

Lot 609

Vassoio in silver plate ovale con piano cesellato e bordo mosso a più volute, cm.45x72, primi'900.

Lot 101

An Edwardian silver mounted oak tantalus – two bottles chipped

Lot 113

A silver mounted swagger stick – 'St' John's Ambulance Brigade' – From the Stan Gill Collection

Lot 116

Three pairs of silver sugar tongs and a cased set of six silver-handled tea knives (9)

Lot 117

A small white metal beaker – 'Tostrup 1855', a Chester silver mustard and a jar with cranberry glass liner – cover a/f (3)

Lot 118

A silver trophy goblet – London 1869

Lot 120

A small silver photo frame – Chester 1930's, 5” high

Lot 121

A continental .925 swan cut glass bowl and two silver spoons (3)

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