Thomas Del Mar Ltd Antique Arms, Armour & Militaria London Wednesday 6th December 2017
Auction EnquiRiEs AnD infoRmAtion Sale Number: Code name:
27 Tiber
Enquiries:
catalogue
Thomas Del Mar Patrick Shutt
ÂŁ15 plus postage
consultants: Ian Eaves Sachiko Hori Peter Smith Charles Webb
Thomas Del Mar Ltd 25 Blythe Road London W14 0PD Tel: +44 (0) 207 602 4805 Fax: +44 (0) 207 602 5973 Email: enquiries@thomasdelmar.com
Front cover: lots 319 & 383 Back cover: lot 191
Photography: Rolant Dafis
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Thomas Del Mar Ltd ANTIQUE ARMS, ARMOUR & MILITARIA PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE DOWAGER COUNTESS CAWDOR THE RICHARD HOLMES COLLECTION PROPERTY FROM THE BERGER COLLETION EDUCATIONAL TRUST, SOLD TO BENEFIT FUTURE PHILANTHROPY PROPERTY OF THE LATE ANTHONY DE REUCK THE LEATHER COLLECTION OF LORINERY THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN PROPERTY FROM A FRENCH COLLECTION
TO BE SOLD BY AUCTION AT Thomas Del Mar Ltd 25 Blythe Road London W14 0PD
PUBLIC EXHIBITION Sunday 3rd December 12 noon to 4pm Monday 4th December 10am to 7pm Tuesday 5th December 10am to 5pm
DAY OF SALE
Wednesday 6th December 2017 at 11am, precisely
This auction is conducted by Thomas Del Mar Ltd in accordance with our Conditions of Business printed in the back of this catalogue. All questions and comments relating to the operation of this sale or to its contents should be addressed to Thomas Del Mar Ltd and NOT to Sotheby’s.
View the catalogue online at www.thomasdelmar.com www.the-saleroom.com/thomasdelmar
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Important Information for Buyers All lots are offered subject to Thomas Del Mar Ltd.’s Conditions of Business and to reserves. The Conditions of Business for Buyers are published at the end of the catalogue. Please note that all measurements including bore sizes are approximate. Estimates are published as a guide only and are subject to review. The actual hammer price of a lot may well be higher or lower than the range of figures given and there are no fixed “starting prices”. A Buyer’s Premium of 24% is applicable to all lots in this sale. Excepting lots sold under Temporary Import rules which are marked with the symbol ‡ (see below), the Buyer’s Premium is subject to VAT at the standard rate (currently 20%). Lots offered for sale under the auctioneer’s margin scheme and VAT on the Buyer’s Premium is payable by all buyers. Lots marked with the symbol ‡ have been imported from outside the European Union (EU) to be sold at auction under Temporary Import Rules. When released to buyers within the EU, including the UK, the buyer will become the importer and must pay VAT at the rate of 5% on the hammer price. The Buyer’s premium will be subject to the standard VAT rate at 20%. Buyers outside the EU will normally be eligible to obtain a refund in respect of VAT, upon satisfactory documentary evidence of exportation. Further information on this matter is available on request. ~ Restricted Materials Lots marked with the symbol ~ have been identified at the time of cataloguing as containing organic material which may be subject to restrictions regarding import or export. The information is made available for the convenience of bidders and the absence of the symbol is not a warranty that there are no restrictions regarding import or export of the Lot. Thomas Del Mar Ltd. will be pleased to execute bids on behalf of those clients unable to attend the sale in person, subject to our Conditions of Business. All bids must be submitted in writing in good time and lots will always be purchased as cheaply as possible (depending on any other bids received, reserves and competition in the saleroom). This service is offered free of charge. Thomas Del Mar Ltd. can supply quotations for shipping of purchases, including transit insurance and VAT refund administration fees, and will assist in the application for any export licences which may be required. Administration fees may be applicable for this. Buyers are reminded that it is their responsibility to comply with UK export regulations and with any local import requirements. The display mounts used in the catalogue and sale exhibition, including armour stands and mannequins, may be made available to the successful buyer of the relevant lot. Please contact us for prices and further details.
Payment Payment is due in sterling at the conclusion of the sale and before purchases can be released. Please note that we require seven days to clear sterling cheques unless special arrangements have been made in advance of the sale. We are pleased to accept major credit cards (regrettably we are unable to accept American Express), for which a surcharge will be made of 3% of the transaction total. International debit cards attract a 3% surcharge. There is no charge for payments made by UK registered debit card. Cash and credit card payments above £6,000 and “card holder not present” payments above £2,000 will not be accepted without prior arrangement. Electronic transfers may be sent directly to our Bank: HSBC Bank Plc 38 High Street Dartford Kent DA1 1DG IBAN No.: BIC.: Sort Code: Account No.: Account Name.:
GB18HBUK40190481632140 HBUKGB4B 40-19-04 81632140 Thomas Del Mar Ltd
Storage On receipt of cleared funds, lots can be collected from Thomas Del Mar Ltd.’s premises at 25 Blythe Road, London, W14 0PD. Please note that collection is BY APPOINTMENT on +44 (0) 207 602 4805. All lots should be cleared within one month of the auction date, after which they will be transferred to a third party for storage. A transfer fee of £10 per lot plus all incurred transfer and storage costs due to the third party will be payable prior to release. iii
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Select Bibliography Atkinson 1978
Atkinson, John A., The British Duelling Pistol, London, 1978
Back 1993
Back, D.H.L., The Mantons, 1993
Blair 1969
Blair, Claude, “A Cuirassier Armour in the Scott Collection and other pieces from the Capodilista Armoury“ in Scottish Art Review, Vol. XII, No. 3, 1969
Boccia & Coelho 1967
Boccia, L.G. & Coelho, E.T., l’Arte dell’Armatura in Italian, Milan, 1967
Brooker 2016
Brooker, Robert, British Military Pistols and Associated Edged Weapons, Hong Kong, 2016
Brooker 2006
Brooker, Robert E., Armes de poing militaires francaises: Du XVIe au XIXe siecle et leurs influences a l'etranger, 2006
Culme 1977
Culme, John David, Nineteenth Century Silver, London, 1977
Damien 1993
Damien, Andree (preface), La Manufacture d’armes de Versailles et Nicolas-Noel Boutet: Manufacture nationale, imperiale et royale, 1793-1818, Versailles, 1993
de Cosson & Burgess 1881
de Cosson, Alexander & Burgess, William, “Catalogue of the Exhibition of Ancient Helmets and Examples of Mail” in Archaeological Journal, Vol. XXXVII, 1881
Dean 1920
Dean, Bashford, Helmets and Body Armor in Modern Warfare, New Haven, 1920
di Carpegna 1997
di Carpegna, Brescian Firearms, Rome, 1997
Dickens 1999
Dickens, B., “‘M·B’ The Gun Makers’ Silversmith - A Question of Attribution” in Journal of the Arms & Armour Society, March 1999, pp. 110-114
Dickinson & Härke 1992
Dickinson, T & Härke, H., “Early Anglo-Saxon Shields”, Archaeologia, Vol. 110, 1992
Dillon 1888
Dillon, Harold A., “Arms and Armour at Westminster, the Tower and Greenwich”, Archaeologia, Vol. LI, 1888, pp.52; 57
Eaves 1989
Eaves, Ian, “On the Remains of a Jack of Plate Excavated from Beeston Castle in Cheshire” in Journal of the Arms and Armour Society, Vol. XIII, no. 2 (1989)
Ezell 1981
Ezell, Edward C., Handguns of the World: Military Revolvers and Self-Loaders from 1870 to 1945, New York, 1981
Ezell 1981
Ezell, Edward Clinton, Handguns of the World: Military Revolvers and Self-Loaders from 1870 to 1945, Mechanicsburg, 1981
ffoulkes 1916
ffoulkes, C.J., Inventory and Survey of the Armouries of the Tower of London, Vol. 1, London, 1916
Flayderman 1998
Flayderman, Norm, Flayderman’s Guide to Antique American Firearms and Their Values, 1998
Godoy & Leydi 2003
Godoy, J.A. & Leydi, S., Parures Triomphales: Le maniérisme dans l’art de l’armature italienne, Geneva, 2003
Harding 1997
Harding, D.F., An Introduction to East India Company Smallarms, c.1775-1851, London, 1997
Hayward et al. 1963
Hayward, J.F. et al., The Kretzschmar von Kienbusch Collection of armor and arms, Princeton, 1963
iv
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Hinde & Herbert 2005
Hinde, K. & Herbert, J., The Collections of the Worshipful Company of Cutlers of London: London made knives and their marks, London, 2005
Holinshead 1557
Holinshead, Ralph, The First Volume of the Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland, London, 1557
Kovacs 2016
Kovacs, Tibor, Maces, War-hammers and Topors from Hungarian Collections, Budapest, 2016
Laking 1920
Laking, G.F., A Record of European Armour and Arms, Vol. II, London, 1920
Laking 1921
Laking, G.F., A Record of Armour and Arms, London, 1921
Larocca 1996
Larocca, Donald, The Gods of War: Sacred Imagery and the Decoration of Arms and Armor, New York, 1996
Lenk 1965
Lenk, Torsten, The Flintlock: Its Origin and Development, Stockport, 1965
London Museum 1954
The Museum of London, London Museum Medieval Catalogue (1954)
Mann 1932
Mann, J.G., “Sir John Smythe’s Armour in Portraiture” in Coinnoisseur, Vol. XC, August 1932
Mann 1951
Mann, J.G. (ed.), Armour Made in the Royal Workshops at Greenwich, London, 1951
Mills 2001
Mills, Nigel, Saxon and Viking Artefacts, Witham, 2001
Missilier & Ricketts 1988
Missilier, Philippe & Ricketts, Howard, Splendeur des Armes Orientales, Paris, 1988
Müller & Kölling 1990
Müller, H. & Kölling, H., Europaische Hieb- und Stichwaffen aus der Sammlung des Museums fur Deutsche Geschichte, Berlin, 1990
Neal & Back 1978
Neal, W. Keith & Back, D.H.L., The Manton Supplement, 1978
Oakeshott 1960
Oakeshott, R.E., The Archaeology of Weapons: Arms and Armour from Prehistory to the Age of Chivalry, London, 1960
Popov 2015
Popov, Stoyan, The Maces from the Present Bulgarian Lands, 10th-17th C. AD., Sofia, 2015
Richardson 2016
Richardson, Thomas, Arms and Armour of the Elizabethan Court, Leeds, 2015
Schedelmann 1944
Schedelman, Hans, Die Wiener Buschenmacher Und Buchsenschafter, Berlin, 1944
Southwick 2001
Southwick, Leslie, London Silver-hilted Swords, their makers, suppliers and allied traders, with directory, Leeds, 2001
Ward 1983
Ward, Wilfrid J., “Duels & Duelling” in Guns Review, June 1983, p.449
Williams 1997
Williams, David, Late Saxon Stirrup-strap Mounts: A Classification and Catalogue, York, 1997
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Eastern Arms and Armour VARIOUS OWNERS
1 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD with slightly curved suriagi blade with bo-hi and midare hamon, o-kissaki boshi, silver habaki, tang with ‘Nami’ character and Bun mon with two mekugi-ana, iron mokko-gata tsuba inlaid with shinchu foliage and pellets, tsuka, soft metal dragon menuki, in its lacquered saya with gilt mon, with NTBK certificate 325558 61.4 cm; 24 ¼ in blade £1500-2000 2 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD with strongly curved blade with midare hamon, tang signed ‘Takenaka Kunihoko saku’ with one mekugiana, in shira saya painted with the same signature as the tang 70.5 cm; 27 ¾ in blade £1200-1800 3 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD with curved blade with suguha hamon, tang signed ‘Kanemitsu’ and pierced with two mekugi-ana, in shira saya, with its iron tate-maru-gata tsuba decorated with copper flowerheads, fabric-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka with foliate menuki, brass kashira and fuchi, in red lacquered saya 59.5 cm; 23 ½ in blade (2) £1000-1400
1
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4 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD, CIRCA 1830 with Shinogi-zukuri iori-mune blade with suguha hamon, plain kiri-yasuri tang pierced with a single mekugi-ana, Ko-maru boshi, iron tate-maru-gata tsuba pierced with an openwork wave pattern, silver fuchi and kashira each decorated with firey clouds, the latter inhabited by a dragon, gilt-metal dragon menuki, in its lacquered saya with silver mounts en suite, with certificate 71.7 cm; 28 ¼ in blade
7 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD, 17TH CENTURY with curved blade with notare hamon with choji, tang signed ‘Kaga no Kuni Fujiwara Yukinobu’ and pierced with a single mekugi-ana, copper mokko gata tsuba decorated with traditional landscape scenes, fabric-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka with gilt floral menuki kashira and fuchi, in black lacquered saya 68.4 cm; 27 in blade
£4000-6000
£1500-2000
5 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), 13TH/14TH CENTURY WITH EDO PERIOD MOUNTS with slightly curved single-edged blade formed with midare hamon, plain tang pierced with two mekugi-ana, iron Mokkogata tsuba with roped mimi, fabric-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka, in its lacquered saya with engraved soft metal mounts 60.3 cm; 23 ¾ on blade
8 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD with curved iori-mune blade with midare-hamon, tang (shortened) signed ‘Yasutsugu’ and pierced with two mekugi-ana and with yasu tsugu (hollyhock) mon, in shira saya 50.8 cm; 20 in blade £1000-1400
£2000-3000 6 A JAPANESE SWORD (KATANA), EDO PERIOD with slightly curved single-edged Iori-mune blade with midare hamon, kiri-jiri tang signed ‘Yoshinobu saku’ and pierced with two mekugi-ana, Shakudo tate-maru-gata tsuba, kashira, fuchi and menuki decorated with flames inhabited by dragons, in its lacquered saya with shakudo kogai decorated en suite 62.8 cm; 24 ¾ in blade
9 A JAPANESE SWORD (KOTO TACHI), MUROMACHI PERIOD AND LATER with strongly curved single-edged blade with midare-hamon, tang signed ‘Noshu Kanefusa’ and pierced with two mekugiana, iron kaku-mokko-gata tsuba, gilt fabric-bound grip with foliate menuki and tsuka-kashira decorated with trees enriched with gold, in wooden fabric-bound saya (small losses) 87.2 cm; 34 ½ in blade
£2000-3000
‡ £1200-1800 10 A JAPANESE SWORD (TACHI), EDO PERIOD with single-edged strongly curved blade, plain tang pierced with three mekugi-ana (rusted, small losses), in a black painted wooden saya (cracked, losses) 88.1 cm; 34 ¾ in blade ‡ £200-300
2
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11 A JAPANESE SHORTSWORD (WAKIZASHI), EDO PERIOD with slightly curved blade with midare hamon, plain tang pierced with a single mekugi-ana, iron tsuba chiselled with leaves, fabric-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka, copper mounts, in lacquered saya with signed kozuka 32.8 cm; 12 ⅞ in blade
13 A JAPANESE DAGGER (AIKUCHI), EDO PERIOD with kaku-mune blade, small copper tsuba, leather-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka, bronze monster menuki, in its lacquered saya decorated with a gilt bird, and with inscribed kozuka decorated with a crayfish 24.2 cm; 9 ½ in blade
£400-600
£400-600
12 A JAPANESE DAGGER (TANTO), EDO PERIOD with straight blade with mitsu-mune and suguha hamon, tang signed ‘Hizen kuni Tadayoshi’ and pierced with a single mekugi-ana, brass tsuba formed as a curled monstrous cat leather-bound sharkskin-covered tsuka with iron mounts, in its lacquered saya, complete with a kozuka with decorated copper and gilt grip 25.5 cm; 10 in blade
14 A JAPANESE SHORTSWORD (WAKIZASHI), EDO PERIOD with curved single-edged blade (tip rounded, worn), tang signed ‘Hishu Kikuchi ju Kunimoto’ and pierced with a single mekugi-ana, and iron tsuba inlaid with copper 47.2 cm; 18 ⅝ in blade
£400-600
4
£200-300
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15 A JAPANESE SPEARHEAD (SUGU-YARI) MOUNTED AS A DAGGER, EDO PERIOD with long tapering tang, lacquered grip and saya each enriched with shell 12.5 cm; 5 in head £300-500 16 A LARGE JAPANESE SWORD GUARD (TSUBA), EDO PERIOD of iron with kozuka hitsu-ana, kogai hitsu-ana and udenuki-ana, decorated in soft metals with wheels and foliage 9.2 cm; 3 ⅔ in ‡ £200-300 17 THREE JAPANESE SKEWERS (KOGAI), EDO PERIOD the first of iron, of two pieces, decorated with a web design in soft metal (small losses); the second in copper, also of two pieces and engraved with foliage; and the third of copper, inlaid with soft metal foliage, the three cased together the first: 19.2 cm; 7 ⅝ in overall £300-350 18 AN UNUSUAL AXE HEAD, PROBABLY CHINESE WARRING STATES PERIOD, 5TH/3RD CENTURY B.C. formed entirely of bronze, with flat rear face cast with a birdshaped mark, the front decorated with a key pattern (chips), and short socket 8.7 cm; 3 ⅜ in high
15
£250-350 19 THREE CHINESE IRON STIRRUPS, 19TH CENTURY with oval tread, arched sidebars rising to a pierced loop for suspension and retaining some soft metal inlay (worn) £80-100
16
18
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21 20 THREE SOUTH EAST ASIAN DAGGERS (KRIS) AND A FURTHER MALAYSIAN DAGGER (BADE BADE), 19TH/EARLY 20TH CENTURY the first with straight double-edged blade, engraved brass selut and carved jawa demam hilt (cracked), in its wooden scabbard; the second similar, in its wooden scabbard; the third with wavy blade and hardwood jawa demam hilt with carved decoration, in its wooden scabbard; the fourth with curved blade, carved grip and scabbard the first: 33.2; 13 ⅛ in blade (4) £120-180 21 A PHILLIPPINES (MORO) MAIL AND HORN SHIRT, LATE 19TH/20TH CENTURY formed of horn plates joined by butted brass rings of varying sizes, extending to the thigh, and covering the upper portion of the arms, opening at the front and secured by three brass lugs (one missing, horn with small cracks, losses) ‡ £400-600
6
22 TWO INDIAN DAGGERS (KATAR), 18TH CENTURY the first with sharply tapering fullered blade formed with a heavily reinforced tip, and integral iron hilt with three grip-bars; the second with a tapering fullered blade formed with a medial ridge, and iron hilt with a pair of faceted grip-bars the first: 24.1 cm; 9 ½ in blade £200-300 23 AN INDO-PERSIAN ARM DEFENCE (BAZU BAND), 19TH CENTURY formed of a gutter-shaped main-plate and an inner plate joined by a series of hinges, embossed with an elliptical moulding on each face and the principle edges reinforced with a scalloped brass border (small chips and holes) 34.0 cm; 13 ⅜ in £100-150
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~ 24 AN INDIAN DAGGER (JAMBIYA) WITH RHINOCEROS HORN HILT, 19TH CENTURY with slightly curved double-edged blade of flattened-diamond section, carved rhinoceros horn hilt with pointed pommel, and diamond-shaped iron button washer 22.0 cm; 8 ⅝ in blade £500-700 25 AN INDIAN DAGGER (JAMBIYA), MID-19TH CENTURY with curved double-edged blade formed with a medial ridge over its entire length on each face, and carved dark horn hilt of characteristic form (small losses) 36.0 cm; 14 ⅛ in blade £250-350
26 A FINE INDIAN DECORATED SWORD (TALWAR) HILT, LAST QUARTER OF THE 19TH CENTURY comprising a pair of long langets with pierced foliate terminals, a pair of quillons formed as flattened pierced flowerheads, recurved knuckle-guard with fluted bud-shaped finial, outerguard en suite, large disc-shaped pommel with domed button on a foliate washer and rising to a matching budshaped finial, integral grip, the whole decorated throughout with elaborate designs of differing conventional flowers and foliage within a framework of pellets, all on a hatched blued ground, and in fine condition throughout 19.5 cm; 7 ¾ in high £2000-3000
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27
~ 27 A NORTH INDIAN DAGGER (PESH KABZ) WITH RHINOCEROS HORN HILT, SECOND HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY with strongly tapering blade formed with slightly curved and rounded backedge and double-edged towards the point, carved rhinoceros horn pistol grip with engraved shaped iron ferrule and tang button 33.3 cm; 13 in blade £700-900 28 A NORTH INDIAN DAGGER WITH HORN HILT, SECOND HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY with curved double-edged blade formed with a slender central fuller on each face, carved horn pistol grip with diamond-shaped iron tang washer 26.7 cm; 10 ½ in blade £250-350 7
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31
32
29 A LARGE INDO-PERSIAN DAGGER (JAMBIYA), SECOND HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY with curved double-edged blade formed with a full-length medial ridge on each face, retaining some gold scrollwork at the forte, iron hilt of characteristic form, decorated with flowers and foliage and retaining traces of gold 34.7 cm; 13 ¾ in blade
32 A NEPALESE SILVER-MOUNTED KUKRI KNIFE, LATE 19TH CENTURY with curved single-edged blade notched at the forte, hardwood grip carved with a band of foliage, in its leathercovered wooden scabbard with silver mounts chiselled with foliage and beadwork on the outer face 39.0 cm; 15 ⅜ in
£400-600
Provenance The P. Holstein Collection, sold Hotel Drouot, Paris, 8 May 1957, lot 129
30 AN OTTOMAN SILVER-MOUNTED DAGGER (JAMBIYA), TURKEY, 17TH/18TH CENTURY with curved double-edged blade formed with a long raised central rib on each face, and well formed hilt encased in sheet silver (small dents) 28.0 cm; 11 in blade £250-350 31 AN INDIAN DAGGER (PESH-KABZ), MID-18TH CENTURY with single-edged reinforced blade of watered steel, banded horn grip, pierced iron suspension loop, in its leather-covered wooden scabbard with pronounced iron chape covering the lower half and strongly curved to a bud-shaped terminal 32.5 cm; 12 ¾ in blade £400-600
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The Property of a Collector, sold in these rooms, 25th June 2008, lot 44 (the first). £120-180 33 A SMALL INDIAN KNIFE, 19TH CENTURY, ANOTHER, EUROPEAN, LATE 17TH CENTURY AND AN INDIAN SILVER SWORD CHAPE, 19TH CENTURY the first with slightly curved single-edged blade integral tang and rounded pommel, in its silk-covered scabbard; the second with single-edged blade struck with a mark, and later wooden grips; the third chased with patterns of flowers and foliage the first: 12.8 cm; 5 ⅛ in blade (3) £80-120
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34
35 34 AN INDIAN DAGGER (CHILANUM), 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY finely formed, with strongly curved blade with a reinforced tip, a pair of three-quarter length fullers (one small hole), iron hilt extending over the lower portion of the blade in a series of stylised bird’s head mouldings, comprising slightly curved V-shaped guard, V-shaped pommel with tapering mouldings on the top, retaining traces of early gilt scrollwork, and faceted lotus bud-shaped finial 24.0 cm; 9 ½ in blade £800-1200
35 AN INDIAN DAGGER (KATAR), 18TH CENTURY with strongly tapering blade formed with a reinforced tip, a pair of converging fullers divided by slender ridge-lines and decorated with a central panel of delicate foliage on a finely watered ground, hilt of characteristic form including a pair of shaped grip-bars joined by a pair of delicate scrollwork bars, the side bars chiselled on each side with delicate foliage en suite with the blade, with bouquets of flowers top and bottom, and retaining much early gold finish, in an early fabric-covered wooden scabbard (light wear) 25.0 cm; 9 ⅞ in blade
36 AN INDIAN DAGGER (CHILANUM), LATE 17TH/18TH CENTURY with curved tapering double-edged blade formed with a central rib and a reinforced tip, iron hilt comprising bifurcated guard and pommel, the latter extending on one side to form a recurved knuckle-guard with stylised monsterhead finial, and bud-shaped pommel button (areas of pitting and wear) 23.0 cm; 9 in blade £300-400
£1200-1800
9
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37 A MASSIVE NEPALESE SACRIFICIAL BEHEADING SWORD (RAM DAO), 18TH/19TH CENTURY with characteristically heavy hatchet blade of flattened wedgeshaped section terminating in a recurved point, long slender tang for attaching to the grip (now missing) and in brown patinated condition throughout 143.5 cm; 56 ½ in overall Weapons such as this were used in the sacrifice of animals to Kali, the most blood thirsty of the Hindu Gods. For a discussion of similar weapons and this goddess sea Larocca 1996, pp. 6-8. £200-300 38 AN INDO-PERSIAN AXE (TABAR), 18TH/19TH CENTURY with double-sided head each formed as a crescent decorated on each side with chiselled floral scrollwork enriched with gold koftgari and with some blued finish, terminal spike formed with a circular panel at the base pierced with nine slipped circles, and long tubular haft decorated with a damascus pattern and with rounded basal cap 99.5 cm; 39 ¼ in overall £200-300
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39 AN INDO-PERSIAN PAINTED COMPOSITE BOW AND THIRTEEN ARROWS, 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY the bow of characteristic form, painted in green and red with scrolling foliage and flowers on a yellow ground (losses); one arrow with leaf-shaped head and integral iron haft; six arrows, each with leaf-shaped head, bamboo haft and bone nock; another, similar, with pierced head; two further iron arrows with near conical heads; and two arrows with conical heads and bamboo hafts and a further short arrow; together with two early carrying bags the bow: 45.0 cm; 17 ¾ in (16) £350-450
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39 10
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40 A FINE INDIAN SWORD (SHAMSHIR) WITH ENAMELLED SILVER HILT, LUCKNOW, FIRST HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY with earlier Persian curved single-edged blade of watered steel, chiselled silver hilt comprising a pair of pierced foliate langets, straight quillons with ram’s head terminals, integral grip rising to a matching ram’s head pommel, the greater part of the hilts surface chased and enamelled in polychrome with foliage inhabited by exotic animals and birds, in its red velvetcovered wooden scabbard (areas of wear) with silver mounts comprising two bands with rings for suspension and chape all decorated en suite with the hilt (the enamels with small losses on the hilt and scabbard mounts), 82.0 cm; 32 ½ in blade A similar example is illustrated in Missillier and Ricketts 1988, no. 223, p. 134. £2000-3000
40
11
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41 A FINE INDIAN DAGGER (KARD), LUCKNOW, FIRST HALF OF THE 19TH CENTURY with earlier Persian finely watered single-edged blade with traces of a gold inlaid mark on one face (the tip with a very small chip), the tang decorated with gold scrollwork around its border and over the base of the forte, silver grip-scales chased and enamelled in polychrome with foliage inhabited by exotic birds, in its wooden silk-covered scabbard (losses), with enamelled silver locket and chape en suite with the hilt (the enamel with loses) 19.0 cm; 7 ½ in blade A similar example is illustrated in Missillier and Ricketts 1988, no. 223, p. 134. £1000-1500
42
~ 42 A RARE INDIAN IVORY-MOUNTED DAGGER (PESH-KABZ), 18TH CENTURY with straight single-edged blade formed with a reinforced back-edge, characteristic carved ivory grip, rising to form a down-curved beaked pommel, in its carved ivory scabbard with carved moulded finial, the top and bottom each in imitation of a locket and chape, the former with a small pierced moulding for suspension (small chips and cracks) 18.0 cm; 7 ⅛ in blade £800-1200
43 TWO INDO-PERSIAN DAGGERS (PESH-KABZ), AN AFGHAN DAGGER (CHOORA) AND A PERSIAN DAGGER (JAMBIYA), 18TH/19TH CENTURY the first with tapering recurved blade of T-section, encrusted with gold flowers and scrolls at the forte, the hilt decorated en suite and fitted with a pair of bone grip-scales; the second with tapering reinforced blade of T-section, wooden grip, and leather-covered wooden scabbard; the third with straight tapering reinforced blade, iron hilt fitted with dark wood grip-scales, and leather-covered wooden scabbard; the fourth with curved double-edged blade decorated with a panel of foliage inhabited by a reclining animal on each face of the forte and with calligraphy along the remainder of its length, iron hilt (rusted), in its matching scabbard the first: 21.3 cm; 8 ¼ in blade (4) £350-450
12
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44
44 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR) WITH SILVER-ENCRUSTED HILT, LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point and formed with three fullers of unequal length on each face, russet iron hilt chiselled with large flowers and foliage in low relief and each encrusted with silver (small losses), comprising a pair of shaped langets, short quillons, knuckle-guard with recurved bud-shaped finial, disc pommel and integral grip, in its black cotton-covered wooden scabbard (small losses), with small silver chape 76.8 cm; 30 ¼ in blade £400-600
45
46
45 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), LATE 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point, formed with a pair of long fullers on each face and stamped with a double eye-lash mark on one face and a further mark at the forte, engraved gilt-brass hilt decorated with boldly scrolling foliage and flowers, comprising a pair of langets with shaped terminals, short quillons, knuckle-guard, and integral grip rising to a horsehead pommel set with a red paste in one eye (the other missing), in its blue velvetcovered wooden scabbard with gilt-brass openwork locket and chape each decorated with flowers and scrolling foliage 76.8 cm; 30 ¼ in blade
46 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 18TH CENTURY with broad curved blade double-edged towards the point, cut with a narrow fuller along the back and stamped with a star mark on each side, iron hilt of characteristic form, comprising langets with shaped terminals, mushroomshaped quillons, recurved knuckle-guard with stylised monster-head finial, large disc-shaped pommel, the button resting on a petal-shaped domed washer, and the hilt encased in silver decorated with gilt panels pricked with foliage 78.0 cm; 30 ¾ in blade £350-450
£300-400
13
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47
48
49
50
47 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point, iron hilt of characteristic form including a pair of langets swelling towards the tips, a pair of quillons, recurved knuckle-guard with stylised monsterhead finial, large disc-shaped pommel and attenuated button, the hilt encrusted with gold foliage enriched with silver pellets 81.5 cm; 32 ⅛ in blade
50 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), EARLY 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the tip and formed with a slender groove along the back-edge, iron hilt of characteristic form including a pair of langets with shaped terminals, recurved knuckle-guard with bifurcated bud-shaped tip, and disc pommel with up-turned brim, in a later red velvetcovered scabbard 72.0 cm; 28 ⅜ in blade
£250-350
£200-300
48 AN INDIAN SWORD (KHANDA), LATE 17TH/18TH CENTURY with flat-blade swelling and double-edged towards the low triangular point, etched with a short Devanagn’ inscription on one face, iron hilt comprising a pair of langets with bud-shaped terminals, broad figure-of-eight shaped knuckle-guard with pierced border, rising to a broad knuckle-guard decorated en suite, flat pear-shaped pommel with long attenuated button on a flower-shaped rosette, and integral grip 75.0 cm; 29 ½ in blade
51 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR) AND AN INDIAN SPEAR, 19TH CENTURY the first with curved bladed double-edged towards the point, silver-plated hilt of characteristic form including large disc pommel with domed finial and pierced button for a tassel, in its scabbard; the second with tapering head of flattened-diamond section, writhen globular basal moulding and tapering socket the first: 77.0 cm; 30 ⅜ in blade (2) £250-350
£250-300 49 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), EARLY 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the tip, iron hilt of characteristic form encrusted with a symmetrical design of gold scrolling foliage, including large disc pommel with a Devanagn’ maker’s inscription framing the outer face, and integral grip decorated en suite 72.0 cm; 28 ⅜ in blade £250-350
52 TWO INDIAN SWORDS (TALWAR) the first with straight blade double-edged towards the point, formed with a fuller along the greater part of its length on each face, iron hilt of characteristic form including large disc-shaped pommel (heavily rusted overall); the second similar (the blade rusted over its second half), with two leather-covered wooden scabbards (chapes missing) with iron looped lockets the first: 74.7 cm; 29 ⅜ in blade (2) £100-150
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53
54
53 AN UNUSUAL INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 19TH CENTURY with straight double-edged blade with traces of an inscription within a short fuller on each face and etched with a ‘watered’ pattern, iron hilt of characteristic form, comprising a pair of short quillons with button-shaped terminals, a pair of langets with shaped terminals, disc pommel with a domed finial, and integral grip, decorated over almost its entire surface with bouquets of flowers against a punched ground within linear frames in thickly encrusted silver koftgari 73.5 cm; 29 in blade £200-250 54 AN INDIAN SWORD (FIRANGI), 18TH CENTURY with straight fullered blade of European make struck with a double eye-lash mark on one face at the forte, punched with a brief inscription on each face, iron hilt comprising a pair of long shaped langets enclosing the forte, figure-of-eight shaped guard extending to a broad moulded knuckle-guard, fluted cupshaped pommel, attenuated pommel and integral grip 104.0 cm; 41 in blade £350-450 55 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 19TH CENTURY with curved broad blade double-edged towards the point, iron hilt of characteristic form including a pair of langets with pierced terminals, recurved knuckle-guard with fluted budshaped finial, large disc-shaped pommel with a pierced flowerhead rondel on the top and integral grip, in later fabriccovered wooden scabbard 72.5 cm; 28 ⅝ in blade £250-350
55
56
56 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point, iron hilt including a pair of short quillons with mushroom-shaped terminals, disc-shaped pommel and integral grip, and retaining traces of silver koftgari decoration 74.8 cm; 29 ½ in blade £150-200 57 AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), LATE 19TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point, cut with a narrow fuller along the greater part of its length (rusted), iron hilt of characteristic form decorated over its surface with silver flowers and foliage 77.8 cm; 30 ⅝ in blade ‡ £80-120 58 AN INDIAN SWORD (KHANDA), 18TH CENTURY with long fullered European blade, iron hilt of characteristic form extending over the lower portion of the blade, including figure-of-eight shaped guard, broad knuckle-guard, and attenuated pommel (cleaned), in its wooden scabbard with dark red silk covering (losses) 102.0 cm; 40 ⅛ in blade ‡ £150-180 59 TWO INDIAN SWORDS (TALWAR), 20TH CENTURY each with fullered blade double-edged towards the point, characteristic iron hilt, the pommel attenuated and extending to an angular button, in its scabbard 76.3 cm; 30 in blades (2) ‡ £150-200
15
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60 A TRANSCAUCASIAN SWORD (QUADDARA), AN INDIAN ELEPHANT GOAD (ANCUS), AND TWO INDIAN AXES, 19TH CENTURY the first with single-edged blade cut with two fullers along the greater part of its length and stamped with a six-point star on one face of the forte, and a pair of horn grips retained by three iron rivets over silver Russian coins; the second with flat head comprising characteristic hooked terminal and central blade retaining traces of silver decoration, short tubular haft and brass basal cap (spike missing); the third with crescentic blade and tubular iron haft; the fourth similar, with fabric-covered haft the first: 59.5 cm; 23 ⅓ in blade £200-300
61
61 AN INDIAN MAIL SHIRT, 19TH CENTURY formed entirely of riveted rings of circularsection wire, with a short central opening at the neck, short sleeves later extended to the elbows with mail of a heavier gauge, and a short skirt divided at its front and rear, the neck-opening fitted at its rear with a later piece of mail of smaller rings alternately of riveted round-section wire and welded rings of flat-section, cut at its lower edge with four dags and sewn at its upper edge with crimson silk piping through which is threaded a leather thong (heavily oxidised and holed at a few points) Provenance Sold Christie’s, London, 14 April 1976, lot 65 £350-500 62 A NORTH INDIAN MAIL AND PLATE CUIRASS, 18/19TH CENTURY formed of a shirt of riveted rings of ovalsection wire with a central front opening closed by pins, wrist-length sleeves and a short skirt, incorporating triangular plates at the top centre of both front and rear, and rectangular plates elsewhere, all etched within a plain border with a continuous pattern of lozenges (heavily oxidised overall, with some holing and losses at its edges) £350-500
62
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63 A MAIL SHIRT, PROBABLY OTTOMAN TURKISH MODIFIED TO NORTH AFRICAN USE, 18/19TH CENTURY formed entirely of large riveted oval rings of oval-section wire, with a later-added short upstanding collar stiffened with leather thongs (severed at points), short central opening at the neck, short sleeves, and a short skirt divided at its front and rear (heavily oxidised overall) Provenance Sold Christie’s, London, 14 May 1956, Lot 157 £400-500 64 A NORTH AFRICAN MAIL SHIRT, 19TH CENTURY formed entirely of riveted rings of circularsection wire, with a short upstanding collar, a short central opening at the neck, short sleeves and a long skirt divided at its front and rear (heavily oxidised overall, with some holing and losses)
63
£250-400 ~ 65 TWO INDIAN POWDER-FLASKS, 18TH CENTURY; THREE BULLET MOULDS; AND A CLEANING ROD the first of horn, with engraved brass terminals decorated with a trellis pattern filled with foliage, the nozzle with spring cut-off and the basal terminal formed as a stylised fish tail; the second encased in leather and with traces of early paint, fitted with a turned ivory stopper; one bullet mould with a brief inscription; together with a file; a further tool and two leather pouches the first: 24.5 cm; 9 ⅝ in (10) £200-250
64 65 17
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~ 66 A NEPALESE SHIELD (DHAL) AND TWO INDIAN SHIELDS (DHAL) the first of an entire tortoiseshell, fitted with a central rondel decorated with a deity, surrounded by smaller animals and miniature kukri brass plaques, fitted with four bosses corresponding to enarmes, the inner face painted red and with black fabric pad; the second and third modern the first: 39.3 cm; 15 ⅜ in diameter (3) £150-200
66
67 AN INDO-PERSIAN ARM DEFENCE (BAZU BAND), 19TH CENTURY of characteristic gutter-shaped form, retaining a small number of butted mail links and four buckles for attachment (wristplate missing), the interior with red fabric lining, and the outer surface etched with stylised calligraphy enclosing panels of seated figures in traditional garb within a framework of scrolling foliage and animals, all enriched with gold 40.9 cm; 16 in ‡ £500-700 68 AN INDIAN CIRCULAR HIDE SHIELD (DHAL), RAJASTHAN, LATE 18TH CENTURY of shallow convex form, the interior painted red with gold border designs and gilt flowers, fitted with an early pad and four iron rings for enarmes, each corresponding with a domed brass boss, the exterior painted with a central rondel filled with polychrome flowers and foliage, the outer border en suite, and the middle field with a design of scrolling red flowers and foliage against a black ground (one small crack and pierced for display) 46.0 cm; 18 ⅛ in diameter £200-250
67
69 TWO INDIAN SMALL SHIELDS (DHAL), 18TH AND 19TH CENTURIES the first of hide, the interior painted red with gold details (losses), fitted with an early pad and enarmes, the outside painted with polychrome flowers within a linear border and with four brass foliate bosses; the second of iron, the outer surface decorated with silver scrolling foliage enriched with gold, with enarmes on the inside and an early pad; and a mail hand defence and padded lining with for a bazu band the first: 21.0 cm; 8 ¼ in diameter (3) £250-350
68 18
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70 A RARE CAUCASIAN MAIL AND PLATE HEAD-DEFENCE, LATE 17TH CENTURY formed of a dished circular plate pierced at its centre with a single hole for the attachment of a finial, and around its lower edge with numerous smaller holes to which is attached with later wire a deep mail tippet with a face-opening that narrows towards its base, and is formed of small riveted rings of flatsectioned wire (heavily oxidised overall, with some holing and losses at its edges) A similar head-defence is in the Magyar Nemzeti Múzeum, Budapest. See Gutowski 1997, cat. No. 28, pp. 53 & 92. £500-700 71 TWO SUDANESE SWORDS (KASKARA), 19TH CENTURY the first with earlier fullered European blade, flattened cross-piece, and hide-covered wooden grip; the second with double-edged etched blade, brass cross-piece and hide-bound grip the first: 89.4 cm; 33 ⅜ in blade £200-300
70 19
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72
73
76 72 A PERSIAN STEEL STRIKE-A-LIGHT, 17TH CENTURY of characteristic form, with broad blade formed with a moulded upper edge, the terminal strongly recurved and terminating in a stylised monsterhead, engraved on each side with scrolling foliage sown with pellets 20.0 cm; 7 ⅞ in
75 A PAPUA NEW GUINEAN CLUB (MASSIM CULTURE) of dark wood with spatulate blade incised with zig-zag patterns and wavy decoration, and retaining very small traces of lime infill 59.9 cm; 23 ⅝ in overall
£800-1000
~ 76 AN ARAB SILVER-MOUNTED DAGGER (JAMBIYA), EARLY 20TH CENTURY with curved double-edged blade formed with a medial ridge, silver-mounted carved rhinoceros horn grip, in its wooden scabbard, the inner surface covered with green velvet and the outer decorated with sheet silver and embossed top and bottom, with its matching belt 15.3 cm; 6 in blade
73 A 28 BORE INDIAN MATCHLOCK GUN (TORADOR), 19TH CENTURY with sighted shortened barrel retained by three slender metal bands, the rearmost enclosing the back-sight, breech with integral pan with pivot-cover, enclosed action with pierced serpentine and shaped trigger, full wooden stock (shortened) with traces of painted decoration, and iron ramrod 47.0 cm; 18 ½ in barrel ‡ £250-350 74 A LARGE GROUP OF MOSTLY AFRICAN SMALL WEAPONS, 19TH/20TH CENTURY comprising a Congolese sword, probably from the Salampasu tribe, with shaped iron blade and carved wooden hilt; a Sudanese throwing knife of characteristic form, with five blades (grip missing); a Somali Billaou dagger with broad leafshaped blade, wooden grip, in its scabbard; two Kenyan swords, probably from Lamu, each with widening leaf-shaped blade, in their scabbards; a Persian dagger (jambiya), with curved double-edged blade decorated with traces of silver scrolling foliage and bone hilt; a Moroccan dagger (jambiya) of characteristic form, in its metal scabbard; together with eleven daggers, two scabbards, and a brass ashtray the first: 44.8 cm; 17 ⅝ in blade (22) £300-400 20
£80-120
£250-350 77 TWO AFRICAN CLUBS (KNOBKERRY), AN AFRICAN AXE, AN AFRICAN SPEAR, A NIGERIAN CANOE PADDLE, AND THREE FURTHER HAFTED WEAPONS the first with ovoid head (cracked) and long haft; the second with bulbous head; the third with long wedge-shaped head widening towards the edge, and leather-covered haft; the fourth with leaf-shaped head formed with a medial ridge and socket, plaited wire, on its wooden haft; the fifth with tapering leaf-shaped blade and long wooden haft, carved and pierced with openwork; and three carved staffs with anthropomorphic heads (one detached) the first: 29.8 cm; 75 ⅞ in overall (8) £150-200
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78 AN ARAB SWORD (KATTARRA), OMAN, 18TH CENTURY with broad double-edged flat blade (tip shortened), iron hilt of characteristic form including block-shaped quillons with downcurved bud-shaped finials, faceted ovoid ‘tower’ pommel and integral iron grip (pitted) 62.0 cm; 24 ⅜ in blade £1500-2000 79 TWO AFRICAN SWORDS, A SCABBARD FOR THREE SUDANESE DAGGERS, AN AFRICAN QUIVER, A BOW, AN AFRICAN CROSSBOW, TWO SOUTHEAST ASIAN TRUMPETS the first with curved blade stamped ‘No. 416’, leather-covered hilt and scabbard (the scabbard worn, losses); the second in its scabbard, seized; the third a crocodile head; the fourth of characteristic form with thirteen arrows; together with three powder flasks, a hide-covered bottle, and a wooden cane with pointed iron end the first: 76.7 cm; 30 ¼ in blade (13) £200-300
78
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European Edged Weapons VARIOUS OWNERS 80 A BRUNSWICK STATE TWO-HAND PROCESSIONAL SWORD OF THE GUARD OF JULIUS, DUKE OF BRUNSWICK AND LÜNEBURG IN WOLFENBÜTTEL (1528-89), NO. 235, DATED 1573 with straight double-edged blade of flattened-diamond section sharply tapering at the point, rectangular ricasso formed with a pair of slender up-turned lugs in the middle, boldly incised with the crowned Ducal monogram, the number and the date within a linear frame on each side, iron hilt comprising a pair of ribbonlike quillons each interrupted by a chiselled and engraved fish-shaped moulding, curled forward and back at the respective down-curved terminals (one quillon expertly repaired), a pair of small flat engraved serpentine lugs at the base, punched inner and outer ring-guards, each interrupted with three baluster mouldings and filled with a saltire, the former with thumb-ring, thick pierced crutch-shaped pommel boldly engraved with foliage, and early leather-covered wooden grip 134.0 cm; 52 ¾ in blade Provenance The Brunswick Ducal Zeughaus, Wolfenbüttel Duke Julius of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (1528-1589) inherited the title following the death of his two older brothers in battle. He was a keen supporter of the Reformation and introduced it into the Duchy of Wolfenbüttel. The swords from his Ducal Guard are all numbered and may be divided into two series, one dated 1573 and the other 1574. The blades are generally inscribed with the date, an arsenal number and the crowned Ducal monogram IH. There are minor variations within each series and it would appear from the numbered swords extant that original quantity in the group was around 600 - with numbers in each series being recorded in the 290’s. In 1573 a sword was delivered to Wolfenbüttel by the armourer Wolf Gabriel and it has been suggested that this was possibly a prototype for the group. Given the large number of differing bladesmith’s marks and the variation in minor details it is likely that the order for both the 1573 and 1574 swords was contracted to a number of swordsmiths. It is probable that they were originally stored in the Wolfenbüttel Zeughaus and transferred to the Brunswick Zeughaus when the family moved from Wolfenbüttel in 1753/54. The inventory of the Hanover Zeughaus in 1854 records six of these swords, three dated 1573 and three dated 1574. A document describing the decoration of Schloss Blankenburg in 1868 with arms and armour from the Brunswick Zeughaus records thirty-six swords which are probably from this group. £15000-20000
80 22
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81
82
81 A NORTH EUROPEAN BASKET-HILTED MILITARY BACKSWORD (TESSAK), LATE 16TH CENTURY with earlier tapering double-edged blade of slightly hollowdiamond section, iron basket-hilt of characteristic form, comprising a pair of vertically recurved quillons with pronounced terminals each formed as a mulberry, symmetrical basket-guard formed of a pair of saltires each joined at the base by a scrolling bar and divided by the knuckle-guard, the latter rising to a small recurved finial, figure-of-eight shaped basal plate, mushroom-shaped pommel decorated en suite with the quillons, and later grip bound with plaited wire between ‘Turk’s Heads’ 84.5 cm; 33 ¼ in blade
82 A NORTH EUROPEAN SABRE OF SINCLAIR TYPE, FIRST QUARTER OF THE 17TH CENTURY with curved blade double-edged towards the point and formed with two long slender fullers on each face, incised ‘Andrea’ and ‘Ferararia’ in elaborate letters on the respective faces, iron hilt of characteristic type, including vertically recurved spatulate quillons with bud-shaped finials, up-turned outer guard incised with a pair of lines framing a trefoil aperture in the centre, knuckle-guard joined to the frontal guard by an sshaped bar, bifurcated inner-guard, thumb-ring and associated cushion-shaped pommel, and later leather-bound grip 83.2 cm; 32 ¾ in blade £1200-1800
Hilts of this form are associated with both North Germany and Scandinavia. See Norman 1980, p. 149. £2000-3000
23
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83 83 A SWEPT-HILT RAPIER WITH CHISELLED AND DAMASCENED HILT, THE BLADE 17TH CENTURY, 19TH CENTURY with German double-edged blade with a running wolf and a sun-in splendour mark on the respective faces, each ahead of three slender fullers, tapering ricasso struck with a celestial mask, iron hilt formed as a series of circular and oval panels of varying size, comprising down-curved quillon with rondel finial, outer ring-guard, knuckle-guard, outer guard, a pair of arms and trifurcated inner-guard and barrel-shaped pommel, the principle bars and the pommel all chiselled and damascened in gold and silver with scrollwork and exotic birds (areas of light surface rust and wear), and spirally moulded grip bound with plaited wire and ‘Turk’s Heads’ 106.5 cm; 41 ⅞ in blade £2000-3000
24
84
85
84 A CUP-HILT RAPIER IN SPANISH MID-17TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY with long tapering blade of flatteneddiamond section, iron hilt including a pair of straight quillons with trumpetshaped terminals, knuckle-guard en suite, cup-guard pierced with designs of scrolling foliage and with moulded brim, and flattened scalloped ovoid pommel, and wire-bound grip between iron collars 103.5 cm; 40 ¾ in blade
85 A SWEPT-HILT RAPIER IN LATE 16TH/EARLY 17TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY with earlier tapering slender blade pierced with a series of slots within a short fuller and inlaid with a brass panel at the forte, iron hilt cast with figures and scrolls in low relief, including downcurved quillon, upper and lower ring-guard, knuckle-guard, and barrelshaped pommel (areas of pitting) 92.7 cm; 36 ½ in blade
£600-800
The hilt is based on, or inspired by, a rapier in the Wallace Collection no. A619. £500-700
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86 86 A GERMAN ESTOC, 16TH CENTURY AND LATER with early long blade of stout-diamond section, black-painted iron hilt comprising a pair of later horizontally recurved quillons with globular terminals, early spirally moulded globular pommel, and fishskin-covered grip bound with iron bands between shaped collars 108.0 cm; 42 ½ in blade ‡ £2000-4000
87 87 A COMPOSITE GERMAN HAND-AND-A-HALF SWORD, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY AND LATER with early broad double-edged blade of flattened-hexagonal section, cut with a wavy pattern and a cross pattern enclosed by linear frames at the forte on the respective faces, struck with a brass-lined running wolf mark (small losses) on one face, iron hilt of rounded bars comprising later drooping quillons with moulded terminals including a band of delicate ropework, inner-and outer guards each formed of a diagonal bar interrupted by a central moulding en suite with the quillon terminals, an additional frontally projecting bar at the base on each side, a pair of arms, and early writhen plummet-shaped pommel and later leather-covered two-stage grip 109.5 cm; 43 ⅛ in blade ‡ £1800-2200
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88
88 A NORTH EUROPEAN CAVALRY SWORD, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 17TH CENTURY with tapering double-edged blade struck with running wolf mark and inscribed with the spurious date ‘1441’ within a short fuller on each face, asymmetrical iron hilt including inner and outer ring-guards each filled with a pierced sprung-in plate, outer guard and knuckle-guard each interrupted by a globular moulding and joined by an S-shaped bar, thumb-ring, and compressed spherical pommel, and later grip 78.8 cm; 31 in blade £600-800 89 TWO ÉPÉES AND TWO COURT SWORDS, 19TH AND EARLY 20TH CENTURY the first two with tapering blades terminating in a buttonshaped finial, openwork brass hilts decorated with neo-rococo scrolls and helmet-shaped pommels; the third with slender blade and burnished iron hilt decorated in imitation of brilliants and the fourth probably for a diplomat, with brass hilt with beadwork border the first: 86.5 cm; 34 in blades (4) £250-350 90 THREE KNIGHTLY SWORDS IN 15TH CENTURY STYLE, LATE 19TH AND 20TH CENTURIES the first and second with flat blade, cruciform hilt and wheel pommel, the third with moulded brass hilt, in its scabbard the first: 87.0 cm; 34 ¼ in blade (3) £200-250
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE DOWAGER COUNTESS CAWDOR 91 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY, THE HILT PROBABLY BY WALTER ALLAN OF STIRLING with tapering double-edged blade, stamped with a King’s head mark, signed ‘Conrad Wundes’ and ‘Me Fecit Solingen’ divided by the running wolf of Solingen within a short fuller framed by a pair of slender fullers on each face, well formed iron hilt signed beneath the quillon base ‘WA’ over ‘S’ (feint, heavily worn, quillon missing), basket-guard formed of rounded bars carrying an alternating arrangement of slender and broad panels each pierced with circles and stylised hearts emphasised by delicate fluted patterns, including a pair of ‘ram’s horn’ mouldings at the base, two looped bars and associated spirally-fluted bun-shaped pommel (guard repaired at the pommel ring, small chips and areas of pitting), later wooden grip and leather liner 73.7 cm; 29 in blade
92 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY with broad double-edged blade, stamped with the spurious date ‘1515’ in a short fuller and with the running wolf mark ahead on each face, iron hilt of flattened bars carrying an alternating arrangement of oval and square panels pierced with with hearts and circles within linear frames, a large oval bar for the reins, scrolling quillon, engraved bun-shaped pommel, associated bud-shaped button, and wire-bound fishskin-covered grip 88.0 cm; 34 ⅝ in blade £1500-2000
For a discussion of Walter Allan see Reid 1963, pp. 16-21. £2000-2500
91
92
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93 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY with tapering blade double-edged towards the point, formed with two long fullers and with traces of an inscription including ‘Ven.Ver......Vicat’ on each face, iron hilt (pitted) of rounded bars carrying an alternating arrangement of rectangular and square panels with cusped edges, each pierced with a symmetrical arrangement of hearts and circles emphasised by incised lines and fluting, short scrolling quillon, fluted bun-shaped pommel and later grip 81.7 cm; 32 ¼ in blade
94 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY with tapering blade formed with a rectangular ricasso, iron hilt of rounded bars carrying an alternating arrangement of rectangular and square panels with cusped borders, each pierced with a symmetrical arrangement of hearts and circles emphasised by incised lines and fluting (refreshed), short scrolling quillon, associated bun-shaped pommel and later grip 82.2 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade £1000-1400
£1000-1500
95 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY with tapering blade formed with three near full length fullers and stamped ‘Andrea Farara’ on each face (rubbed, tip sharpened), grooved ricasso, iron hilt of flattened bars carrying an alternating arrangement of rectangular and square panels with finely cusped borders, each pierced with a symmetrical arrangement of hearts and circles emphasised by incised lines and fluting, broad scrolling quillon, fluted bun-shaped pommel and associated wire-bound fishskin-covered grip 74.7 cm; 29 ⅜ in blade £1200-1800
93
28
94
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VARIOUS OWNERS 96 A RARE ENGLISH BACKSWORD WITH BRASS MORTUARY HILT, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 17TH CENTURY with broad blade double-edged towards the point, cut with three slender fullers of differing length and struck with a pair of celestial masks on each face (pitted), symmetrical brass basket-hilt of characteristic form decorated with a pair of masks on the base, comprising a pair of vestigial langets, scrolling quillon struck ‘M’ crowned on the inside, knuckle-guard, two frontal bars joined by a vertical bar and fitted with a further scrolling bar, chiselled globular pommel, and later grip bound with plaited wire (losses) between brass collars 85.2 cm; 33 ⅝ in blade
97 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD LATE 17TH CENTURY with tapering blade stamped ‘Andreia Ferara’ between a series of decorative marks including a pair of running wolves on each face, rectangular ricasso, iron ribbon guard (small cracks and chips) extending to a small beak at the front, involving saltires incorporating circular central panels, S-shaped bars, fitted with a pair of slender rounded bars at the rear, vestigial quillon, bun-shaped pommel (pitted throughout), and spirally moulded leather-covered grip bound with plaited wire 82.3 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade
98 AN ENGLISH BASKET-HILT BROADSWORD, CIRCA 1680 with broad double-edged blade formed with a short fuller retaining traces of an inscription and with traces of a running wolf mark on each face, iron basket-hilt of flattened bars including knuckleguard, a pair of saltires each with a central circular panel retaining traces of punched ornament, two vertical bars front and rear, a pair of basal loops, and bun-shaped pommel (blade and hilt with areas of pitting), and later spirally carved wooden grip 82.2 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade £1500-2000
£1500-2000
£2000-2500
96
97
98
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99 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, LAST QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY with double-edged blade formed with a long pair of fullers on each face, iron basket-guard of flattened rounded bars carrying an alternating arrangement of slender rectangular and square panels each pierced with arrangements of heart-shaped apertures, the latter centring around a quartrefoil, scrolling quillon, and fluted bun-shaped pommel, and spirally carved fishskin-covered grip bound with plaited wire (small losses, the iron parts with areas of pitting) 81.6 cm; 32 ⅛ in blade
101 A BRITISH HIGHLAND INFANTRY OFFICER’S BASKETHILTED BACKSWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY with tapering blade double-edged towards the point, formed with three long slender fullers and retaining traces of a maker’s inscription including a double eyelash mark on each face, iron hilt of rounded bars (pitted), carrying an alternating arrangement of slender and square panels, compressed spherical pommel, an early red fabric liner (moth damage), and fishskin-covered grip (binding missing) 79.0 cm; 31 ⅛ in blade £400-600
£1000-1500 100 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD, SECOND QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY with tapering single-edged blade formed with three long fullers on each face, iron hilt of flattened bars carrying an alternating arrangement of narrow and square panels with cusped borders and pierced with hearts and circles, scrolling quillon, fluted bun-shaped pommel (pitted throughout), and wire-bound fishskin-covered grip 86.0 cm; 33 ⅞ in blade
102 A HIGHLAND REGIMENT OFFICER’S BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY with tapering fullered blade double-edged towards the point, iron basket-hilt of flattened bars carrying an alternating arrangement of narrow and near square panels each pierced with stylised hearts and circles (one panel cracked), scrolling quillon, conical pommel and sharkskin-covered grip bound with plaited wire (the blade and hilt with areas of rust) 80.8 cm; 31 ¾ in blade £300-400
£800-1000
99
30
100
101
102
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103 A HIGHLAND REGIMENT OFFICER’S BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY with tapering fullered blade double-edged towards the point, iron basket-hilt of flattened bars carrying an alternating arrangement of narrow and near square panels each pierced with stylised hearts and circles, scrolling quillon, conical pommel and wire-bound spirally-carved grip with ‘Turks Heads’ (light pitting) 77.2 cm; 30 ⅜ in blade
105 A HIGHLAND REGIMENT OFFICER’S BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD,LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY with broad double-edged German blade signed ‘J. J. Runkel Solingen’ within a short fuller on each face, brass hilt of rounded bars carrying an alternating arrangement of rectangular and square panels, solid scrolling quillon, and fluted bun-shaped pommel (loose) and spirally carved horn grip (binding missing) 84.3 cm; 33 ⅛ in blade £1200-1800
£500-700 106 A VICTORIAN HIGHLAND BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, LATE 19TH CENTURY with fullered blade, iron hilt of rounded bars carrying panels pierced with hearts and circles, quillon, and fluted bun-shaped pommel (grip missing) 81.5 cm; 32 ⅛ in blade
104 A RARE BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD FOR AN OFFICER OF THE 116TH (PERTHSHIRE HIGHLANDERS) REGIMENT, BREADALBANE FENCIBLES, CIRCA 1794 with broad blade double-edged towards the tip, engraved regulation basket-guard formed of two halves (worn), each comprised of flattened bars, including panels of scrolling thistle flowers and foliage, the centre incorporating the regimental device, associated bun-shaped pommel and later grip 74.2 cm; 29 ¼ in blade
£300-400 107 A BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD IN EARLY 18TH CENTURY SCOTTISH STYLE, 20TH CENTURY of heavy construction, with broad fullered blade cut with a running wolf mark, iron hilt of rounded bars incorporating pierced panels with cusped borders, ramshorn mouldings, S-shaped bars, scrolling quillon and fluted pommel, and blackened grip with brass ‘Turk’s heads’ 83.7 cm; 33 in blade
A number of short-lived highland regiments were raised in the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars, including the 116th (Perthshire Highlanders) raised in 1794 and disbanded shortly after. See Robson 1996, pp. 173-4. Another example from this group formerly in the collection of Anthony North was sold in these rooms 30th June 2010, lot 165. £500-700
£600-800
103
104
105
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108 A BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD IN EARLY 18TH CENTURY SCOTTISH STYLE, 20TH CENTURY of heavy construction, with broad fullered blade stamped with three marks on one face (indistinct), iron hilt of rounded bars incorporating pierced broad and narrow panels with cusped borders, scrolling quillon and fluted pommel, and spirally bound grip with ‘Turk’s heads’ 83.7 cm; 33 in blade £600-800 109 A DETACHED BLADE FROM A BROADSWORD, 18TH CENTURY of flattened rounded section, stamped ‘Andrea’ and ‘Farara’ between a series of King’s head marks on each face (worn), rectangular ricasso and tapering tang 69.4 cm; 27 ⅜ in blade £250-350 110 A SCOTTISH BASKET-HILTED BROADSWORD, LATE 20TH CENTURY with etched fullered polished blade, plated basket-hilt of rounded bars with openwork panels, fluted bun-shaped pommel, leather-covered grip, in its black painted scabbard 79.5 cm; 31 ⅜ in blade £50-60 111 THREE SCOTTISH DRESS DAGGERS (SKEAN DHU), 20TH CENTURY the first by Wilkinson, Pall Mall, etched ‘H’land Lt Infty’ and with maker’s details at the forte, gilt-brass hilt decorated with the regimental device, basket-weave grip, in its scabbard; the second similar, for the Cameron Highlanders; and the third similar, for the Seaforth Highlanders and Ross-shire Buffs the first: 12.0 cm; 4 ¾ in blade (3) £250-350
112
112 A FINE 18 CT GOLD-MOUNTED DRESS DIRK BY HAMILTON AND INCHES, EDINBURGH 1966, BASED ON THAT PRESENTED TO SIR COLIN CAMPBELL, G.C.B., BY THE HIGHLANDERS OF BREADALBANE, GLENORCHY & NETHER LORNE IN 1856 with broad blade double-edged at the point and formed with a notched back-edge, etched with a long panel of strapwork and thistle foliage on a frosted ground on one face and with further designs enclosing the inscription ‘Presented to General Sir Colin Campbell G.C.B. by the Highlanders of Breadalbane, Glenorchy & Nether Lorne, as a mark of their admiration of his high qualities as a soldier and devotion to his country 1856’ on the other, gold hilt finely cast and chased with thistle foliage, the pommel incorporating a band of openwork trellis and set with a faceted citrine, hardwood basketweave grip enriched with gold nails, in its wooden scabbard covered with plum velvet, with marked gold mounts decorated en suite, the middle band decorated with crossed flags, the chape involving the Campbell crest and motto, complete with its accompanying knife and fork each mounted with gold and citrine en suite with the hilt, in its lined and fitted case covered with red morocco 26.7 cm; 10 ½ in blade £3500-4000
32
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113 TWO SCOTTISH SILVER-MOUNTED DRESS DAGGERS (SKEAN DHU), EDIINBURGH 1970 AND 1971 the first by Wilkinson, Pall Mall, etched with Gordon Highlanders and maker’s details at the forte, silver hilt including openwork pommel, in its scabbard; the second with etched blade and the hilt and scabbard mounts decorated with traditional Celtic motifs the first: 11.8 cm; 4 ⅝ in blade (2)
115 AN ENGLISH SILVER-HILTED SMALL-SWORD, LONDON, LATE 17TH CENTURY with slender blade of flattened-diamond section, stamped ‘In Toledo’ within a short fuller on each face, silver hilt cast and chased in low relief, comprising asymmetrical double shell-guard, a pair of slender arms, near rectangular knuckle-guard, and pommel (marks rubbed), the principal elements chased with masks in low relief on a matted ground enriched with foliage, and the grip bound with plaited wire between Turk’s Heads’ 76.5 cm; 30 ⅛ in blade
£250-350
A sword with a very similar hilt marked by Richard Fuller, is preserved in the Royal Armouries Leeds, inv. no. IX.1797. Richard Fuller, a gifted silver-hilt maker and sword cutler is recorded circa 1670-1731. See Southwick 2001, plate 20-1, p. 277.
114 A NORTH EUROPEAN TRANSITIONAL SWORD, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 17TH CENTURY with tapering blade formed in three stages, the uppermost of flattened-diamond section, the middle flattened-hexagonal and the base stamped ‘Tomaso Ayala’ and ‘En Toledo’ between a series of decorative cross marks within a short fuller on each face, chiselled blackened iron hilt comprising a pair of straight quillons with flowerhead terminals, outer ring-guard interrupted by a central double moulding en suite with the quillon terminals, gadrooned pommel decorated with a flower head on top, and later grip bound with plaited wire between ‘Turk’s Heads’ 89.0 cm; 35 in blade
£1500-2500 116 AN IRISH SILVER-HILTED SMALL-SWORD, CIRCA 1780, RETAILED BY BENNETT, DUBLIN with colichemarde blade etched with scrolls, celestial masks and a bird over the forte, silver hilt with gadrooned borders cast and chased in low relief, comprising ‘boatshell’ guard, a pair of straight quillons with slightly recurved terminals, knuckle-guard, a pair of small plain arms, spirally moulded pommel, and the grip bound with plaited wire and ribband between moulded collars, in its parchment-covered wooden scabbard with silver locket and chape, the former punched with the retailer’s details 82.3 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade
£2000-3000
£1500-2000
114
115
116
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117 AN ENGLISH SILVER-HILTED SMALLSWORD, LONDON, 1737, PROBABLY, JOHN (I) BENNETT with German hollow-triangular blade, blued over the forte and inlaid with brass scrolls, silver hilt finely cast and chased in low relief comprising four differing fishing and hunting scenes on the shell-guard, globular quillons decorated with scrolls, a pair of moulded arms, knuckle-guard interrupted with an avian moulding, and pommel en suite with the knuckleguard, the principle scenes all against a punched finely matted ground 70.0 cm; 27 ½ in blade John Bennett (1708/9-74) apprenticed to John Carman 1723, became free of the Cutlers’ Company 1731, was elected to the court 1745, and is recorded as a hiltmaker in Threadneedle Street 1773.
118 A FRENCH SILVER-MOUNTED SMALL-SWORD, CIRCA 1780 with slender hollow-triangular bladed etched and gilt with scrolls on a blued panel over the forte, silver hilt (marks obscured), cast and chased in low relief, comprising oval shell-guard engraved with scrolling foliage on the outer face, the inner decorated with scrolls enriched with faceted beads in imitation of brilliants, quillon, knuckle-guard, ovoid pommel and integral grip all decorated with scrolls and beadwork en suite, in contemporary leather-covered wooden scabbard, perhaps the original, with silver locket, chape and middle-band all decorated with scrollwork 84.7 cm; 33 ⅜ in blade
119 A NORTH EUROPEAN SMALLSWORD WITH CHISELLED AND GILT HILT, CIRCA 1750 with associated hollow-triangular blade, iron hilt comprising double shell-guard chiselled with a foliate border enclosing a pattern of numerous minute expanded flower heads with a framework of gilt trellis on each face, a pair of arms decorated with gilt foliage, quillon, knuckle-guard and ovoid pommel all en suite with the guard and arms, and original grip bound with plaited wire and ribband decorated with gilt flower heads between ‘Turk’s Heads’ 81.5 cm; 32 ⅛ in blade £500-700
£800-1000
£1200-1800
117
34
118
119
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120 AN ENGLISH SILVER-HILTED SMALL-SWORD, LONDON, CIRCA 1785 with hollow-triangular blade etched with scrolls over the forte, silver hilt cast and chased with faceted beads in imitation of brilliants, comprising oval openwork dish-guard decorated with a radiating design of foliage (date mark unclear), a pair of quillons with rounded terminals, a pair of slender arms, quillonblock centring on a star, knuckle-guard, and ovoid pommel, and the grip bound with plaited wire and ribband between chased silver collars 82.5 cm; 32 ½ in blade
122 AN ENGLISH SILVER-HILTED SMALL-SWORD, LONDON 1728 with hollow-triangular blade, silver hilt cast and chased in low relief on a finely matted ground, comprising asymmetrical shell-guard decorated with trophies-of-artillery beneath a canopy supported by classical figures on the outside and further canopied trophies on the inside, globular quillon, knuckle-guard decorated with scrollwork and ovoid pommel en suite with the shell, and associated grip bound with plaited wire between silver collars 69.2 cm; 27 ¼ in blade
A similar hilt, marked for London 1785-6, is illustrated Southwick 2001, colour plate 10.
£450-550
£600-800 121 A FRENCH SMALL-SWORD WITH CHISELLED AND GILT IRON HILT, CIRCA 1750 with tapering hollow-triangular blade etched with scrolls over the forte (light surface rust), iron hilt chiselled with scrolls and trophies-of-arms in low relief, comprising asymmetrical shellguard, a pair of arms, quillon with globular terminal, knuckle-guard, ovoid pommel and the grip bound with plaited wire between ‘Turk’s Heads’ 73.0 cm; 28 ¾ in blade £400-600
120
121
122
PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF THE DOWAGER COUNTESS CAWDOR 123 A CHISELLED AND GILT IRON BODKIN AND TWO PARTIAL SMALL-SWORD HILTS, FRENCH, MID-18TH CENTURY the first with tapering spike threaded at the base, ovoid pommel decorated with frames filled with trophies surrounded by garlands, all on a matted and gilt ground; the second and third comprising the quillon, knuckle-guard, quillon-block and arms, one decorated with rococo shells, garlands and foliage and the other with foliage and figures in classical garb, on a punched gilt ground the first: 8.0 cm; 3 ⅛ in £300-400
123
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124
125
126
VARIOUS OWNERS 124 A RARE HUNTING SWORD WITH TORTOISESHELL-VENEERED HILT, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 18TH CENTURY, PROBABLY GERMAN with associated French blade, steel hilt chiselled with geometric ornament, including down-turned shell, moulded quillon with ovoid terminal, knuckleguard interrupted by a faceted oval moulding, and swelling faceted grip entirely covered with tortoiseshell 77.5 cm; 30 in blade A series of hunting swords with tortoiseshell-veneered grips are preserved in the Stibbert Musuem, Florence. £250-350
36
125 A FRENCH SILVER-MOUNTED HUNTING SWORD, PARIS SMALL CHARGE MARK FOR 1762-8 with slightly curved blade double-edged towards the point, etched with a trophyof-arms within an oval with scrollwork top and bottom on each side at the forte, silver hilt cast and chased in low relief, comprising a pair of recurved moulded quillons, spirally-moulded cap pommel, and dark-stained horn grip bound with silver wire and ribband 59.0 cm; 23 ¼ in blade £300-400
126 A GERMAN HUNTING SWORD, MID-18TH CENTURY with slightly curved blade double-edged towards a clipped-back point, etched and gilt with trophies, the motto ‘V.Pandur’ and a hussar on a blued panel on each side (light wear), steel crosspiece formed with a moulded collar (knuckle-chain missing), moulded pommel-cap, and horn grip stained in imitation of tortoiseshell 50.0 cm; 19 ¾ in blade £250-350
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128
127 127 A MEDIEVAL SHORTSWORD, 15TH CENTURY in excavated condition, with curved single-edged blade, iron hilt including a pair of asymmetrical drooping quillons, and retaining nine rivets for attaching the grips with nine engraved brass washers decorated with expanded rose heads 40.0 cm; 15 ¾ in blade The vendor states that, by tradition, this was found on the site of the Battle of Towton (29th March 1461). £400-600 128 A MEDIEVAL DAGGER, CIRCA 1470-90, POSSIBLY ITALIAN in excavated condition, with tapering double-edged blade with traces of three short fullers on each face, iron hilt comprising curved quillons with scrolling terminals, écusson, and near spherical pommel decorated with a scallop design on the front 30.5 cm; 12 in blade
129 A GERMAN CHISELLED IRON SCABBARD FOR A SMALL DAGGER, MID-17TH CENTURY formed in one piece, of tapering circular section, decorated with rudimentary figurative designs and scrolls (patinated) 20.0 cm; 7 ⅞ in £100-150 130 A QUANTITY OF SWORD SCABBARDS, 18TH CENTURY including two for hussar type swords, another with gilt brass locket and middle band, and seven further scabbards (losses, some in relic condition) (10) £300-500
For an Italian sword of related form see Oakeshott 1960 no. 21 (a). £2000-3000
37
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133
131
132
131 A RARE ENGLISH PLUG BAYONET, DATED 1690 with tapering double-edged blade, stamped with a King’s head mark on each face, one face with the copper-lined mark of the London Cutler’s Company and a copper-lined ‘T’ mark, the forte inscribed ‘God Save King William & Mary’ and ‘Nicholas Arnold 1690’ with traces of gilding on the respective faces, moulded brass hilt comprising a pair of straight quillons with helmeted warrior head terminals, cap pommel formed en suite, and turned wooden grip, in its tooled leather-covered wooden scabbard with brass mounts including a moulded hook at the front, and with a leather frog for attachment to a belt 29.0 cm; 11 ⅜ in blade
~ 132 A RARE ITALIAN GUNNER’S STILETTO (FUESTTO DI BOMBARDIERE), MID-17TH CENTURY with tapering blade of triangular section, engraved on the inner face with calibrated graduations from 1 to 120, moulded baluster-shaped forte, iron hilt formed of a pair of spirally moulded bud-shaped quillons and pommel en suite, spirally hippopotamus ivory grip inset with horn rondels and small pellets and bound with plaited wire, and a white metal collar top and bottom 22.7 cm; 9 in blade
Bayonets with inscriptions relating to King William and Queen Mary are notably rare. The mark is probably that of Gyles Lyndesy who became Free of the Cutler’s Company in 1673, was granted this mark in 1678 and became a liveryman in 1678. A knife and fork and a hunting sword bearing his mark are in the Collections of the Worshipful Company of Cutlers. See Hinde and Herbert 2005, p. 52. Nicholas Arnold is probably the Officer who owned this bayonet.
£700-900
£1200-1800
For a discussion of Fuestto di Bombardiere see Mann 1931, pp. 46-50.
~ 133 A SMALL KNIFE WITH IVORY GRIP, LATE 16TH/EARLY 17TH CENTURY AND ANOTHER, 15TH CENTURY both in excavated condition, the first with single-edged blade formed with a series of notches at the base, and spirally carved ivory grip (small age cracks); the second with singleedged blade extending into a tang and later wooden grips the first: 17.2 cm; 6 ¾ in (2) £120-180
38
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134 A COMPOSITE LEFT-HAND DAGGER, CIRCA 1660, PROBABLY FRENCH with tapering double-edged blade of diamond-section, formed with a pair of pierced narrow fullers on each side of a pronounced medial ridge on each face (pitted), rectangular ricasso flattened for the thumb on the inside and grooved on the other side, iron hilt comprising quillons chiselled in the shape of cherubic figures, central cartouche containing a classical warrior on horseback, pommel decorated en suite with the guard, and later grip bound with spirally moulded plaited wire between ‘Turk’s Heads’ 25.6 cm; 10 in blade A very similar hilt of a small-sword, formerly part of the von Kienbusch Collection, is preserved in the Philadelphia Museum of Art. See Norman 1992, p.69. Provenance William Randolph Hearst Paris Watson & Co., Inc., New York, sold to the City Art Museum of St Louis in 1939 Sold Sotheby’s New York, 24th May 1993, lot 421 £1500-2000 135 A ‘HOLBEIN’ DAGGER IN SWISS 16TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY with broad double-edged blade of flattened-diamond section, iron hilt comprising guard and pommel respectively cast with masks and demifigures, cast grip in imitation of plaited wire, in its openwork scabbard formed in two pieces and lined in wood, the outer faces decorated with Landskencht warriors in contemporary costume, and with traces of silvered finish 23.2 cm; 9 ⅛ in blade See Schneider 1976, pp. 154-155.
135 134 137 SIX BAYONETS, 19TH CENTURY comprising two Chassepot bayonets, both dated 1871; a Gras bayonet, dated 1878; and three further bayonets, two in their scabbards the first: 57.5 cm; 22 ⅝ in blade (6) £100-120
£600-800 136 A BOWIE KNIFE BY WOODHEAD, HOWARD STREET, SHEFFIELD, MID-20TH CENTURY with straight blade formed with a clipped-back point, etched ‘I can dig gold from Quartz’ and ‘Californian Bowie Knife’ (worn), German silver grip cast with foliage and palmette, and oval guard 18.2 cm; 7 ¼ in blade
138 A DIVER’S KNIFE AND A GURKHA KUKRI KNIFE, 20TH CENTURY the first with double-edged blade by Siebe Gorman & Co, turned wooden grip, in its threaded brass scabbard; the second of characteristic form, in its scabbard the first: 17.0 cm; 6 ¾ in blade (2)
139 TWO LEFT-HAND DAGGERS IN LATE 16TH/EARLY 17TH CENTURY STYLE, SPAIN, 20TH CENTURY the first with pierced broad double-edged blade, iron hilt with drooping forwardcanted quillons, side ring and faceted pommel all inlaid with gold flowers and scrolls within oval frames, in its scabbard with iron mounts en suite; the second with pierced fullered blade, iron hilt with drooping quillons, side-ring and pommel all decorated in gold with scrolling foliage and cherubic masks the first: 27.7 cm; 11 in blade (2) £300-400
£250-350
£200-300 39
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THE RICHARD HOLMES COLLECTION 140 A BASKET-HILTED BACKSWORD, PROBABLY CARRIED BY AN OFFICER OF THE HIGHLAND SCOTTISH INFANTRY, CIRCA 1750-98 with broad blade double-edged towards the point, cut with a fuller over the greater part of its length, etched with scrolls of foliage, exotic birds, portrait profiles of Turks and commemorative inscriptions including the earlier date 1665, iron basket-hilt of fluted bars of near rectangular section including an alternating arrangement of near rectangular and square panels, each pierced with symmetrical arrangements of hearts and circles, with cusped borders and enriched with incised lines, scrolling quillon, fluted bun-shaped pommel, an early leather liner, and fishskin-covered grip bound with wire between ‘Turk’s heads’ 92.8 cm; 36 ½ in blade £1200-1800
141 A BRITISH INFANTRY GRENADIER’S BASKET-HILTED HANGER OR SHORT SABRE, CIRCA 1750-70 with slightly curved fullered blade double-edged towards the point, stamped ‘S. Harvey’ on each face, iron three-quarter basket-hilt of flattened bars involving a series of heart, diamond and other shaped apertures, bun-shaped pommel, and fishskin-covered grip (binding missing) From circa 1680 until 1856, each British infantry battalion contained a Grenadier company, selected from the tallest and strongest men in the battalion, formed on the right of the line when on parade and regarded as the elite of the battalion. The swords issued to Grenadiers often had basket-hilts, which not only symbolised their elite status but also gave extra protection to the right hands of the Grenadiers. Grenadiers were usually used as assault troops and so they could expect to become involved in desperate hand-tohand combat, in which the basket-hilt functioned very well as a mailed fist. £800-1200
142 A BRITISH INFANTRY OFFICER’S SABRE WITH SILVER-GILT HILT BY GOLDNEYS, ST JAMES’S, LONDON, CIRCA 1795-96 with curved blade double-edged towards the point, cut with a shallow fuller on each face, etched and gilt on a blued panel over the lower third with trophies involving celestial motifs, silvergilt stirrup hilt including a pair of langets, lionhead pommel, and wire-bound fishskin-covered grip, in its silver-giltmounted leather scabbard with locket, chape and band with loops for suspension, the locket engraved ‘Goldneys, late Neild, St James’s Street, Sword Cutlers to his Royl. Highness the Prince of Wales’ and stamped with the maker’s mark HF 81.0 cm; 31 ⅞ in blade Sabres became popular with flank company officers of British infantry regiments in the 1790s and were ultimately officially recognised as the swords of such officers in 1803. The firm of Goldneys - a partnership between the brothers Thomas (17691856) and Samuel (1770-1843) Goldney took over the premises of James Neild (1744-1814) at 4 St. James’s Street in 1793 and continued in business until 1828; the firm was noted as prominent Royal sword cutlers. £1000-1500
140
40
141
142
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VARIOUS OWNERS 143 AN 1822 PATTERN INFANTRY OFFICER’S SWORD FOR AN OFFICER OF MILITIA BY HAMBURGER ROGERS & CO., COVENT GARDEN, LONDON, CIRCA 1845-70 with regulation blade double-edged towards the point, cut with a single fuller over two thirds of its length, etched with ‘VR’ crowned and with maker’s details, silver-plated hilt with folding side-guard and wire-bound fishskin-covered grip, in its silver-plated scabbard (one side tarnished) with loops for suspension 82.4 cm; 32 ½ in blade The silver-plating of the hilt and scabbard suggests that it may have been owned by an officer of Militia. After 1830, officers of regiments of Militia wore uniforms embellished with silver lace.
~ 144 A SILVER-HILTED OFFICER’S SPADROON, PROBABLY FRANCIS THURKLE, LONDON, 1778 with slightly curved blade double-edged towards the tip, etched and gilt with foliage and trophies on a blued panel over the lower half of a long fuller on each face (light wear), silver hilt comprising circular quillon, outer guard, knuckle-guard, cushion-shaped pommel and reeded ivory grip (small chips), in its silver-mounted leather scabbard (light wear, small holes) with locket and chape (detached), the former with a single ring for suspension 80.2 cm; 31 ⅝ in blade
145 A GEORGIAN OFFICER’S SWORD, BY GIBSON, THOMAS & CRAIGS, LATE 18TH CENTURY with curved fullered blade double-edged towards the point, etched and gilt with foliage, the crowned Royal Arms, the maker’s details on one face and the crowned Royal cypher and further foliage on the other, brass stirrup hilt with wire-bound banded grip, in its brass-mounted leather-scabbard 63.0 cm; 24 ¾ in blade £300-400
£600-800
Hamburger Rogers & Co. was at 30 King Street, Covent Garden, London, from 1836 until 1917. £250-300
143
144
145
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146 AN HISTORIC 1853 PATTERN BRITISH CAVALRY TROOPER’S SWORD APPLIED WITH A PLAQUE RECORDING ITS DISCOVERY ON THE BATTLE FIELD OF BALACLAVA BY THE EARL OF GLASGOW IN 1891 of regulation type, with slightly curved blade double-edged towards the point, iron triple-bar hilt, and leather grip-scales, and the knuckle-guard fitted with a silver plaque engraved ‘Found by the Earl of Glasgow on the Field of Balaclava 1891’ 89.5 cm; 35 ¼ in blade
148 A 1796 PATTERN INFANTRY OFFICER’S SWORD AND AN INDIAN SWORD (TALWAR), 19TH CENTURY the first of regulation type, with etched blade signed ‘J. J. Runkel Solingen’ (pitted), gilt-brass hilt with folding side-guard (grip loose); the second with curved single-edged blade double-edged towards the point, and hilt of characteristic form the first: 82.2 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade (2) £200-300
£500-800 ~ 147 A VICTORIAN 10TH (PRINCE OF WALES’ OWN) HUSSAR OFFICER’S SWORD, LATE 19TH CENTURY with etched blade decorated with scrolling foliage, ‘VR’ crowned, regimental details, battle honours for Peninsula and Waterloo and the maker’s details ‘Wheeler, & Robinson, 9 Prince’s Street, Hanover Square London’ (small areas of pitting), gilt-brass hilt including straight quillons with moulded terminals, a pair of ivory grip-scales retained by rosette washers, in its plated iron scabbard 82.0 cm; 32 ⅜ in blade
149 A VICTORIAN 1845 PATTERN INFANTRY OFFICER’S SWORD, 19TH CENTURY of regulation type, with etched blade, brass hilt, wire-bound fishskin-covered grip (small losses), in its iron scabbard 82.0 cm; 32 ¼ in blade £80-120
£450-600
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150 A RARE FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD DRAGOON TROOPER’S SWORD, CIRCA 1785 with tapering single-edged blade formed with a pair of fulllength fullers on each face, brass hilt formed of a recurved outer-guard with three scrolling terminals, the upper two joining the knuckle-guard and with a further bar at the base formed as fasces surmounted by a Phrygian cap, cusped quillon, cap pommel, the guard stamped ‘MA 1834’ on the underside of the reverse, and later leather-covered grip bound with plaited wire, in its original leather scabbard with steel locket and chape, the former with brass stud for suspension and the former with shaped drag 97.1 cm; 38 ¼ in blade See Ariès 4,1967, fig. 1. £1200-1500 151 A FRENCH ANXI LIGHT CAVALRY OFFICER’S SWORD with curved blade double-edged towards the tip, formed with a long fuller, etched and gilt with trophies, garlands and foliage on a blued panel at the forte and signed ‘S & K’ for Schitzler and Kirschbaum of Solingen, brass triple-bar hilt with downcurved globular quillon, a pair of elliptical langets, and original leather-covered wooden grip with plaited brass wire binding (worn) 84.5 cm; 33 ¼ in blade
152 A FRENCH DRAGOON SWORD, CIRCA 1800 with straight blade double-edged towards the point and formed with a long broad fuller on each face, brass hilt with large palmette guard joined to the knuckle-guard by four scrolling bars, solid scalloped inner-guard, globular quillon, cap pommel, numbered ‘331’ beneath and the inside of the guard engraved ‘737’, and the grip with an early leather covering (binding missing) 92.3 cm; 36 ⅜ in blade £900-1100 153 A FRENCH MODEL MODEL AN XI CAVALRY SWORD, DATED 1855 of regulation type, with fullered blade double-edged at the point, the back-edge dated and with Châtellerault arsenal inscription, regulation brass hilt, leather-bound grip (wire binding missing), in its iron scabbard 96.0 cm; 37 ¾ in blade £300-400
£600-800
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154 A SPANISH DRESS ÉPÉE BY, TRADITION PRESENTED TO GENERAL JOHN H. EATON AS ENVOY EXTRAORDINARY AND MINISTER PLENIPOTENTIARY TO SPAIN (1836-1840) BY MARIA CHRISTINA OF SPAIN AS REGENT FOR HER DAUGHTER, THE FUTURE ISABELLA II, THE BLADE DATED 1837 with tapering double-edged blade of flattened-hexagonal section, stamped ‘Ano D 1837’ and ‘Fa Ntl Di Toledo’ on the respective faces at the forte, giltbrass hilt cast with classical ornament in low relief, including oval shell-guard decorated with the Iberian eagle flanked by classical figures, quillon-block with the letter ‘F’ for Ferdinand’ enclosed in a laurel wreath, a pair of straight quillons, knuckle-guard and pommel, and integral grip all decorated en suite, in its blued iron scabbard (now oxidised to brown) with gilt-brass suspensions mounts and drag 76.8 cm; 30 ¼ in blade Provenance By tradition presented to General John H. Eaton when Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Spain (1836-1840) by Maria Christina of Spain (when Regent for her daughter, the future Isabella II); thence to his friend and physician Dr William B. Magruder; thence to his brother Colonel James A. Magruder, a personal friend of General Grant, who wore the sword on full dress occasions including the funeral of President Lincoln, thence by descent to Mrs. Millicent Magruder Nichols, Massachusetts who gifted the sword to Dumbarton House in 1967. John Henry Eaton (1790-1856), was born in Halifax near the town of Scotland Neck, North Carolina. He attended University North Carolina 18021804, where he studied law and was admitted to the bar commencing practice in Franklin. In 1808 or 1809 he moved to Franklin, in Williamson County, Tennessee, to take up residence on lands owned by his father. Here he met his future wife, Myra Lewis, who with her sister were the wards of General Andrew Jackson. Eaton’s marriage thus brought him further wealth and also an opening into a political career. In 1818 Eaton was appointed to the U.S. Senate to fill a vacancy caused by the resignation of George W. Campbell; at the end of the term he was elected as a Democrat. Eaton served in the Senate from 1818-1829, when he resigned to become secretary of war in President Jackson’s cabinet remaining there until June 1831. In 1834 Jackson appointed him governor of the Territory of Florida, and in 1836 envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Madrid. The latter appointment he held until 1840. ‡ £600-800 155 A GERMAN OFFICER’S DEGEN, MID-18TH CENTURY with tapering double-edged blade inscribed with the spurious date and the running wolf of Solingen on each face, gilt-brass hilt with boatshell-guard, a pair of quillons, knuckle-guard, pommel, and solid grip all decorated with writhen designs and rococo ornament 80.0 cm; 31 ½ in blade £200-250 156 A GERMAN ARTILLERY OFFICER’S SWORD, LATE 19TH CENTURY of regulation type, with polished blade, regulation brass hilt cast with crossed cannon on the langets, in its scabbard with two suspension rings 79.0 cm; 31 ⅛ in blade £100-150
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157 A CENTRAL EUROPEAN MACE, 17TH CENTURY, PROBABLY HUNGARIAN with pear-shaped head of sixteen wedge-shaped flanges, moulded terminal, long tapering socket, and later haft pierced for a thong 58.5 cm; 23 in overall
159 A LUCERNE HAMMER, IN SWISS 16TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY with long tapering terminal spike, head of four flaring spikes with stout down-turned rear spike, a pair of long straps (head rusted), on a wooden haft 47.0 cm; 18 ½ in head
For another example in the Hungarian National Museum, see Kovács 2016, p. 97 no. 33. This group, and its spread across Central and South Eastern Europe, is discussed by Popov 2015, pp. 82-85.
£200-300
£1500-2500 158 AN ITALIAN BEC-DE-CORBIN FORMED ENTIRELY OF STEEL IN THIRD QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY with three-pronged claw-shaped head, leaf-shaped terminal spike, rear spike, writhen haft fitted with a belt hook, and the grip incorporating a disc top and bottom 70.0 cm; 27 ⅝ in overall ‡ £1800-2200
160 A LOCAHABER AXE IN 17TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY, A HALBERD AND A BILL 19TH CENTURY the first with flat head extending to a tapering terminal blade, curved forward edge with characteristic bill hook at the top (head pitted), on a wooden haft; the second with slender terminal spike, small axe-blade and down-curved spike, on a wooden haft, and the third with engraved back-edge incorporating an additional rear spike, tapering socket, and wooden haft the first: 52.2 cm; 20 ½ in head (3) £250-350
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161 A RARE GERMAN ETCHED DOUBLE HALBERD FOR THE GUARD OF JOHANN SIGISMUND, MARGRAF OF BRANDENBURG, DATED 1609 with long tapering terminal blade of flattened-diamond section, asymmetrical double axe-head of ‘bat-wing’ form, pierced with heart-shaped apertures and circles, etched on each face with a warrior profile, a mounted figure holding a falcon, the crowned coat-of arms enclosed by an inscription on the terminal blade, a warriors heads beneath, and scrolling leafy tendrils on the head, one face struck with a mark, on a wooden haft 66.0 cm; 26 in head The inscription reads ‘VON GOTTES GNADEN JOHANS SIGISMUNDT MARGGRAF ZU BRANDENBURG UND CHURFURST IN PREUSSEN HERZOG ZU GULICH CLEVE BERG STETIN POMMERN DER CASSUBEN UND WENDEN HERTZOGK 1609. Another halberd from this group, struck with the same mark, is preserved in the Deutsches Historisches Museum, Berlin. See Müller and Kölling 1990, no. 258 Johann Sigismund Elector of Brandenburg ((1572-1620, Elector from 1608) united his domain with that of Prussia through his marriage in 1594 to Anna, daughter of Albert Frederick of Prussia. He became duke of Prussia in 1618 and through his mother-in-law acquired rights over the Rhenish territories of Jülich, Cleves, and Berg following the Treaty of Xanten in 1614. £3500-4500
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162 A RARE GERMAN ETCHED HALBERD FOR THE GUARD OF THE ABBEY OF WERDEN AND HELMSTÄDT IN THE DIOCESE OF COLOGNE, DATED 1592 with tapering terminal spike swelling towards the base, of hollow-diamond section and formed with a pair of basal lugs, recurved axe-blade pierced with a rosette formation of holes, formed with a central spike, down-curved rear fluke pierced en suite and with an additional lug top and bottom, etched over the greater part of its surface with strapwork frames and scrolling leafy tendrils on a stippled ground, with the arms of the Abbey, issuant figures playing trumpets, the figure of Justice a further angelic figure and the pious inscription ‘Tale a Te’ and ‘o male a me’, and the rear fluke dated on each face, tapering conical socket, a pair of long straps, on a wooden haft 59.0 cm; 23 ¾ in head £2500-3500
163 A RARE GERMAN PARTISAN, FOR THE GUARD OF THE PRINCE ARCHBISHOP OF WURZBURG, 17TH CENTURY, PERHAPS JULIUS ECHTER OF MESPELBRUNN with broad terminal blade of flatteneddiamond section formed with a pair of broad basal lugs and moulded beneath, tapering faceted socket, and etched on each face with a ground of scrolling foliage on a stippled ground, the basal lugs decorated with trophies-of-arms, one face with an issuant monster above the figure of St John holding a chalice, and the other with the Bishop’s arms, a pair of straps, on a wooden haft 62.5 cm; 24 ⅝ in head Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn (15451617) was a major figure in the German Counter-Reformation. He became Prince-Bishop of Wurzburg in 1573 at the age of 28, and was an energetic ruler, building churches, reforming the administration of justice, founding a university and establishing primary schools. He banned Lutheran preachers and promoted the ministry of the Jesuits in his province. £2500-3000
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164 AN AUSTRIAN ETCHED PARTISAN FOR THE GUARD OF EMPEROR CHARLES VI, DATED 1732 with broad central blade of flattened-diamond section formed with two basal lugs, etched 'CAROLUS' above the crowned Imperial double eagle, a trophy-of arms enclosing the inscription 'CONSTANTIA ET FORTITUDINE' on one face and with the inscription 'WO LIEB UND TRUE IN EINEN LAND BENIMBIDE FEIND DIE OBER HAND', and a trophy-of-arms with a central panel filled by fortress on the other, moulded tapering socket, a pair of straps, on a wooden haft 33.5 cm; 13 ¼ in head
166 AN ENGLISH PARTISAN FOR THE GUARD OF QUEEN ELIZABETH II (1956, 1952-) with tapering central blade of flattened-diamond section, the base of broad crescentic form incorporating two pairs of very short lugs, threaded base, moulded brass socket, large pierced brass collar, the head etched and gilt with the Royal arms above the Royal cypher 'EiiR' on a blued panel on each face, on its original wooden haft with brass shoe, and green tassel, and in good condition throughout 54.0 cm; 21 ¼ in head £400-600
£1500-2500 165 AN AUSTRIAN ETCHED PARTISAN FOR A SENIOR OFFICER OF THE IMPERIAL ARMY, DATED 1701 with broad central blade formed with a pair of basal lugs, etched on one face with the crowned Imperial double eagle above a trophy-of-arms, and on the other with a further trophy and a crested coat-of-arms, moulded socket etched with a further trophy-of-arms and with an inscription, on a wooden haft 37.0 cm; 14 ½ in head
167 A PARTISAN, LATE 19TH CENTURY with tapering terminal blade of flattened diamond-section, the base of broad crescentic form incorporating two pairs of short straight ribbon-like lugs, plain tapering socket (head rusted), on a wooden haft 65.8 cm; 25 ⅞ in head £300-400
Maximilliamis de Fanz a Rittersburg Rom Kaiser Obrist Lieutenant und Guard Hauptman £1200-1800
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168 A GERMAN HALBERD, MID-16TH CENTURY with long terminal spike of diamondsection, forward-leaning axe-blade, triangular rear pean pierced with a vertical arrangement of four holes, and a pair of shortened straps (areas of pitting, small cracks and laminations), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 53.0 cm; 20 ⅞ in head Provenance Schloss Ramholz
170 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY with long terminal spike of diamondsection, curved axe-blade pierced with a group of three holes in the centre, rear pean pierced with a vertical arrangement of three holes and struck with mark, in a rondel the letters ‘HL’ and a pellet, and a pair of long straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 70.0 cm; 27 ½ in head Provenance Schloss Ramholz
£600-800 169 A GERMAN HALBERD, LAST QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY with long terminal spike of diamondsection, curved axe-blade pierced with a group of five holes and two further holes, pierced rear pean, and a pair of long straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 90.0 cm; 35 ½ in head Provenance Schloss Ramholz £600-800
169
172 A GERMAN HALBERD, LAST QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY, with long terminal spike of diamondsection, angular axe-blade (top re-shaped) pierced with a group of seven holes in the centre and two further groups of three holes, pierced rear pean, and a pair of long straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 77.5 cm; 30 ½ in blade Provenance Schloss Ramholz £600-800
£600-800 171 A HALBERD, LAST QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY, GERMAN OR STYRIAN with long terminal spike of diamondsection, curved axe-blade pierced with a group of five holes in the centre and two further groups of three holes each decorated with a crescent, pierced rear pean, and a pair of long straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 62.5 cm; 24 ⅝ in head Provenance Schloss Ramholz
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£600-800
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173 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY/EARLY 18TH CENTURY with leaf-shaped terminal blade formed with a medial ridge, curved axe-blade, rear pean with an additional up-turned lug, tapering socket, a pair of straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 39.5 cm; 15 ½ in head
175 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY with leaf-shaped terminal blade formed with a medial ridge, curved axe-blade pierced with three groups of holes, pierced rear pean with an additional upturned lug, tapering faceted socket, a pair of straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 43.2 cm; 17 in head
177 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY with leaf-shaped terminal blade formed with a medial ridge, curved axe-blade (small chips top and bottom), rear pean with an additional up-turned lug, tapering faceted socket, a pair of straps (areas of pitting), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 39.2 cm; 15 ½ in head
Provenance Schloss Ramholz
Provenance Schloss Ramholz
Provenance Schloss Ramholz
£600-800
£600-800
£600-800
174 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY with leaf-shaped terminal blade formed with a medial ridge, curved axe-blade, rear pean with an additional up-turned lug, tapering faceted socket, a pair of straps (areas of pitting, axe-blade repaired), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 41.0 cm; 16 ⅛ in head
176 A NORTH EUROPEAN HALBERD, 17TH CENTURY with leaf-shaped terminal blade formed with a medial ridge, curved axe-blade formed with an additional lug top and bottom, down-curved rear pean struck with a mark on one face, tapering faceted socket, and a pair of straps (areas of pitting, small repairs), on a long moulded wooden haft with tassel 43.5 cm; 17 ⅛ in head
Provenance Schloss Ramholz
Provenance Schloss Ramholz
£600-800
£600-800
175 174
176 177
173
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178 A GERMAN HALBERD, LATE 16TH CENTURY with central spike of diamond section, forward leaning slightly curved axe-blade pierced with a slipped trefoil and cut with cusps on the rear edges, rear spike stamped with a mark on one side and pierced and cusped en suite, and a pair of long straps, on a later wooden haft 49.5 cm; 19 in head
181 AN ITALIAN CORSECA, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY with long tapering central blade of flattened-diamond section recessed at the base to a trapezoidal panel, a single curved basal lug of tapering diamond section (the other lug missing), faceted socket, and a pair of short straps, on a later wooden haft 72.0 cm; 28 ⅜ in head
£400-600
£300-400
179 STYRIAN HALBERD, LAST QUARTER OF THE 16TH CENTURY with tapering terminal spike, small curved axe-blade pierced with three groups of holes (cracked), rear spike struck with a mark, a pair of long straps (head rusted), on a later wooden haft fitted with an additional pair of straps 45.5 cm; 18 in head
182 A RARE SPEAR, LATE 15TH CENTURY, PROBABLY GERMAN formed of a long tapering spike of square-section, the base incorporating four stout spikes, conical socket with a pair of roped latten collars, and a single short strap (one strap missing, the base chipped), on a later wooden haft 97.5 cm; 38 ⅜ in head £700-900
£250-350 180 A GERMAN HALBERD, LATE 16TH CENTURY with broad leaf-shaped blade formed with a medial ridge, the lower portion of the axe-blade formed with a small cusp (the remainder removed), plain rear fluke, faceted tapering socket, on a later wooden haft 41.0 cm; 16 in head £250-300
183 A CONTINENTAL MILITARY PARTISAN, SECOND HALF OF THE 18TH CENTURY with double-edged terminal blade formed with a reinforced tip, the base with a pair of broad lugs pierced on each side (one slightly bent), etched on each face with a crowned double eagle charged with a shield per bend sinister sable or, molded socket, a pair of straps, on a wooden haft (in two pieces) 37.5 cm; 14 ¾ in head ‡ £150-200
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50
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Armour PROPERTY FROM THE BERGER COLLETION EDUCATIONAL TRUST, SOLD TO BENEFIT FUTURE PHILANTHROPY 184 A COMPOSITE CAP-A-PIE FIELD ARMOUR, MAINLY ITALIAN, 16TH AND EARLY 17TH CENTURIES WITH ETCHED AND GILT DECORATION OF THE 19TH CENTURY IN THE EARLY 17TH CENTURY STYLE comprising German close helmet of the second quarter of the 16th century, with rounded one-piece skull rising to a low medial comb (split at its rear), and associated visor, upper bevor and lower bevor attached to it by common pivots (replaced), the forward-projecting visor pierced beneath a pair of stepped vision-slits with several small ventilationholes and slots, and a pair of large sub-rectangular apertures closed by later horizontal and vertical bars, the prow-shaped upper bevor pierced at each side with numerous ventilation-holes and slots, and fitted at the right of the chin with a sliding catch to engage a notch cut in the faceopening of the lower bevor, the latter fitted at the same side with a swivel-hook to engage a pierced stud (in both cases replaced) on the skull, the hollowed lower edges of the skull and lower bevor restored; collar of two lames front and rear (restored using old plates); breastplate formed of a main plate of early ‘peascod’ fashion, fitted at each of its arm-openings with a moveable gusset and flanged outwards at its lower edge to receive a fauld of one centrally-divided lame (restored), supporting on paired straps and buckles (replaced) long tassets each of nine lames (the first of the left associated and the fifth of the right patched at its centre) terminating in winged poleyns (the lowest two of the left associated and reworked); one-piece backplate with an outward-flanged lower edge; large symmetrical pauldrons, each of seven lames (the sixth of the left patch at its front end, the third of the right patched at its centre rear and the lowest four of the right associated), and connected by a turner (that of the left patched at its upper end, and that of the right restored), to fully articulated tubular vambraces with winged bracelet couters each of three lames; fingered gauntlets each with a flared and obtusely-pointed tubular cuff (the right lacking its outer lower corner), four metacarpal-plates (the second of the left patched at its outer end), a shaped knuckle-plate, and scaled finger- and thumb-defences; and tubular greaves (restored) each cut at its lower end with an arch to accommodate an integral round-toed sabaton of eight lames; the main edges of the armour formed with inward turns, mostly file-roped, and its surfaces etched with an overall pattern of imbricated architectural arches enclosing crowned eagles and lions on a stippled ground and retaining traces of gilding (some chipping, cracking and holing throughout; and the surface worn, patinated and tarnishing overall) See note at front of catalogue for information concerning stands. Provenance Nosely Hall, Leicestershire Sold Sotheby’s, 28 September 1998, lot 17 The decoration of the armour was probably inspired by that of an Italian armour made for Count Annabile Capodilista about 1620, which was purchased for the Tower of London Armouries in 1840 (now numbered II. 192), following its use by the ‘Guard Attendant of the Queen of Beauty” in the Eglinton Tournament of the previous year. See Blair 1969, pp. 22-7, pls 5 & 6. ‡ £8000-12000
184 51
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VARIOUS OWNERS 185 A HIGHLY RARE AND IMPORTANT ENGLISH JACK OF PLATE, CIRCA 1580-90 formed of small overlapping square plates of iron with cropped corners, secured by lines of diagonal, vertical, or in some cases horizontal, stitches of crossbow twine through holes at their centres between the inner and outer layers of a fabric doublet of ‘peascod’ fashion with a frontal opening situated slightly to the left of centre and originally closed by laces passing through pairs of reinforced holes, an upstanding collar devoid, like the edges of the arm-openings, of plates, and a short skirt, the whole enclose between two outer layers of fine linen canvas covered with modern nylon netting and overlying felted woven wool on the outside and a coarser canvas on the inside of the garment, and decorated with white woollen tufts at the intersections of the stitches (the outer fabric partly discoloured, worn through at points and split at the shoulders and some other points; and the plates in some cases patinated to a green colour) 72.0 cm; 28 ⅜ in Provenance Sir William ffarindon, Worden Hall, Lancashire (sold by auction 1948) A private English collection Literature Alexander de Cosson & William Burgess, ‘Catalogue of the Exhibition of Ancient Helmets and Examples of Mail’, Archaeological Journal, Vol. XXXVII, 1881, p. 591. Ian Eaves, ‘On the Remains of a Jack of Plate Excavated from Beeston Castle in Cheshire’, Journal of the Arms and Armour Society, Vo. XIII, no. 2, September 1989, p. 137, n. 29) The jack of plate - sometimes referred to in contemporary documents as a ‘steel coat’, a ‘plate coat’ or a ‘coat of plate’ was a uniquely British defence first recognisably mentioned in English and Scottish records of the second quarter of the 16th century (Eaves 1989, pp. 85-6 & 144, n. 48), p. 145, n. 52). The inventory of the holdings of the Office of the Armouries taken on the death of Henry VIII in 1547 mentions ‘a Northerne Jack covered with lynnen’ and three ‘Northern Jackes made of Canvas and plate’ (Harold A. Dillon, ‘Arms and Armour at Westminster, the Tower and Greenwich’, Archaeologia, Vol. LI, 1888, pp. 52 & 57). Although defences of this kind ceased to be manufactured towards the end of the 16th century (Eaves 1989, p.86 & 148, n. 60), their use persisted into the early years of the following century. In 1622 some forty examples were issued from the Armouries of the Tower of London for use in America by the Virginia Company (Eaves 1986, p. 86 & 148, n. 61). William Harrison in his description of England first published in 1577, observed that ‘Our armour …consisteth of corselets, almaine riverets, shirtes of mayle, Jacke quilted over wyth leather, fustian or canuas ouer thicke plates of yron that are sewed into the same, and of which there is no towne or village that hath not hir conuenient furniture (in Ralph Holinshead, The First Volume of the Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland, London, 1557, f. 86v). Today, however, only sixteen more or less complete jacks of plate are preserved worldwide. Aside from the example offered here, eight (only five of which are complete) can be 52
recorded in the Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds, one in the British Museum, London, one in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, one in the Royal Museums of Scotland, Edinburgh, one in Warwick Castle, Warwickshire, one in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, one in the Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nuremberg, and one in the Schweizerisches Landesmuseum, Zurich (Eaves 1989, pp. 1357, n. 22-6 & 2). Of these, only the last two along one of those in the Royal Armouries and that recently acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum (Thomas Del Mar Ltd, 7 Dec. 2016, lot 51), have their frontal openings offset to one side of centre as on the present lot. The present lot together with the examples now in the Royal Armouries and the Victoria and Albert Museum formed part of a collection assembled at Worden Hall, Lancashire, by Sir William ffarington (c. 1704-81) sometime after 1765. They are unlikely to have formed part of the Hall’s indigenous armoury which was sequestered by Parliament in 1643 (Susan Maria ffarington, The ffarington Papers, Chetham Society, 1856, p. 93), although it was said that one of the three did service, together with a helmet and other pieces, as part of a funeral achievement eventually removed from the ffarington Chapel in Leyland Church in 1816 (De Cosson & Burgess 1881, p. 591). The collection was in due course added to by Miss Susan ffarington in the 19th century. An 18th century inventory of it is preserved in New Zealand while three 19th century ones, dating from 1846 to circa 1870 are privately preserved in England, and refer to ‘3 Brigandine Jackets (for Bowmen. (Elizn’. A drawing of what is almost certainly one of these jacks is preserved in a manuscript catalogue prepared by the late 18th century Manchester antiquary Thomas Barritt and now preserved in the Manchester City Library (Ancient Armour and Weapons in the Possession of Thos Barrit 1793). The catalogue shows objects both in his own collection and of others that he visited in the north of England. He describes the jack as ‘A Bigantine jacket quilted within with square pieces of iron about an inch in diameter and sliding over each other like the scales of fishes, and covered over with strong linen’. One of the Worden jacks (probably that now in the Royal Armouries Museum, inv. No. III.1884) was lent by Miss ffarington to the Exhibition of Ancient Helmets and Examples of Mail held in the rooms of the British Archaeological Association in 1881 (De Cosson & Burgess 1881, cat. no. 49, p.591) The collection was sold by a local auctioneer in 1948. The purchaser of the three jacks subsequently lent them to Rufford Old Hall, Lancashire. One of them in due course passed to a private collection in the USA but was in 1982 acquired by the Royal Armouries, H.M. Tower of London, while that now in the Victoria and Albert Museum and that offered here had from some time before 1981 been sent for conservation to the North Western Museum and Art Gallery Service at Blackburn, Lancashire.” At some time before 1981 it was sent for conservation to the North Western Museum and Art Gallery Service at Blackburn, Lancashire, where it was enclosed within protective nylon netting. £5000-7000
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186 A CAP-A-PIE FIELD ARMOUR WITH ETCHED DECORATION IN THE ITALIAN STYLE OF THE SECOND HALF OF THE 16TH CENTURY, 19TH CENTURY comprising close helmet with two-piece skull joined along the crest of a low medial comb, and a peak, upper bevor and lower bevor attached to it by common pivots, the upper bevor cut at each side of its upper edge of with a broad trapezoidal notch serving as a vision-slit, and pieced at each side with seven circular ventilation-holes in rosette-formation, the upper and lower bevors each secured at their right sides by swivel-hooks and pierced studs, and a pair of gorget-plates front and rear; collar of two lames front and rear; one-piece breastplate of ‘deep-bellied’ form, flanged outwards at its lower edge to receive a fauld of two lames cut at the centre of its lower edge with a shallow arch separating a pair of pendent tassets each of five lames worn over a skirt of butted mail; one-piece backplate with an outward-flanged lower edge; large symmetrical pauldrons, each of five lames (the left partly disarticulated), connected by turners to fully articulated tubular vambraces with winged bracelet couters each of five lames; fingered gauntlets with long pointed tubular cuffs; guttershaped cuisses terminating in winged poleyns each of three lames; tubular greaves each articulated once at their lower ends and fitted with integral sabatons with pointed toe-caps, each of seven lames; and a circular steel target rising at its centre to a quadrangular spike and fitted at its rear with a pair of leather enarmes; all parts etched on a blackened ground between plain bands and borders with scrolling foliage and flower-heads inhabited by mythical beasts; the armour mounted on a wooden stand with a rectangular base and accompanied by a sword with tapering two-edged blade, transversely-grooved kite-shaped pommel, straight quillons flaring to trefoil terminals and leather-covered wooden grip (tarnished and lightly patinated overall) £3500-5000
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187 A COMPOSITE GERMAN THREE-QUARTER FIELD ARMOUR, MID- TO LATE 16TH CENTURY, THE BREASTPLATE STRUCK WITH THE MARK OF PAUL MEITINGER OF INNSBRUCK comprising burgonet formed of a one-piece skull rising to a high roped medial comb, projecting forward to a short obtusely-pointed peak struck at its front edge with the ownership mark of the Austrian Landesfürstliches Zeughaus, fitted at its rear with an obtusely-pointed one-piece neck-guard (right articulating rivet loose), and at each side with a hinged cheek-piece (the distal end of each hinge replaced) flanged outwards at its lower edge to serve as a continuation of the neck-guard, pierced at its centre with seven small circular ventilation-holes arranged in rosette formation and fitted at its front edge with a buff leather loop (replaced) to receive a tie; ‘almain’ collar of three lames front and rear, the lowest front one struck with the same ownership mark as the burgonet, giving issue at either side to an integral spaudler of six downward-overlapping lames; breastplate of late ‘peascod’ form struck at the centre of its shallow neck-opening with the maker’s initials P M (the first initial partly worn) of Paul Meitinger of Innsbruck and fitted at its arm-openings with moveable gussets, and at its outward-flanged lower edge with a fauld of two lames, the lowest cut with a shallow arch over the crotch and bearing a pair of detachable tassets (not a pair) each of seven lames, extending to just above the knees; one-piece backplate shaped to the shoulders and flanged outwards at its lower edge to receive a culet of one lame; vambraces (not a pair) each formed of a tubular upper and lower cannon (the inner plate of the right lower cannon corroded at its front edge) articulated to one another by a winged couter of three lames; the main edges of the armour decorated with roped inward turns, those of the vambraces accompanied by recessed borders on a ground originally black from the hammer (the armour showing some pitting and wear overall) See note at front of catalogue for information concerning stands. The records show Paul Meitinger, the maker of the breastplate, to have been active in Innsbruck in the period 1544-80. In 1554-8 he was employed by the Imperial Zeughaus to make infantry armours. Further contracts were obtained by him in 1562-5, 1573 and 1576. He also made armours for the Jesuits of Halle in 1580. Further breastplates and backplates bearing his mark are to be found in the Hofjagd- und Rüstkammer, Vienna, Inv.Nos A 403 & 407, the collections of Schloss Ambrass, near Innsbruck, Inv. Nos WA 223 & 331, and the Museo Stibbert, Florence, Inv. No. 2367. See Thomas & Gamber 1954, pp. 87 & 105, pl. 83).
187
£6000-8000
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188 188 TWO MINIATURE ARMOURS IN 16TH CENTURY STYLE, 20TH CENTURY the first with visored close-helmet, etched cuirass applied with the crowned double-eagle of the Holy Roman Empire, a pair of full arm-defences with fingered gauntlets, a pair of full leg defences with pointed sabatons, decorated throughout with etched scrolling foliage complete with a halberd (tip chipped, areas of wear overall); the second similar, plain, with a sword, each on an elaborate wooden stand in art deco style incorporating a hinged front concealing a drinks cabinet the first: 167.0 cm; 65 ¾ in high including halberd £500-700
189 A MINIATURE CAP-A-PIE ARMOUR WITH ETCHED DECORATION IN THE 16TH CENTURY STYLE, 19TH CENTURY of steel, comprising close helmet with two-piece combed skull, pivoted visor and bevor, the former pierced with ventilation-holes, and a single fixed gorget-plate front and rear; breastplate and backplate, each of one plate, the former medially ridged and fitted at its lower edge with a skirt, one-piece tassets and flat codpiece; large symmetrical pauldrons connected by turners to three-piece vambraces with winged couters (the left perforated at the point of the elbow); full legharness with winged poleyns and integral articulated sabatons; the front of the armour etched overall with scrolling foliage on a blackened ground involving, at the centre of the breastplate, with an escutcheon charged with a rampant lion and shield; on a wooden stand with a black-painted wooden base 52.0 cm; 20 ½ in £400-600
190 A COMPOSITE NORTH EUROPEAN PIKEMAN’S ARMOUR, IN MID-17TH CENTURY STYLE, LATE 19TH/20TH CENTURY comprising pot with one-piece eggshaped crown fitted within its lower edge with a separate slightly downturned brim and at each side with a pendent scutiform cheek-piece; onepiece medially-ridged breastplate with V-shaped waist-line, fitted at each side of the chest with a swivel-hook and pierced stud to secure the shoulderstraps of the backplate, and at each side of the waist with restraining-hooks for its waist-belt, its lower end formed with a deep flange supporting on a pair of hinges at each side a one-piece trapezoidal tasset embossed to simulate five lames and decorated with roundheaded rivets; and one-piece backplate with straight lower edge, fitted to either side of its neck-opening with a scaled shoulder-strap (detached, its leathers replaced) and to either side of its lower end with a waist-belt (replaced); the neck-opening of the breastplate and backplate each struck with a trio of dots; the main edges of the armour formed with plain inward turns accompanied by recessed or engraved borders (the whole painted black over a partly oxidised surface) £1000-1500
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191
191 A FINE AND IMPORTANT NORTH ITALIAN LEFT CHEEK-PIECE OF A BURGONET WITH EMBOSSED AND DAMASCENED DECORATION, MILANESE, CIRCA 1580, PROBABLY FROM THE ATELIER OF LUCIO MARLIANI, CALLED PICCININO of sub-rectangular form, cut away in a diagonal line at the rear of its upper edge and pierced there with two holes, one occupied by a brass-capped rivet, for the attachment of an internal hinge that formerly connected it to the sides of a burgonet, cut at the front of the same edge with a shallow notch to accommodate the rear of the burgonet’s peak, flanged outwards at the rear of its lower edge to serve as a continuation of the latter’s neck-guard, and projecting downwards at the front of the same edge where it is fitted with a brass-capped rivet for the attachment of a chin-strap, its front and lower rear edges turned inwards and decorated with roping indicated by gilt diagonal lines, its surface finely embossed, engraved and damascened in gold on a blued ground with a classical warrior at its centre standing before a city, intertwined serpents in the flange of its lower edge, and a helmet and shield in the downward projection of the front of its lower edge, all enclosed within strapwork damascened with delicate running scrollwork 15.0 cm; 5 ⅞ in high x 10.6 cm; 4 ¼ in wide The cheek-piece is probably from the atelier of the Milanese armourer Lucio Marliani, called Piccinino, who decorated armour based on the designs of Andrea Casalini of Parma. His work is identifiable from the signature LUCIO/IÇR jointly representing himself and his assistant Gerolamo Assi, occurring on a saddle-steel in the Muzeum Narodowe, Cracow, inv. no. XIV -412. Paolo Morigia, in his Nobilità di Milano of 1595, praised Lucio Piccinino both for his relief work in iron and silver and his damascening, noting that he had made costly armours for Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma, and other princes. The Duke of Parma’s armour is thought to be that preserved in the Hofjagd- und Rustkammer, Vienna, inv. nos A 1132, 1153 & 1153a-b. The cheek-piece offered here closely resembles in form that of the Duke’s burgonet. The warrior decorating its centre and the intertwined serpents decorating its lower edge can be compared with similar subjects forming part of the ornament of the Duke’s breastplate, also appearing in Casalini’s designs for it. See Godoy & Leydi 2003, pp. 9-21, 270-94, 306, 308-11, 321, 478-82 & 488, figs XV-XVIII. £4000-6000 57
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192
194
195
193
192 A GERMAN ‘BLACK AND WHITE’ COMB MORION, EARLY 17TH CENTURY with rounded two-piece crown joined along the crest of a high medial comb (split near to its apex), and ‘swept’ integral brim (each side pierced with a later suspension-hole) rising to an acute point front and rear, its edge formed with a plain inward turn, the base of the crown encircled by twelve lining-rivets of which eleven retain their brass rosette-washers, and each side decorated with a burnished longitudinal band against a blackened background (refreshed with paint) 25 cm; 9 ⅞ in
194 A NORTH ITALIAN MORION IN THE ‘SPANISH’ FASHION, CIRCA 1590-1600 with one-piece almond-shaped crown rising to a short ‘stalk’ at its apex, slightly downturned brim formed at its edge with a file-rope inward turn (worn) accompanied by a narrow groove, its front pierced with a late suspension-hole, and the base of the crown encircled by fourteen holes for lining rivets of which one at the left still survives (the whole with a mottled overall patina) 20.5 cm; 8 in £350-500
£600-900 193 A NORTH EUROPEAN ZISCHÄGGE, MID-17TH CENTURY with one-piece hemispherical skull embossed with six radiating ribs and fitted at its apex with a pierced finial and large circular washer, at its brow with a flat obtusely-pointed peak, at its nape with a flaring neck-guard of four lames (the fourth cracked at its right), and at each side with a pendent scutiform cheek-piece (each detached at its rear) pierced at its centre with seven auditory holes in rosette-formation, the peak pierced at its rear with a rectangular hole to accommodate a sliding nasal-bar with a leaf-shaped upper end struck with the mark ‘l’ and retained by a staple and lockingscrew at the brow, the main edges of the helmet formed with plain inward turns and its surfaces coloured black overall 26.4 cm; 10 ⅜ in (with cheek-pieces) £900-1100
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195 A NORTH ITALIAN MORION IN THE ‘SPANISH’ FASHION, CIRCA 1580-90 with one-piece almond-shaped crown rising to a short ‘stalk’ at its apex, slightly downturned brim projecting to an obtuse point front and rear and formed with plain inward turn accompanied by a narrow groove, its front struck with a crowned mark, possibly of its owner, and pierced with a late suspension-hole, and the base of the crown originally encircled by fourteen lining-rivets of which twelve remain and in all but one case retain their original brass rosette-washers, the whole with a blued finish (lightly oxidised in part) 21.0 cm; 8 ¼ in £450-600
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196 THE RARE MAIN PLATE AND PARTIAL POLEYN OF A NORTH ITALIAN ‘GOTHIC’ CUISSE FOR THE LEFT THIGH AND KNEE, CIRCA 1460 the main plate of gutter-shaped form, medially-ridged, turned outwards at its concave upper edge, fitted at its outer edge with the proximal portion of the upper of two former hinges of iron for the attachment of a side-plate, and overlapped at its lower edge by the uppermost lame of the poleyn (its lower outer corner chipped), the main plate painted internally in red characters with the number ‘36.449.L??’ and its inner edge fitted with a tag stamped with the number L.23.64.1.4.17 (lightly pitted overall) 28.0 cm; 11 in Provenance Sumner Healey, New York Stephen V. Grancsay, New York Christies, London, 26 March 1980, lot 39 Exhibited Allentown Art Museum, Allentown, Pennsylvania, 15 March -14 June 1964, cat. No. 66 The cuisse is of the same form as several in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, deriving from the Venetian Fortress of Chalcis, Euboea, which fell to the Turks in 1470. £700-1000
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197
197 A NORTH GERMAN BURGONET, ‘ALMAIN’ COLLAR AND BACKPLATE IN THE ‘BLACK AND WHITE’ FASHION, SECOND HALF OF THE 16TH CENTURY the first formed of a rounded one-piece skull rising to a high roped medial comb, flanged outwards at its rear to receive an obtusely-pointed one-piece neck-guard, pierced at each side with a hole for the attachment of a separate peak, now represented only by its left terminal and pivot, and cut out at each side to accommodate a missing hinged cheek-piece; the second formed of three lames front and rear, fitted at each side with an integral spaudler of six lames (both associated, the right detached and partly disarticulated); the third formed in one piece well-shaped to the shoulders and boxed at each side, its lower edge flanged outwards to receive a culet of one lame; the main edges of all pieces formed with inward turns, either fileroped or notched, and their surfaces decorated with raise or recessed bands and borders originally burnished bright against a black-from-the-hammer ground, the borders of the backplate embossed in low relief with stylised acanthus foliage (the whole painted black over a partly oxidised surface) £1200-1600 198 A NORTH EUROPEAN CUIRASSIER’S BREASTPLATE, CIRCA 1610 of shot-proof weight and formed in one piece in the late ‘peascod’ fashion, with plain outward turns at its neck and armopening and an outward-flanged lower edge fitted at either of its ends with a pierced staple for the attachment of a fauld, its surface decorated with radiating bands and borders of incised single lines (the lines worn and the whole lightly patinated overall) 35.6 cm; 21 ⅞ in £600-800
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199 A SOUTH GERMAN BURGONET, CIRCA 1560-70 with pointed one-piece skull boxed in four panels, rising to a prominent baluster-shaped finial, the upper half of which is faceted and the lower writhen, projecting forward to a flat obtusely pointed integral peak and backward to a similar but slightly shorter and more obtusely-pointed integral neck-guard, fitted internally with a quilted canvas lining and at each side with a hinged cheek-piece (restored) flanged outwards at its front and rear to serve respectively as continuations of its peak and neckguard, and pierced at its centre within a raised circle with four auditory-holes separated by a four-pointed star, the helmet formed at its main edges with file-roped inward turns accompanied by recessed borders, the whole with an overall blued finish (now lightly to moderately pitted, the skull with a plugged hole at the upper end of its left rear facet and a patch at the front of the cut-out for the right cheek-piece) 24.3 cm; 9 ¼ in
200
200 A SOUTH GERMAN MORION, CIRCA 1570-80 with rounded one-piece crown rising to high file-roped medial crown (bruised just behind its apex), and integral brim rising slightly to an acute point front and rear, the edge of the brim formed with a file-roped inward turn, the base of the crown encircled by nine (originally eleven) round-headed lining-rivets of which all but one retain their large pewter rosette-washers, the whole retaining its original black-from-thehammer finish (partly oxidised) 21.5 cm; 8 ½ in
201
201 TWO SOUTH GERMAN MITTEN GAUNTLETS, LATE 16TH CENTURY of a similar design but not forming a pair, each comprising a long flared and pointed cuff (the right restored) with a separate fixed inner plate, five metacarpal-plates, a knuckle-plate formed with a file-roped transverse rib (the left perforated at its inner end), and three finger-plates (the cuffs of both gauntlets pierced at their upper ends with later wiring-holes and their surfaces showing a mottle light to moderate patina overall) £500-800
£800-1000
£900-1200
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202
202 AN ARMET IN THE EARLY 16TH CENTURY GERMAN STYLE, 19TH/20TH CENTURY with rounded skull formed in two pieces joined medially by a separate applied low triple-comb, fitted at each side with a hinged cheek-piece fastening to its mate at the chin by means of a screw, and at the front with a ‘bellows’ visor attached by a pair of small pivots with circular washers, and pierced with paired rows of circular ventilation-holes separated by five transverse ridges of which the uppermost serves as a step beneath a centrally-divided vision-slit having its upper edge formed by an inserted plate, the visor secured at the left of the chin by a swivel-hook and stud, and the lower edges of the skull and cheek-pieces each formed with internally hollowed rims allowing them to lock over and rotate on the turned upper edge of a collar (the whole lightly pitted and patinated overall) 27.5 cm; 10 ¾ in £200-300
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203 A PAIR OF GAUNTLETS IN THE LATE 15TH CENTURY GERMAN ‘GOTHIC’ STYLE, AND A PAIR OF BESAGUES IN THE MID-16TH CENTURY GERMAN STYLE, BOTH 19TH CENTURY the first comprised in each case of a long pointed cuff with truncated tip, three wrist-plates, two metacarpalplates, a shaped knuckle-plate, a shaped finger-plate and the main plate of a hinged thumb-defence, the upper edge of the cuff formed with a plain inward turn bordered by a flute (lightly patinated overall); and the second in each case of circular form, rising to a boss at its centre and formed at its edge with a file-roped inward turn (lightly patinated overall) the first each 31.5 cm; 12 ⅜ in long: the second each 14.0 cm; 5 ½ in diameter (4) £350-500
204 A EUROPEAN SHOT-PROOF BREASTPLATE, PROBABLY 18TH CENTURY of notable weight and formed in one piece with slight outward flanging at its neck-opening and waist, and fitted at the shoulders and sides with rivets and copper washers retaining fragments of retaining-straps (with a light mottle patina overall) 46.0 cm; 18 ⅛ in £250-400
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205 A FINE MODEL OF THE ETCHED AND GILT ARMOUR OF SIR JOHN SMYTH MADE IN AUGSBURG AND GREENWICH CIRCA 1575-6, MONARCH SILVERSMITHS LTD, LONDON, MID-20TH CENTURY comprising armet with prow-shaped visor and upper bevor, formed at its lower edge with a hollowed rim fitting over the upper edge of an articulated collar; one-piece breastplate of ‘peascod’ form, flanged outwards at its lower edge to receive a fauld of one lame from which are suspended by a pair of hasps at each side laminated cuisses terminating in winged poleyns; one-piece backplate with flanged lower edge; large symmetrical pauldrons; tubular vambraces fitted with turners at their upper ends and winged bracelet-couters at their elbows; fingered gauntlets with flared and pointed cuffs; and tubular greaves articulated at the ankles, fitted at their heels with rowel-spurs, and at their front with articulated sabatons; the main edges of the armour formed with roped inward turns and its surfaces decorated with etched and gilt bands; the whole well mounted on a carved wooden figure standing on a rectangular wooden base 35.0 cm; 17 ¾ in The model shows the armour of Sir John Smythe as it was mounted in the Tower of London Armouries (Inv. No. II.84) until 1964, with the armet, collar, pauldrons, vambraces, greaves and sabatons of an armour of Sir Christopher Hatton. The armour of Sir John Smythe was made in Augsburg (the pelleted ‘A’ mark of the city struck within its shield now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York) but augmented with matching pieces made in the royal armour workshops at Greenwich about 1586, as depicted in the album of drawings by the master workman of the Greenwich workshops, Jacobe Halder, and now preserved in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. By the early 18th century at least, it had been mounted in the Tower with elements of one of Sir John Christopher Hatton’s armours made in Greenwich about 1587. The Hatton pieces were removed from the ensemble to be displayed separately in 1964. See ffoulkes 1916, Inv. No. II. 84; Laking 1921 pp. 39-44, figs 1119-21; Mann 1932; Mann 1951, pp. 26-8, pls XXII-XXIIIa; and Richardson 2015, pp. 35 & 62-5. £2500-3000
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206 A GERMAN MACHINE-GUNNER’S OR SENTINEL’S BREASTPLATE, CIRCA 1914-17 of notable weight and formed of a main plate flanged outwards at the neck, fitted to either side of the latter with a broad fixed shoulder-strap projecting down the back, and at its lower end with a skirt of three lames diminishing in width to its rounded lower end and articulated on a pair of internal webbing straps with felt pads fitted between each pair of lames (lightly patina overall) 66.0 cm; 26 in See Dean 1920, pp. 142-7, figs 98 & 98a, for a discussion of this type of defence, replaced by a newer model in 1917. £900-1200 207 A RARE AMERICAN EXPERIMENTAL ARM-DEFENCE, FIRST WORLD WAR comprising one-piece spaudler, gutter-shaped upper and lower cannon linked by a one-piece winged couter open at the rear, and a short oval one-piece hand-defence, all connected by internal leathers (severed at several points), and the main edges formed with plain outward turns (oxidised overall) Approx. 73.0 cm; 28 ¾ in long Provenance Evan Perry, Brighton, Sussex
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200 pairs of this experimental arm-defence were sent to France on trial, but were found not to be satisfactory (see Dean 1920, pp. 264-265). £100-150
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208
208 A MODEL OF A LATE 15TH CENTURY MILANESE JOUSTING HELM BY RUSSELL ROBINSON OF THE TOWER OF LONDON ARMOURIES, CIRCA 1975 of ‘frog-mouthed’ form, comprising crown-plate, front plate and rear plate rigidly secured to one another by rivets, the rear plate decorated with flutes, and the lower edge of the helm fitted at its front with a hinged rectangular hasp and at its rear with a hinged trapezoidal ring 10.0 cm; 4 in high with hasp The model is based on a helm made by Giovani Angelo Missaglia of Milan about 1490 for Gasparo Fracasso, Milanese ambassador to the Court of Innsbruck, and now in the Hofjagd- und Rustkammer, Vienna, Inv. No. B2, and two similar helms in the Palazzo Ducale, Venice, Inv. Nos C5 & C6. (See Laking, 1920, figs 472-3); and Boccia & Coelho, 1967, pls 145-152. £500-800
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Books and Miscellanea VARIOUS OWNERS Please note that lots 209-220 are sold not subject to return 209 ALLEVI, Piersergio, Museo d’Arti Applicate, Armi Bianche (1998); BOCCIA, Lionello Giorgio, Armi Antiche delle Raccolte Civiche Reggiane (1984); BOCCIA, Lionello Giorgio, L’Armeria del Museo Civico Medievale di Bologna (1991); BOCCIA, Lionello Giorgio, L’Oploteca nel Museo Nazionale di Ravenna, Tre Secoli di Armi Antiche (1989); BOCCIA, Lionello Giorgio, Museo d’Arte Medievale e Moderna, Armi d’attacco, da difesa e da fuoco (1996); MAURO, Maurizio, Armeria della Rocca Mostra di Armi Antiche (1989); PIROVANO, Carlo (ed.), Musei e Gallerie di Milano Museo Poldi Pezzoli Armeria, Volume I-II (1985); ROSSI, Francesco, Guida del Museo delle Armi “Luigi Marzoli” (1988); SALVATICI, Luciano, Posate, Pugnali, Coltelli da caccia (1999); SCALINI, Mario et al., Armi e Armati (1988); SCALINI, Mario, Il Saracino e gli spettacoli cavallereschi nella Toscana Granducale (1987); SCALINI, Mario, Museo Nazionale Del Bargello, Armamento Difensivo Trecentesco (1984); SCALINI, Mario, Museo Nazionale del Bargello: Armature All’eroica dei Negroli (1987); VARIOUS AUTHOURS, The arms of the Stibbert Museum (2002) (14) £100-150 210 AYLWARD J. D., The House of Angelo: A Dynasty of Swordsmen Founded 1758 (1953); AYLWARD J. D., The Small-Sword in England: its History, its Forms, its Makers, and its Masters (1946); MARTYN, Charles, The British Cavalry Sword from 1600 (2004); MAZANSKY, Cyril, British Basket-Hilted Swords: A typology of Basket-Type Sword Hilts (2005); MOLLO, Eugene, Russian Military Swords 1801-1917 (1969); MURTHA, Gary D., Japanese Swordguard Artists (1982); NATIONAL TRUST FOR SCOTLAND, The Swords and the Sorrow (1996); NEUMANN, George C., Swords & Blades of the American Revolution (1991); NORMAN, A. V. B., The Rapier and Small-Sword, 1460-1820 (1980); PÉTARD, Michel, Des Sabres et des Épées: Troupes à Cheval - de Louis XIV à l’Empire (1999); PÉTARD, Michel, Des Sabres et des Épées: Troupes à Cheval - de Louis XIV à nos jours (1999); PÉTARD, Michel, Des Sabres et des Épées: Troupes à Pieds - de Louis XIV à nos jours (2005); ROBINSON, B. W., Arms & Armour of Old Japan (1951); ROBINSON, B. W., The Arts of the Japanese Sword (1961); ROBSON, Brian, Swords of the British Army: The Regulation Patterns 1788 to 1914 (1975); ROBSON, Brian, Swords of the British Army: The Regulation Patterns 1788 to 1914 (1996); SASANO, Masayuki, Early Japanese Sword Guards Sukashi Tsuba (1974); SOUTHWICK, Leslie, London Silver-Hilted Swords: Their makers, suppliers & allied traders with directory (2001); WALLACE, John, Scottish Swords and Dirks (1970); WILKINSON, Frederick, Swords & Daggers (1967); WILKINSONLATHAM, John, British Military Swords from 1800 to the present day (1966); WITHERS, Harvey J. S, British Military Swords: 17861912 The Regulation Patterns, An Illustrated Price Guide for Collectors (2003); WOOD, Stephen, Blades of Glory: Swords of the Scottish Infantry 1756-1900 (1995) (23) £80-120
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211 AYLWARD, J. D., The English Master of Arms from the Twelfth to the Twentieth Century (1956); BLACKMORE, Howard, The Armouries of the Tower of London, Volume 1, The Ordnance (1976); BLACKMORE, Howard, Royal Sporting Guns at Windsor (1968); BLAIR, Claude, A Royal Swordsmith and Damascener: Diego de Caias, Metropolitan Museum Journal, Volume 3 (1970); BLAIR, Claude, Three Presentation Swords in the Victoria & Albert Museum (1972); BLAIR, Claude, Two Toy Jousters (1966); BOSSON, Clement, Souvenirs de l’Escalade au Musee d’Art et d’Histoire (1952); CALVERT, Albert, Spanish Arms and Armour: The Royal Armoury of Madrid with 386 Illustrations (1907); FFOULKES, Charles, Arms & Armament, An Historical Survey of the Weapons of the British Army (1947); FFOULKES, Charles, Arms and the Tower (1939); HEWITT, J., The Tower: Its History, Armories and Antiquities (1845), together with an autographed letter by the authour; KAMNIKER, K & KRENN, P., Die Zweihander des Landeszeughauses in Graz (1973); KEEGAN, John & DARRACOTT, Joseph, The Nature of War (1981); KENNARD, A.N., French Pistols and Sporting Guns (1972); LAKING, Sir Guy Francis, Wallace Collection: Oriental Arms and Armour (1964); MANN, James (foreword), Exhibition of Arms, Armour and Militaria lent by H.R.H. The Duke of Brunswick (1952-53), two copies; MANN, James (introduction), Exhibition of Spanish Royal Armour in the Tower of London (1960); MANN, James, A European Sword of the late XIVth Century with an Arabic Inscription, Israel Exploration Society, Volume 7 (1963); MANN, James, Instances of Antiquarian Feeling in Medieval and Renaissance Art, The Archaeological Journal, Volume 89 (1933); MANN, James, The Funeral Achievements of Edward, The Black Prince (1951); MANN, James, The Lost Armoury of the Gonzagas: Part II, The Archaeological Journal, Volume 100 (1945); MANN, James, The Wallace Collection Catalogues, Volume 1: Armour; Volume 2: Arms (1962); NORMAN, A.V.B., Arms & Armour (1972); NORMAN, A.V.B., The Medieval Soldier (1971); REID, William, The Lore of Arms (1976); RICKETTS, Howard, Arms & Armour (1973); ROBINSON, H. Russell, Il Museo Stibbert (1974); ROBINSON, H. Russell, What Soldiers Wore on Hadrian’s Wall (1976); ROBSON, Brian, Sword of the British Army (1975); SAILHAN, P., Typologie des Archeres et Canonnieres: Les Archeres et chateaux de Chauvigny, Bulletin des Antiquaries de l’Ouest, Volume 14 (1978); SILVER, George, Paradoxes of Defence 1599, Shakespeare Association Facsimiles No. 6, OUP (1933); SOTHEBY’S, The Hever Castle Collection: Arms and Armour (1983); UHLEMANN, H.R., Kostbare Blankwaffen aus dem Deutschen Klingenmuseum Solingen (1968); V&A, A Picture Book of Arms and Armour (1932); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Canadian Journal of Arms Collecting, Volume 13 No. 2 (1975); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Varia, Svenska Vapenhistoriska Sallskapet, No. 4 (1976) £60-80
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212 BÄUMEL, Jutta (ed.), Dresdner Rüstkammer (1992); BORG, Dr. Alan, Royal Armouries, Torture and Punishment; CAPPELLI, Licinio (ed.), Le Armi Degli Estensi, La collezione de Konopiste (1987); CAPWELL, Tobias, Masterpieces of European Arms and Armour in the Wallace Collection (2011); DE BORCHGRAVE D’ALTENA, Joseph (Preface), Armes Anciennes des Musée de Belgique, Collection Solvay, Bruxelles (1972); EDGE, David, The Wallace Collection, European Arms and Armour (1992), four copies; GAIER, C., Le Musée d’Armes de Liège sort de sa réserve (1990); GAIER, Claude, Prestige de l’armurerie portugaise. La part de Liège (1991); GOLDLINE, Georges (foreword), Musee d’armes de Liege, Collection Pierre Solvay (1976), two copies; GRANCSAY, Stephen V., The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Historical Armour, A Picture Book (1951); HAMMOND, Peter, The Royal Armouries at the Tower of London: Official Guide (1986); HAYWARD, J. F., Victoria and Albert Museum, European Armour (1951); HAYWARD, J. F., Victoria and Albert Museum, Swords and Daggers (1963), two copies; HOLMES, M. R., The London Museum: Arms and Armour in Tudor & Stuart London (1970); INGAMELLS, John (forward), The Wallace Collection, Guide to the Armouries (1982); JACOBS, E. A. (preface), Musée Royal de l’Armée et d’Histoire Militaire, Bruxelles, Armes and Armures (1992); KRENN, Peter, The Landeszeughaus of Graz, English Edition (1991); MANN, Sir James, Wallace Collection Catalogues, European Arms and Armour, Volume I Armour; Volume II Arms (1962); MILLER, Dr. Jurij A., Masterpieces of Russian Hunting Arms from The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg (1996); MILLER, Dr. Yurij A., Caucasian Arms from The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg (2000); MÜLLER, Heinrich (foreword), Alte Hieb- & Stich-waffen (1986); MUSEE DUCAL DE BOUILLON, Belles Armes Anciennes (1971); NORMAN, A. V. B. & WILSON, G. M., Treasures from the Tower of London, An exhibition of Arms and Armour (1982); NORMAN, A. V. B., Wallace Collection Catalogues, European Arms and Armour Supplement (1986); PYHRR, Stuart (introduction), The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arms and Armor: Notable Acquisitions 1991-2002 (2002); REVERSEAU, Jean-Pierre, Musée de l’Armée, Armes et Armures (1993); ROBINSON, H. R., Treasures of the Tower, Armours of Henry VIII (1977); SCHOBEL, Johannes, Historisches Museum, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (1987); TARASSUK, Leonid, The Art Institute of Chicago, Italian Armour for Princely Courts, Renaissance Armor from the Trupin Family Trust and The George F. Harding Collection (1986); TEMESVÁRY, Ferenc, Arms and Armour, The treasures of the Hungarian National Museum (1992); TEMESVÁRY, Ferenc, Waffenschätze Prunkwaffen (1982); THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, Guide to the Collections, Arms and Armour (1968); THOMAS, Bruno & GAMBER, Ortwin, Die Innsbrucker Plattnerkunst, Katalog (1954); TOJHUSMUSEET (Copenhagen), The Royal Danish Arsenal Museum, Illustrated Guide to the Permanent Exhibition (1979); UNKNOWN AUTHOUR, Oude Wapens uit de Musea van Belgie (1972); VLADESCU, Christian, KONIG, Carol & POPA, Dan, Arme in Muzeele din Romania (1973); VLADIMIRSKAYA, N. S., Treasures of the Moscow Kremlin, Arsenal of the Russian Tsars (1998) (42)
213 BOTTET, Maurice, Monographies de l’Arme Blanche (17891870) (1959); CALIZZANO, Charles, Le Grand Livre des Armes Blanches, Du Monde Entier A Travers les Ages (1989); DEL PERAL Y FORTÓN, Rafael Martínez, La Navaja Española Antigua (1995); FORRER, Dr. R., Une Histoire de L’épee, du Poignard (1905); NORTH, Anthony, Victoria & Albert Museum, An Introduction to European Swords (1982); OAKESHOTT, Ewart, Records of the Medieval Sword (1991); SEITZ, Heribert, Blankwaffen: Geschichte und Typenentwicklung im europäischen Kulturbereich Vom 16. bis 19. Jahrhundert, Volumes I-II (1968); SOUTHWICK, Leslie, The Price Guide to Antique Edged Weapons (1982); VALENTINE, Eric, Rapiers: An Illustrated Reference Guide to the Rapiers of the 16th and 17th Centuries, with their Companions (1968); WELAND, Gerald, A Collectors guide to Swords, Daggers & Cutlasses (1995) (10) £60-90 214 BLACKMORE, David, Arms & Armour of the English Civil Wars (1990); BLAIR, Claude & BOCCIA, Lionello Giorgio, Antiquités & Objets d’art, Armes et Armures (1990); BULL, Stephen, An Historical Guide to Arms and Armour (1991); CIMARELLI, Aldo G., Armes Blanches et Armes Défensives (1973); DASKALOV, Nicola & KOVACHEVA, Vyara, Weaponry of the Past (1989); DELACRE, Jean, Le Pistolet, Le Revolver (1970); DIKE, Catherine, Walking Sticks, Shire Album 256 (1990); DRUGMAND, M. P., Ville de Bruxelles Stad Brussel “L’éperon” Deux mille ans d’Histoire (1978), two copies; EDGE, David & PADDOCK, John Miles, Arms & Armour of the Medieval Knight (1988), three copies; FOURNET, Claude (preface), Couverts de l’art gothique a l’art nouveau, Collection Jacques Hollander (1993); GUTOWSKI, Jacek, Tartar Arms and Armour (1997); HART, Harold H. (ed.), Weapons & Armour, A Pictorial Archive of Woodcuts and Engravings (1982); HOUZE, Herbert G., The Sumptuous Flaske (1989); IMRE, Grafik, Neprajzi Museum, Nyeregbe! In the Saddle! Fest im Sattel! (2002); LEBEDYNSKY, Iaroslav, Les Armes Cosaques et Caucasiennes, Et Les Armes Traditionnelles d’Europe Orientale (1990); MARQUISET, Robert & YVEN, Jean-Pierre, Poires a Poudre, Editions du Portail (1990); MONESTIER, Martin, Duels, Les combats singuliers des origines a nos jours (1991); MUSÉE NATIONAL D’HISTOIRE ET D’ART, Luxembourg, Drei Jahrhunderte Europäische Jagdpulverbehalter 1550-1850 (1995); PURAYE, Jean, la gravure sur armes à feu au pays de Liège (1965); PURAYE, Jean, Le Damas (1966); RANGSTROM, Lena (ed.), Riddarlek och Tornerspel, Tournaments and the Dream of Chivalry (1992); ROSSI, Francesco, Mediaeval Arms and Armour (1990); SCHAAL, Dieter, Verzierte Waffen (1981); SCHÖBEL, Johannes, Jagdwaffen (1976); UNKNOWN AUTHOR, Treasures of The Tower, Crossbows (1976); WILKINSON, Frederick, Antique Arms and Armour (1972); WILSON, Guy, The H L Visser Collection of Ivory Stocked Pistols (1988); ZELLER, Alfred P., l’Art des Choses: Armes Occidentales (1966) (31) £60-80
£100-150 67
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215 BLACKMORE, Howard L., Guns and Rifles of the World (1965); CURTIS, Tony, Lyle Price Guide: Militaria, Arms & Armour (1993); DAVIS, R. H. C., A History of Medieval Europe: From Constantine to Saint Louis (1957); GRANCSAY, Stephen V., Catalogue of Armor: The John Woodman Higgins Armory (1961); GROENENDIJK, Gert, GRYSE, Piet de, STAAT, Dirk & BRONDER, Helen (eds.), A Farewell to Arms: Studies on the History of Arms and Armour (2004); HELD, Robert (Ed.), Arms and Armor Annual: Thirty Outstanding Articles on Weaponry By Leading Arms and Armor Historians of the World (1973); RIMER Graeme, RICHARDSON Thom & COOPER, J. P. D. (eds.), Henry VIII, Arms and the Man 1509-2009 (2009); ROBERTS, Keith, “Matchlock Musketeer 1588-1688” in Warrior, n. 43 (2002); SOTHEBY PARKE BERNET MONACO S.A., Objets Militaires Provenant de la Collection de Robert Florey (1980); SOUTHWICK, Leslie, The Price Guide to Antique Edged Weapons (1982); STONE, George Cameron, A Glossary of the Construction, Decoration and Use of Arms and Armor in All Countries and in All Times (1961); TOWER OF LONDON, Spanish Royal Armour (1960); WITHERS, Harvey J. S., World Swords 1400-1945: An Illustrated Price Guide for Collectors (2006); WOOD, Stephen, Waffen-und Kostümkunde: The British Gorget in North America (1984) £40-60 216 BLAIR, Claude, European Armour, c. 1066 to c. 1700 (1958); BLAIR, Claude, The Silvered & Engraved Armour of Henry VIII in the Tower of London (1965); BURGESS, Martin, The MailMaker’s Technique, The Antiquaries Journal, Volume 33 (1953); DE REUCK, Anthony (compiler), Arms and Armour Society: The Art of the Armourer, Victoria & Albert Museum (1963); DUFTY, A.R., European Armour in the Tower of London (1968); FRANZOI, Umberto, Armoury of the Doge’s Palace in Venice (1966); MANN, James (foreword), Exhibition of Armour made in the Royal Workshops at Greenwich at the Tower of London (1951); MANN, James (foreword), Exhibition of Armour of Kings and Captains from the National Collections of Austria at the Tower of London (1949); MANN, James, Notes on European Armour including: The Evolution of Plate Armour in Germany; Notes on the armour worn in Spain, 10th-15th centuries; The Sanctuary of the Madonna delle Grazie; Notes on the Armour of the Maximilian Period (1929-32); MANN, James, The Decoration of Armour, C. A. Parsons & Co. Ltd House Magazine No. 54 (1962); ROBINSON, H. Russell, Problems in Reconstructing Roman Armour (1972); ROBINSON, H. Russell, Roman Armour: Reconstructions by H. Russell Robinson (1969); ROBINSON, H. Russell, Roman Body Armour in the First Century A.D. (1974); ROBINSON, H. Russell, The Armour of Imperial Rome (1975); THOMAS, Bruno, Harnische (1947) (15) £60-80
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217 BRANCO SOARES, Pedro, Os uniformes Portugueses Na Guerra Peninsular (2007); BRERETON, John, The History of the Duke of Lancaster’s Own Yeomanry 1798-1991 (1994); CLARKE, Dale, “British Artillery 1914-19: Heavy Artillery” in New Vanguard, n. 105 (2005); FLETCHER, Ian, “Badajoz 1812: Wellington’s Bloodiest Siege” in Campaign, n. 65 (1999); FOSTEN D. S. V., Cuirassiers and Heavy Cavalry-Dress Uniforms of the German Imperial Cavalry 1900-1914 (1973); FUNCKEN, Liliane & Fred, Arms and Uniforms, The Napoleonic Wars Part 2 (1973); GRAVETT, Christopher, “Hastings 1066: The Fall of Saxon England” in Campaign, n. 13 (1992); HEAD, Michael G., Foot Regiments of the Imperial Guard (1973); KANNICK, Preben, Military Uniforms in Colour (1968); LAVER, James, British Military Uniforms (1948); MANN, Sir James, The Funeral Achievements of Edward, The Black Prince (1951); MONEY BARNES, Major R., A History of the Regiments & Uniforms of the British Army (1950); PLEGER, Martin, “British Tommy 1914-18” in Warrior, n. 16 (1999); STRICKLAND, Matthew & HARDY, Robert, From Hastings to the Mary Rose, The Great Warbow (2005); THORBURN, W. A., French Army Regiments & Uniforms from the Revolution to 1870 (1969); TIMBERS, Ken (ed.), The Royal Artillery, Woolwich: A Celebration (2008); TINCEY, John, “Blenheim 1704: The Duke of Marlborough’s masterpiece” in Campaign, n. 141 (2004); UNKNOWN AUTHOR, Regl Orders 1892 (1892); WALBOMPRAMVIG, B., Uniformer, Faner Og Våben I Den Danske Hær fra 1659 til 1980 (1988); WILKINSON-LATHAM, John, Cavalry Uniforms (1969); WILKINSON-LATHAM, John, Infantry Uniforms, including artillery and other supporting troops of Britain and the Commonwealth 1742-1855 (1969); WILSON, L. M. & CROWLEY, P. T., The Infantry Regiments of Surrey (2002); WOOD, Stephen, …By Dint of Labour and Perseverance...A journal recording two months in northern Germany kept by Lieutenant-Colonel James Adolphus Oughton, commanding 1st battalion 37th Regiment of Foot, 1758. (1997); YOUNG, Peter & LAWFORD, J. P. (eds.), History of the British Army (1970) (24) £40-60
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218 CALDER, Jenni, NMS Publishing Limited: Museum of Scotland (1998); CATELLAIN, Pierre (2001), Splendeurs Celtes Armes et Bijoux (2001); CETTO, Anna Maria, Les Mosaiques de Ravenne (1953); CHARLES VAN HERCK EN ZOON, Antwerp, Openbare Veiling van de Verzameling Neetesonne (1968); CLOSE-BROOKS, Joanna, St Ninian’s Isle Treasure (1981); DU PASQUIER, Jacqueline, Musée des Arts Decoratifs Bordeaux (1980); ERB, Lisa (ed.), A Museum for Everyone!: The Honolulu Academy of Arts (1995); GIOVANNINI, Sandra & MANCINI, Gabriella, The Pharmacy of Santa Maria Novella (1997); GUINEA, Juan (preface), Émaux médiévaux. De Limoges à Silos (2002); JACKSON, Anna (ed.), V&A, A Hundred Highlights (1996); LIEBGOTT, Niels-Knud, Nationalmuseet, Elfenben - fra Danmarks Middelalder (1985); LIERNEUX, Pierre & ROMMELAERE, Catherine, Les Carrosses de la Cour Royale de Belgique et leurs Escortes (1991); MERTENS, Joan R., The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Greek Bronzes in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (1985); NICKEL, Helmut, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin: Arms & Armor from the permanent Collection (1991; 2007), three copies; ORLOFF, Arne (ed.), Vaabenhistoriske aarboger, Volume 35 (1989); RAUCH, Nicholas, Instruments de chirurgie Gréco-Romains, Genéve (1961); REMICHE, Jean (preface), l’Art des Invasions en Hongrie et en Wallonie (1979); SCHÖBEL, Johannes (forward), Barockes Balali, Die Schatzkammer, Band 22 (1968); SCROCCHI, A., Ricordo di Roma, 40 Vedute (1900); SHARKEY, John, Mystéres Celtes, une religion de l’insaisissable (1975); SPAR, Francis (ed.), Connaissance, Volume 180(1967); STRATFORD, Neil, The Lewis Chessmen and the Enigma of the Hoard (1997); SUYDAM, C.R. (ed.), The American Society of Arms Collectors at Saratoga Springs, Volume Sixty-One (1989); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Discovering Antiques, Issue 33 (1971); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Discovering Antiques, Issue 7 (1970); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Metropolitan Museum Journal, Volume 18 (1983); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Metropolitan Museum Journal, Volume 21 (1986); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Metropolitan Museum Journal, Volume 30 (1995); VARIOUS AUTHORS, Scottish Art Review, Special Number, Based on R. L. Scott Collection, Arms and Armour (1969); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1988-1989 (1989); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1992-1993 (1993); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1993-1994 (1994); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1994-1995 (1995); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1995-1996 (1996); VARIOUS AUTHORS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, Recent Acquisitions; A Selection 1995-1996 (1996); VENNER, Dominique, Les BeauxArts de la Chasse: Objets, Symboles, Decors (1992); VON BOTHMER, Dietrich, The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, A Greek and Roman Treasury (1984) (39)
219 GODOY, Jose-A. & LEYDI, Silvio, Parures Triomphales Le maniérisme dans l’art de l’armure italienne (2003); GRANCSAY, Stephen V., Les Armures (1965); PFAFFENBICHLER, Matthias, Medieval Craftsmen: Armourers (1992); PYHRR, Stuart & GODOY, Jose, Heroic Armor of the Italian Renaissance, Filippo Negroli and his Contemporaries (1998) (4) £80-120 220 SAXE, Field-Marshal Count, Reveries, or Memoirs upon the Art of War (1757), numerous illustrated plates, bound in light brown leather with raised bands and gilt lettering (some scuffing to corners and pages, slightly worn overall), 8vo £80-120 221 FIVE FRAMED AND GLAZED PICTURES, INCLUDING FOUR PRESENTED TO MAJOR HOLMES the first depicting a line infantryman (Clairon); the second a footsoldier (Clairon); the third the camp of the 4th division, dated July 15th 1855; the fourth a poster for the Hampshire Regiment dance; the fifth a map of Operation Joint Guardian, signed by General Sir Mike Jackson KCB CBE various sizes (5) £60-80 222 SEVEN FRAMED AND GLAZED PICTURES depicting various military charges including Charges de Dracons à Grave, “Blackwell’s Military Figures”, “The ExEmperor in a Bottle”, hussars, and line infantrymen various sizes (7) £50-80 223 IN THE MANNER OF THOMAS ROWLANDSON (1756-1827) THE LONG JOHN, A CANNON AT GOSPORT inscribed l.l.: T. Rowlandson. 1790 watercolour over pencil, pen and grey ink together with two photographic reproductions of THE LINE OF KINGS the largest 14 cm by 22 cm; 5 ½ in by 8 ¾ in (3) £200-300
£50-70
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PROPERTY OF THE LATE ANTHONY DE REUCK 224 A COLLECTION OF TUDOR AND LATER EXCAVATED KNIVES including one with an etched blade dated 1617; another with wood handle and gilt brass finial and cutler’s mark to blade; another all in iron with a probably Tudor cutler’s mark to blade; three further knifes, a spearhead and a file (8) Provenance First described from Bull wharf, Thames, 1997; second Three Pigeon quay, Thames, 1979; third Barnes, Thames, 1978, three further with provenance labels £200-300 225 THREE ENGLISH WROUGHT-IRON CANDLEHOLDERS, PROBABLY 17TH CENTURY all with spikes for fixing to beams or tables, one with probably associated cylindrical base, together with a firesteel, assorted bells of bronze and sheet metal and a child’s lead reading tablet (15) Provenance Table candleholder and the fire-steel from the Thames, 1984 and 1981, another candleholder from Canterbury 1991. £150-200 226 A COLLECTION OF EARLY MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY RELIEF-DECORATED HORSE-HARNESS PENDANTS AND MOUNTS including an heraldic shield with traces of red enamel in recessed bands, two French buckles decorated with heraldic beasts, probably Limoges, 13th/14th Century, three gilded and decorated mounts, one with Black-letter inscriptions; a stud; a pendant incised with a heraldic dragon, and enamel badge decorated with the arms of Charles I of England (9) The two Limoges mounts with dragons or salamander relief decoration could have later gilding and one of the two has some black enamel in the recesses £250-400 70
227 TWO MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY AND ENAMEL HORSE-HARNESS HERALDIC MOUNTS, 13TH/ 14TH CENTURY one decorated with a red dragon on each side on a striped background, the other decorated with blue chevrons to one side and red scrolls to the other, both with traces of gilding, a diamond shaped pendant decorated with a rosette on a blue enamel ground, and three heraldic enamel hangers (6) This group includes two heraldic examples of what the Portable Antiquities Scheme defines as ‘harness hooks’ (see Record ID: PUBLIC-AB1C88 and others), of which one has the royal arms (three lions passant). Though these ‘hooks’ have long been assumed to be related in some way to horse equipment, their precise function is still to be determined. Recent research by Robert Webley and by John Clark suggests that they may have been used for attachment to horse bits (see a Curb Bit, Naples, late 14th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Accession Number 04.3.478a, b) £300-500 228 ASSORTED HISTORICAL AND EXCAVATED ITEMS including an iron nail recovered from the Mary Rose; a gunflint from the Tower of London, both on oak bases with inscription plaques, three late Medieval brass letters from tomb memorials, a bronze purse-frame, 16th century; six George III bronze tokens dated 1797, three further coins and other items including a brass cased compass, a lead shell-form ampulla, and nine further items (14) The Mary Rose nail was raised by John Deane and William Edwards in 1840, then sold by auction in Portsmouth on 12th November 1840. Then purchased by Mr de Reuck in 1964 in Southampton. For a similar example to the purse frame in this lot see London Museum, 1954, fig. 52, no. 4. £100-150
229 A PEWTER STUMP-END SPOON, PROBABLY DUTCH, LATE 16TH / EARLY 17TH CENTURY with hexagonal stem, the round bowl with maker’s mark of a crowned rose containing the initials `I.V.L.’ £80-120 230 A COLLECTION OF FIFTEEN COPPERALLOY MEDIEVAL CHAPES AND BELT-HOOKS, 14TH TO 16TH CENTURY with engraved `black letter’ or foliate decoration; together with a group of seven French gilt mounts; a Tudor sword belt-hook, a Norman bronze horse head dagger chape and two latten circular mounts (26) Provenance The Norman knife-chape from Dorset and the sword-belt hook from Greenwich 1987. For similar belt-fittings with black letter inscriptions, see London Museum 1954, fig. 85, nos. 2 and 6. £200-300 231 A COLLECTION OF LATE VIKING AND SAXON COPPER-ALLOY MOUNTS FOR STIRRUP SUSPENSION-STRAPS, MOSTLY 11TH CENTURY with relief cast decoration; and a Viking strap-end from Winchester (11) Mostly from Yorkshire and mostly illustrated in David Williams’ book on the subject (see bibliography). For related examples see Mills 2001, pp. 78-82. £200-300
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227
231
230
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232 A COLLECTION OF COPPERALLOY AND IRON KNIFE-CHAPES, 11TH / 12TH CENTURY (17) £150-200
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233 THREE GILT-METAL SWORD BELT-BUCKLES, PROBABLY 14TH/15TH CENTURY one with a relief-cast shield, one of embossed sheet-metal, and one a bossed disc, together with three gilt-metal and copper-alloy swordbelt hangers, 16th and early 17th centuries, and one a modern copy, each with a relief-cast bar or mount supporting suspension-hooks, one with matching buckles, together with four pairs of gilt-metal beltclips, one pair with incised flower-heads and two pairs incised with the Holy initials `I.H.S.’ (11) £200-300
234
234 A COLLECTION OF EIGHTEEN FOLDED SHEET-METAL MEDIEVAL SWORD AND KNIFE-CHAPES, MOSTLY 13TH CENTURY together with thirteen copper-alloy chapes, mostly 14th Century, some with fretted decoration (31) £200-300
237
235 A LARGE GROUP OF MEDIEVAL FOLDED SHEET-METAL CHAPES, 14TH AND 15TH CENTURY mostly plain tapering, copper-alloy (56) £100-200
238
72
236 A COLLECTION OF SIXTY-TWO FOLDED SHEET-METAL MEDIEVAL CHAPES, MOSTLY 14TH / 15TH CENTURY plain tapering with some gilding, together with a copper-alloy thimble (63) £100-200 237 A COLLECTION OF COPPERALLOY SWORD AND DAGGER-CHAPES, 15TH/16TH CENTURY, PROBABLY SPANISH (18) £100-200 238 A COLLECTION OF TWELVE DAGGER-CHAPES, LATE 15TH AND EARLY 16TH CENTURIES variously of lead-alloy and iron, with relief decoration, and two copperalloy strap-ends (14) £80-120 239 A COLLECTION OF NINETEEN TUDOR COPPER-ALLOY AND GILT-METAL SWORD AND DAGGER-CHAPES, 16TH CENTURY including ones pierced with hearts and trefoils, eighteen further Tudor chapes decorated with relief cast or embossed shell-motifs, and a copper-alloy mount for a stirrup suspension-strap (38) £200-300
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240 A COLLECTION OF EIGHT MEDIEVAL AND TUDOR SWORD AND DAGGER-CHAPES, 15TH/16TH CENTURY including one of gilt copper-alloy engraved on each face with intertwined flowering branches involving the initials ‘W.B.’, one of gilt copper-alloy decorated on each face with rows of small shields on a blackened ground, one of lead-alloy decorated in shallow relief on both sides with a coat-of-arms, one of plain copper-alloy decorated with low-relief ornament rising on each face to a central trefoil, and a copper-alloy sword-locket (9) £200-400 241 A COLLECTION OF MISCELLANEOUS MEDIEVAL SWORD AND DAGGER-CHAPES of iron, copper-alloy and lead-alloy, and a large quantity of small lead-alloy chapes, circa 1350-1450, some with relief-cast and pierced decoration (46) £200-300 242 A COLLECTION OF COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON DAGGER CHAPES, MOSTLY LATE 15TH CENTURY AND EARLY 16TH CENTURIES of various patterns, together with a Romano-British bronze sword chape of crescentic form, 2nd Century A.D., a Roman bronze belt-chape from the Balkans, and an early Medieval bronze knife-chape of zoomorphic design, 11th Century (22) £100-200 243 A COLLECTION OF THIRTY COPPERALLOY SWORD, HANGER DAGGER-CHAPES, LATE 16TH/17TH CENTURY some with gilding and some with pierced decoration including trefoils, quatrefoils, hearts, slots and, in one case, a face (30) £100-200
244 A COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL BUCKLES OF VARIOUS PATTERNS including one of gilt-copper-alloy, possibly Limoges, 12th century, its hasp decorated in relief with a nude figure, one of iron modelled as a lion’s mask, one of copper-alloy having its hasp cast in relief with crosses, and further lead-alloy and copper-alloy buckles of assorted patterns (15)
240
£120-180 245 A GROUP OF SCABBARD-MOUNTS OF VARIOUS DATES AND PATTERNS, MOSTLY TUDOR including a fine silver locket inscribed in black-letters GOD HELP, 14th century, from the Thames at Blackfriars, twelve further lockets and chapes of copper or lead-alloy; and sixteen small silver dagger chapes and other mounts, Medieval and later, with engraved decoration (30)
244
£200-300 246 A LARGE COLLECTION OF IRON SCABBARD CHAPES, MEDIEVAL, STUART, AND TUDOR with a number of lead-alloy examples, contained in five cedar boxes £150-250 247 A COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY SWORD AND DAGGER-CHAPES, 14TH TO 16TH CENTURIES some gilded, many pierced with quatrefoils, trefoils, hearts, and tracery, together with two copper-alloy strapterminal and a finial in the form of a hand (67)
245
£200-300
247
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248 A COLLECTION OF TWENTY-ONE IRON AND COPPER-ALLOY SWORDBELT BUCKLES including a large D-shaped buckle, 13th century, a large circular buckle, 14th century, two small Roman military buckles, and further assorted Medieval to Tudor buckles, together with four Stuart sword-belt clips, one with elaborate etched decoration, and a collection of small buckles still attached to leather straps to show their modes of attachment £200-300 249 A LARGE COLLECTION OF BELTCHAPES, STRAP-MOUNTS, BUCKLES, AND OTHER FITTINGS MOSTLY 15TH CENTURY mostly of pewter (lead-alloy), some of copper-alloy, including two decorated with the Gothic letter ‘S’ in panels, and others decorated with pierced tracery £150-250 250 A LARGE COLLECTION OF COPPERALLOY BUCKLES, MOSTLY 13TH TO 15TH CENTURY several with engraved hasps and some with gilding £200-300 251 A LARGE COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON BUCKLES OF VARIOUS PATTERNS, MOSTLY 14TH CENTURY £100-150 252 A LARGE COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON BUCKLES AND STRAP-FITTINGS, MOSTLY 14TH CENTURY of various patterns, some decorated £150-250 253 A LARGE COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON BUCKLES, MOSTLY 14TH / 15TH CENTURY of various patterns, including some with decoration and some with gilding £100-200
74
254 A LARGE COLLECTION OF TUDOR AND LATER COPPER-ALLOY BUCKLES most with double trapezium-shaped loops, and some with ‘figure-of-eight’ loop, including a few with simple decoration £100-200 255 A COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL IRON BUCKLES, MOST 14TH / 15TH CENTURY of various patterns £100-150 256 A COLLECTION OF COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON SHOE AND BELTBUCKLES, MOSTLY 16TH AND 17TH CENTURIES of various patterns £100-150 257 A LARGE COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL, TUDOR, STUART AND GEORGIAN COPPER-ALLOY AND IRON BUCKLES of various patterns, some decorated £100-150 258 A COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL GILT COPPER-ALLOY AND METAL BUCKLES, 12TH TO 14TH CENTURIES many with relief or engraved decoration, one with traces of enamel, two Medieval bronze loop-buckles, a buckle in the form of a lion passant, and three gilt copper-alloy cylindrical pendants, one with engraved decoration and two similarly decorated chapes (24) £150-300 259 A LARGE COLLECTION OF COPPERALLOY AND IRON BUCKLES, MAINLY TUDOR AND STUART together with suspension-hooks, swordbelt hangers, belt-mounts and other fittings £200-300
260 A GROUP OF MISCELLANEOUS PIECES OF EXCAVATED METALWORK AND JEWELLERY including an Anglo Saxon relief-cast copper-alloy ferrule, a copper-alloy pendant modelled as a helm of the mid13th century, a finger-ring with a loose stone, a quantity of uncut garnets from the Thames, two plain copper-alloy finger-rings, two engraved copper-alloy archers’ thumb rings in the Asian style, two gilt copper-alloy hinged strapmounts, and two further copper-alloy fittings articulated at their centres (12) £150-250 261 A GROUP OF FOSSILS AND OTHER MISCELLANEA comprising two small fossil fish, Knightia sp., each on a limestone matrix, Green River Formation, Eocene, Wyoming; five further small fossils including an ammonite, a polished section of a belemnite and a bivalve; a small iron meteorite fragment from Texas, and a small dried fish (9) £50-70 262 A COLLECTION OF TOY CANNON of various sizes and designs, twelve of cast bronze and one of cast iron, two of the former found in Dorset and one in the Thames, 18th and 19th centuries, together with the copper-alloy side-plate of as ‘Brown Bess’ musket, second half of the 18th century £200-300 263 A LARGE COLLECTION OF MEDIEVAL AND LATER BUCKLES, CHAPES, LOCKETS, STRAP-ENDS, DECORATIVE MOUNTS, BODKINS AND PINS together with assorted flints and iron strikers, later writing tools, badges and miscellaneous items £150-200
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264 A GROUP OF FIVE SWORD POMMELS, 11TH TO 18TH CENTURY comprising a Viking sword-pommel of copperalloy formed with five radiating lobes, 11th century; two dagger-pommels, the first discshaped and of copper-alloy, 15th or early 16th century; a saddle-pommel of copper-alloy formed in two halves and decorated with diagonal lines of cabling, late 16th or early 17th century, and a pommel-shaped finial decorated with fretting and small rivets, probably late 17th or 18th century (5) £80-120
265 A LARGE GROUP OF ARROW-HEADS AND MISCELLANEA comprising nine small arrow-heads, some with sockets and some with tangs, from the site of a battle fought at Las Navas de Tolosa, Spain, in 1212 (accompanied by documentation), together with a collection of arrow and bolt-heads of various sizes and forms, mostly with sockets, Medieval and later, one of the arrow-heads of large, broad form found in the Thames at Queenhythe, 1982, and one of the bolts struck with an omega-shaped mark; together with three caltrops, Medieval and later, one of large size found in the Thames in 1988, and one of small size with barbed points found at Skokloster, Sweden, in 1974
249
£100-150 266 A FINELY MADE ONE-FIFTH SCALE MODEL IN PEWTER SHEET BY A.M.G. MCLEOD, CIRCA 1990, OF A CLOSE HELMET MADE IN THE ROYAL ARMOUR WORKSHOPS AT GREENWICH, CIRCA 1585-90 AND NOW IN THE ROYAL ARMOURIES MUSEUM, LEEDS, INV. NO. IV. 41 AND A PORTRAIT OF MAXIMILLIAN, HOLY ROMAN EMPEROR (1459-1519) AFTER HANS BURKMAIR, 20TH CENTURY the right of the bevor bruised; mounted in a domed glass display-case with a printed label, and accompanied by a numbered certificate of authenticity signed by the Master of the Armouries; the second depicting the mounted armoured Holy Roman Emperor with the date above; and an oval engraved portrait (cut out) of a late 17th century sitter wearing a late 16th century Greenwich armour (3)
260
£60-100
262
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272 271 267 A GROUP OF SMALL ELEMENTS OF ARMOUR comprising and etched and gilt scaled finger-defence of a late 16th century German gauntlet (the first scale associated); four elements of pikemen’s and harquebusiers’ shoulder-straps, English, c. 1630-50, the lower rear corner of a lame of a mid16th century shoulder-defence, a plate fluted in the ‘Gothic’ style and bearing the initials of Anthony de Reuck, a fragment of iron stated to have been excavated from the site of the battle of Tewksbury, Gloucestershire, fought in 1471, a swivelhook and pin possibly from a 16th century armour; and two fragments of mail formed of riveted rings of round-section wire, one edged with brass rings of which some are punched and some formed with butted joins, probably Indian 18th/19th century £40-80 268 A GROUP OF SPEAR AND CROSSBOW-QUARREL HEADS comprising a leaf-shaped spear-head, struck on each side with a mark, possibly of the South German city of Augsburg, 16th century; a small tanged, leaf-shaped spear-head, possibly Indian, 18th/19th century (lightly patinated); an excavated blade possibly of an Asian spear; and two crossbow quarrel-heads with acute points of triangular section, and the shaft of a quarrel with wooden flight (one lacking its rear end) (6) £120-180 269 A COLLECTION OF SHOT OF VARIOUS SIZES including two of stone for a saker found at Dover Castle, Kent, in 1914, 15th/16th century, seven small shot of lead found at Oliver’s Mount Battery, Winchester, 1988, in one case flattened on impact, and in two retaining their casting-sprues, perhaps 17th century, together with a collection of lead shot of various sizes and forms, 16th to 19th centuries, and a large stone-bow projectile from the Thames, 16th-18th centuries £30-50 76
270 TWO LEAD-ALLOY TOY SOLDIERS AND THE BASE OF ANOTHER one representing a musketeer and one a drummer (lacking its head), found in the Thames, 18th/19th century, a small leadalloy badge in the form of a Medieval archer, together with an arrow, a sword-scabbard and an unidentified device of the same material, and a miniature penknife with mother of pearl grip-plates, late 19th/early 20th century £60-100 271 AN ANGLO-SAXON SHIELD-BOSS AND GRIP, LATE 5TH/6TH CENTURY the first of Dickinson’s type 1.1, the second terminating at each end in adorsed volutes (one missing) See Dickinson & Härke 1992, pp.10-13 & 24-7, fig. 7 & 16-17 for comparable examples. £250-400 272 A GROUP OF DETACHED ELEMENTS OF GAUNTLETS OF THE LATE 14TH AND EARLY 15TH CENTURIES including three knuckle-plates, two of copper-alloy and one of iron with an applied medial rib of copper-alloy; a terminal finger-plate of a gauntlet of engraved copper-alloy; the distal two scales of a thumb-defence and three further thumb or finger-scales (8) £60-80
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273 AN AUSTRIAN SADDLE, 19TH CENTURY with leather-covered wooden frame, brass-bound cantle and brass pommel formed as a horse’s head £300-400 274 AN AUSTRIAN SADDLE, 19TH CENTURY with leather-covered wooden frame, brass-bound cantle and brass pommel formed as a horse’s head £300-400
273 THE LEATHER COLLECTION OF LORINERY 275 A PERSIAN BRONZE HORSEBIT, LURISTAN, FIRST MILLENIUM B.C. AND THREE FURTHER EARLY BRONZE HORSEBITS the first of characteristic form, with recurved bit and an elaborate ibex moulding at each end forming the sidebars; together with a Roman bronze horse bit, with writhen bars and four rings for harness and two further brass bits (4) A related example to the first is recorded in the collection of David-Weill see Godard 1931, pl.XLVI, No. 176. £600-800 276 WINTER, George Simon, Horse Bit Studies, numerous engravings, nos. 1 to 114 numbered consecutively (light foxing, staining); nos. 1 to 60 as single plates and nos. 61-72; 73-84; 85-94; 95-104; 107-113 as group plates (boards and endpapers missing)
274
£600-800
275 276 77
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277 A WEST EUROPEAN HORSEBIT, EARLY 17TH CENTURY, AND TWO FURTHER BITS the first of russet iron, with scrolling faceted iron sidebars with delicate floral mouldings, two-piece bit, with its chains; the second with two short sidebars; the third with a ring-shaped bit (3) £250-300
277
278
278 A WEST EUROPEAN HORSEBIT, 17TH CENTURY, AND THREE FURTHER HORSEBITS the first with scrolling faceted sidebars, with shaped mouldings, fitted on each side with a gilt-brass boss, decorated with a cherubic mask within a foliate frame (worn), two-piece bit, with its chains; the second with pierced sidebars, openwork washers, and U-shaped bit; and two further bits (4) £200-300 279 TWO VICTORIAN GENERAL OFFICERS’ HORSEBITS AND EIGHT FURTHER HORSEBITS the first and second with scrolling sidebars fitted with brass bosses each with the crowned royal cypher and general officer’s device; the third for the Cameronians; the fourth for the Queen’s own; the fifth for the King’s Royal Rifle Corps; two for artillery regiments; and three further regimental horse bits (10) £250-350
279
280 NINE REGIMENTAL HORSEBITS, LATE 19TH / EARLY 20TH CENTURY the first for the Prince of Wales’ Own Hussars; the second for the 18th Hussars; the third for Prince Albert’s Own Hussars; the fourth for the 14th King’s Hussars; the fifth and sixth for the Prince of Wales’ Own Hussars; and three further bits (9) £400-600
280 78
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281 TWO VICTORIAN INFANTRY MOUNTED OFFICER’S HORSE BITS AND SEVEN FURTHER REGIMENTAL HORSEBITS, 19TH CENTURY each with iron bit and scrolling sidebars, three with brass bosses for the infantry-mounted officers, and the remainder for the Guards (9) £250-350 282 A GEORGE V LEEDS CITY POLICE HORSEBIT, ANOTHER POLICE HORSEBIT AND SIX FURTHER VARIOUS BITS the first and second with chromed scrolling sidebars fitted with white metal and brass bosses; the third, fourth, and fifth decorated with the Garter motto; and three further bits (8)
281
£120-180 283 A LIFEGUARD’S HORSEBIT AND A QUANTITY OF TACK the horsebit chromed, the bosses decorated with Peninsula and Waterloo battle honours, straps decorated with guard stars in white metal (7)
282
£150-200 284 A GROUP OF EIGHT VARIOUS HORSEBITS each fitted with brass side-bosses, the first, second and third with crowned ‘VR’ cypher enclosed by the Garter; the fourth with crowned royal arms of ‘ER II’; the fifth, sixth and seventh with crowned ‘ER VII’ cypher; and the eighth with ‘ER II’ cypher (8) £300-400 285 FIVE HORSEBITS each with scrolling sidebars, fitted with brass bosses, the first four with crowned ‘VR’ cypher; the fifth with ‘GR V’ cypher; and another (6)
283
£200-250
284 79
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286 TWO MEXICAN SPURS, A MEXICAN HORSEBIT AND SIX FURTHER SOUTH AMERICAN HORSEBITS, 19TH CENTURY the first with large multi-spike rowel, iron neck and heel-band, each decorated with white metal, the terminals of the latter pierced for straps; the second similar, of iron (pitted); the third of iron inlaid with bands of silver; the fourth inlaid with engraved plaques of silver decorated with flowers and foliage; and five further bits (9) £250-300
286 287 THREE PAIRS OF CHILEAN ROWEL SPURS, LATE 19TH CENTURY each fitted with iron multi-spiked rowel, white metal neck and heel-band, the latter with pierced terminals for straps (6) £150-200
287
288 TWO PAIRS OF MEXICAN ROWEL SPURS AND ANOTHER PAIR OF SPURS, PROBABLY SOUTH AMERICAN, 19TH CENTURY the first with large multi-spiked iron rowel, iron necks and heelbands inlaid with silver geometric designs, and a pair of early plaited straps with buckles; the second similar, with arched openwork necks, faceted heel-bands and early straps; the third fitted with iron multi-spike rowels, white metal bulb-shaped necks, arched heel-bands and a pair of straps (6) £250-350
288
289 A LARGE GROUP OF ROWEL SPURS, MAINLY SOUTH AMERICAN, LATE 18TH TO 20TH CENTURIES the first with large iron multi-spike rowel, openwork neck, faceted heel-band pierced for straps; the second with large iron multi-spike rowel, neck and heel-band inlaid with white metal bands; the third with iron rowel and iron neck and heelband inlaid with white metal bands; the fourth similar; the fifth with multi-spike iron rowel, openwork neck, and arched heelband; and twenty-three further spurs (28) £300-400
289 80
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292
290
VARIOUS OWNERS 290 A BRASS SALUTING CANNON BARREL, 19TH CENTURY formed in two tapering stages, moulded at the muzzle, and cascable, decorated with a series of concentric lines over its length, and fitted with a pair of trunnions on a sweatedon raised band 24.5 cm; 9 ⅝ in barrel 2.5 cm; 1 in bore £250-350 291 A BRONZE MODEL MORTAR, 20TH CENTURY formed in four stages, with raised astragal mouldings (the middle band with a very small chip beneath), a pair of basal trunnions, raised vent on its iron-clad wooden bed 7.0 cm; 2 ¾ in barrel 2.6 cm; 1 ⅛ in bore £80-120 292 A RARE EXTERNAL HANGING SIGN FOR A GUNSMITHS FACTORY OR SHOP, LAST QUARTER OF THE 19TH CENTURY formed as cast iron solid bodied model of a two band Enfield short rifle, fitted with its two original wrought iron hanging chains, and much early black paint 121.0 cm; 47 ⅝ in overall £800-1000
293
294
293 THE ROYAL COMPANY OF ARCHERS UNIFORM OF THE EARL OF GLASGOW, comprising trousers, tail coat and epaulettes all heavily embroidered with bullion and with the device for the Royal Company, cocked hat by Morgan & Co, 5 Albemarle Street, London W (loop missing), a further cocked hat, aiguillette, two unrelated pieces of embroidered fabric, in original tin case with brass plaque engraved ‘Earl of Glasgow’ £1200-1800 ~ 294 A SILVER-MOUNTED RHINOCEROS HORN SWAGGER STICK FOR THE ROYAL WARWICKSHIRE REGIMENT, BIRMINGHAM 1880 with worked moulded body, engraved silver cap engraved ‘G. Smyth, Coventry March 1896’ and silver finial 73.5 cm; 29 in overall £600-800
81
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298
299
295 AN 1847 PATTERN NAVAL OFFICER’S SWORD RETAILED BY MACKAY, DEVONPORT, EARLY 20TH CENTURY of regulation type, the blade with traces of etched decoration and the maker’s details at the forte (worn), brass hilt with folding side-guard, in its scabbard 78.2 cm; 30 ¾ in blade
297 A SILVER CROSS FOR THE OXFORD AND CAMBRIDGE MATCH FOR THE CHANCELLORS CHALLENGE PLATE, BIRMINGHAM, 1910 TO G. L. RITCHIE the front with the arms of Oxford and Cambridge, the reverse engraved G. L. Ritchie 1910, in good condition, cased 6.9 cm; 2 ¾ in
£150-200
G. L. Ritchie was awarded the Military Cross 26th January 1917 for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty. He displayed great courage and determination in collecting and attending to the wounded under very heavy fire.
296 A NAVAL OFFFICER’S SWORD, COCKED HAT, EPAULETTES, AND ELEMENTS OF UNIFORM FIRST HALF OF THE 20TH CENTURY the sword with etched blade by J. Friedebergof Portsea, regulation hilt engraved ‘LEB’ on the folding side-guard, in its regulation scabbard; the cocked hat with its bullion, cased; the epaulettes by Bilney & Rowlands, Portsea, with belt, cased, the case lid painted Lt. L. E. Baxter; uniform comprising coat by Gieve Matthews and Seagrove, named to G. H. Andrew and dated 24.6.12, trousers, mess tail coat and waistcoat the sword: 80.0 cm; 31 ½ in blade (7) £400-600
£60-80 298 A SMALL PRIMING FLASK FOR THE 9TH BATTALION OF THE ROYAL REGIMENT OF ARTILLERY, CIRCA 1790-1815 of polished horn, with brass nozzle with spring cut-off, brass basal cap engraved ‘9RAB.6.1’, and two loops for suspension 21.0 cm; 8 ¼ in These flasks were in use circa 1790-1815. Other examples are preserved at the Royal Armouries, Fort Nelson. See Blackmore 1976, p. 182, no. 270. £250-350 299 AN ITALIAN POWDER-FLASK, EARLY 17TH CENTURY with tooled leather body, the inner portion faced in iron and fitted with a short belt hook, fitted with nozzle with spring cutoff and two rings for suspension 19.0 cm; 7 ½ in high £400-500
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European and American Firearms VARIOUS OWNERS
300 A RARE 15 BORE WHEEL-LOCK MUSKET, THIRD QUARTER OF THE 17TH CENTURY, GERMAN OR DUTCH with lightly swamped octagonal barrel stamped with a mark (Neue Støckel 7969) at the breech (fore-sight missing light pitting), fitted with moulded brass back-sight, bevelled lock retained by two side-nails, fitted with external wheel retained by a single moulded bracket, angular dog, sliding moulded pan-cover, flat dog (small losses, top-jaw chipped, spring and screw worn), the interior struck with the letters ‘IW’, blackened hardwood full stock (fore-end cracked at the terminal), flattened on each side of the centre of the fore-end and fitted with a slender transverse arm for a rest, butt of fishtail form, inlaid with an engraved mother-of-pearl oval behind the tang and on the left of the butt decorated with strapwork and foliage, moulded iron triggerguard, bone forward ramrod-pipe, and wooden ramrod (repaired), perhaps the original 128.5 cm; 50 ⅝ in barrel £3000-4000
300
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301
302
301 AN 8 BORE FLINTLOCK CARBINE BY JOSEPH HEYLIN, CORNHILL, TOWER PRIVATE PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1760 with tapering sighted brass barrel formed in five stages with raised mouldings, signed, partially faceted breech struck with the maker’s mark, engraved grooved tang, border-engraved stepped lock signed on a scroll, figured walnut full stock carved with a scallop moulding about the tang (small cracks), brass mounts comprising trigger-guard engraved with a rococo flower and with early acorn finial, engraved butt-plate and vacant rococo escutcheon, and a pair of moulded ramrod-pipes and associated horn-tipped ramrod 43.0 cm; 17 in barrel Joseph Heylin was free of the Gunmaker’s Company in 1757, became assistant 1773 and Master in 1777. £1000-1200
302 A RARE 25-BORE FOUR-SHOT FLINTLOCK FOWLINGPIECE, CIRCA 1730, AUSTRIAN OR GERMAN with tapering sighted barrel, rotating octagonal breeches incorporating faceted pans and steels (springs restored), engraved stepped lock decorated with a crested coat-of-arms (worn, unclear, cock screw replaced), figured walnut half-stock moulded over the fore-end, about the lock and mounts (foreend cracked, small chips), the butt with carved raised cheek-piece on the left, brass mounts comprising solid sideplate finely engraved with scrolling foliage inhabited by an exotic bird, trigger-guard with acanthus finial at the rear and iron forward section acting as breech release, butt-plate decorated with scrolls and with pronounced heel (dented), escutcheon decorated with a bust, and faceted ramrod-pipe (ramrod missing) 103.0 cm; 40 ½ in barrel The arms appear to be those of the Counts von Sporck. £2500-3500
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303
303 A .680 CALIBRE FLINTLOCK DOUBLE RIFLE BY JOVER AND SON, FROM THE ARMOURY OF THE NIZAM OF HYDERABAD, LONDON PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1790 with rebrowned twist barrels rifled with nine grooves, fitted with gold fore-sight and signed in gold capitals on the rib, breech inlaid with two gold lines, gold vents, stamped with proof marks beneath and with police numbers on the left barrel, engraved grooved breech tang decorated with a gold sunburst, signed stepped bevelled detented locks engraved with trophies-of-arms on the tails, fitted with cocks engraved en suite, semi-rainproof gold-lined pans, and steel springs with rollers, highly figured walnut half-stock, chequered grip, the butt with raised cheek-piece carved with a scroll on the left, engraved steel mounts comprising broad scrolling trigger-guard decorated with a tiger shaded by a palm tree (worn) and with pineapple finial, butt-plate en suite with the trigger-guard, and fore-end cap forming the rear ramrod-pipe, border-engraved vacant silver escutcheon and barrel bolt escutcheons, and associated iron ramrod 80.5 cm; 31 ž in barrels Jover and Son are recorded at 337 Oxford Street circa 1784 until 1796 when they became bankrupt. £5000-7000
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304 A .750 CALIBRE INDIA PATTERN FLINTLOCK MUSKET, EARLY 19TH CENTURY of regulation type, with tapering sighted barrel struck with proof marks and moulded at the breech, border-engraved rounded lock with ‘Tower’, ‘GR’ crowned and Ordnance mark, figured walnut full stock stamped with the letter ‘M’ opposite the lock and ‘6H’ crudely incised beneath the butt, regulation brass mounts, iron sling swivels, iron ramrod, and bayonet stamped ‘JOHN GI-…’ 100.4 cm; 39 ½ in barrel
304
£700-900
306
305 A .750 CALIBRE EAST INDIA COMPANY TRANSITIONAL PATTERN FLINTLOCK MUSKET, EARLY 19TH CENTURY of regulation type, with sighted barrel, rounded lock signed ‘Wilson’ with East India mark on the tail (rubbed), full stock (cracked), brass mounts (one lock retaining screw missing) and iron ramrod 96.5 cm; 38 in barrel
307
£100-150 306 A .750 CALIBRE EAST INDIA COMPANY PERCUSSION SAPPER’S CARBINE, CIRCA 1851-5 with sighted barrel, border-engraved lock with the East India Company rampant lion, full stock, brass mounts including trigger-guard and butt-plate, the former with brief Indian inscriptions, iron ramrod, and iron sling swivels (two missing) 76.5 cm; 30 ⅛ in barrel
308
See Harding 1997, pp. 258-9. £400-500
307 A .650 CALIBRE PERCUSSION THREEBAND MUSKET, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, MID-19TH CENTURY with blued sighted barrel struck with Ordnance and proof marks at the breech, case-hardened lock engraved with a crown on the tail, full stock, brass mounts, iron ramrod, and two sling swivels 99.5 cm; 39 ¼ in barrel £300-400
308 A .577 CALIBRE VICTORIAN THREEBAND SNIDER-ENFIELD RIFLE, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, DATED 1873 with browned barrel by T. Turner, stamped 1563 on the right of the ladder back-sight, hinged breech cover (defective), dated lock, full stock, chequered fore-end and grip, and iron mounts (clearing rod and one suspension loop missing) 93.0 cm; 36 ⅜ in barrel £400-600
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309 A .577 CALIBRE GREENE’S (BRITISH TYPE) RIFLED CARBINE BY THE MASSACHUSETTS ARMS CO., DATED 1856 with browned sighted barrel, blued breech with ‘A2’ crowned, back-action lock with VR crowned, Mass Arms Company inscription and Maynard’s primer, double trigger, the forward trigger for barrel release, walnut half-stock, iron patchbox cover, iron butt-plate, and trigger-guard, and in good condition with some original finish, with a copy of ‘Directions for using Greene’s Carbine’ 45.7 cm; 18 in barrel
310 A RARE AMERICAN 40 BORE JENNINGS PATENT PERCUSSION GUN, CIRCA 1830 converted from flintlock, with octagonal sighted brass barrel stamped ‘12’ beneath the breech and fitted with a broad pierced sleeve fitting over the action, the latter of brass, inscribed ‘New York’ (rubbed) on top, extending to an iron breech block with six protruding teeth corresponding with the breech apertures, engraved stepped iron lock fitted with engraved side-hammer (screw replaced), brass grip, hardwood butt, brass butt-cap and trigger-guard 83.0 cm; 32 ¾ in barrel
Provenance Robin Wigington, Arbour Antiques Ltd, 18th November 1990
Isaiah Jennings invented his all-metal breech-loading rifle in New York in 1818. It would appear that relatively few examples are extant.
See Flayderman 1998, pp. 503-4. £2000-3000
£2000-3000
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311 A .46 CALIBRE DUTCH PERCUSSION RIFLE BY J. G. ZELLER TE ARNHEM, CIRCA 1850 with browned octagonal barrel formed with a recessed muzzle for a loading tool and fluted over the forward portion, adjustable back-sight (fore-sight missing), scroll-engraved breech, scroll-engraved tang, signed scroll-engraved lock (hammer missing), double set trigger (the forward trigger missing), figured walnut half-stock, the butt with raised cheekpiece on the left, the spine with provision for a tang-sight (removed), engraved iron mounts including trigger-guard shaped for the fingers and engraved with a quiver of arrows, scroll-engraved flush-fitting side-plate, spurred butt-plate, and sling swivel, horn fore-end cap and brass-tipped ramrod 77.3 cm; 30 ½ in barrel £500-700
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312 A 15 BORE D.B. PERCUSSION SPORTING GUN BY KITHER, DARTFORD, LONDON PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1840 with browned twist barrels signed on the rib, engraved breech with gold lines, pierced platinum plugs, signed border and scroll-engraved back-action locks, highly figured walnut halfstock (fore-end cracked through), chequered grip, and engraved iron mounts en suite with the tang and locks, comprising trigger-guard (terminal extended) and butt-plate, and brass-tipped ramrod 71.0 cm; 28 in barrels £400-600
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313 A .56 CALIBRE 1801/16 PATTER FLINTLOCK SHORT SEA SERVICE PISTOL of regulation specifications, the barrel struck with Ordnance marks at the breech, border-engraved lock with ‘GR’ crowned and ‘Tower’, border-engraved ring-neck cock, figured walnut full stock (repaired above the lock), carved with a moulding about the tang, regulation brass mounts including pommel punched ‘25’ on the right, iron belt hook and ramrod 22.8 cm; 9 in barrel See Brooker 2016, pp. 179-180. £1500-1800 314 A 14 BORE FRENCH MODEL AN9 FLINTLOCK PISTOL, DATED 1810 of regulation specifications, the barrel dated at the breech and with the model number on the tang, lock with St Etienne arsenal inscription, stock dated on the right (fore-end cracked), regulation brass furniture, and iron ramrod 20.0 cm; 7 ⅞ in barrel £400-500 315 A BELGIAN .650 CALIBRE PERCUSSION CAVALRY PISTOL, LIÈGE PROOF, CIRCA 1860 of regulation type, the lock by Dresse Laloux & Cie, three-quarter stock, brass mounts comprising side-plate, trigger-guard and butt-cap, later iron muzzle band, back-strap and ramrod 19.5 cm; 7 ¾ in barrel
316 A .700 CALIBRE CONTINENTAL PERCUSSION CAVALRY PISTOL, CIRCA 1840 with tapering barrel retained by a single brass barrel band, regulation lock fitted with scroll-engraved hammer, full stock, and regulation brass mounts (worn, repairs) 19.2 cm; 7 ⅝ in barrel £120-180 317 THE BARRELS AND STOCK OF THREE ENGLISH PISTOLS AND A PISTOL SIGNED CLARKSON, 18TH CENTURY AND LATER the first mid-18th century, converted from flintlock, with three-stage barrel, full stock (cut-down) and brass spurred pommel with grotesque cap; the second mid-18th century, with tapering barrel (pitted), and brass grotesque mask buttcap and openwork side-plate; the third early 19th century, with rebrowned octagonal barrel inscribed ‘London’, and the fourth composite, with tapering barrel, signed lock and brass mounts (each worn throughout) the first: 22.3 cm; 8 ¾ in barrel (4) £200-300
£150-200 89
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318 A FINE CASED .450 CALIBRE RIFLED PERCUSSION PISTOL BY ALEX THOMSON, EDINBURGH, CIRCA 1835-40 with signed rebrowned twist octagonal sighted multi-groove rifled barrel, engraved case-hardened breech with platinum plug, engraved case-hardened grooved tang, signed engraved case-hardened flush-fitting lock with side hammer decorated en suite, figured walnut three-quarter stock, finely chequered butt, engraved case-hardened iron butt-cap with trap and barrel bolt escutcheons, engraved blued trigger-guard, vacant silver escutcheon, carved horn fore-end cap, and no provision for a ramrod: in original fitted oak case lined in plum velvet, the lid with trade label for 16 Union Place, complete with accessories including threeway flask, associated bullet mould, nipple-wrench and rammer 16.7 cm; 6 ½ in barrel Alexander Thomson is recorded at this address circa 1833-44. £3000-4000
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THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN ~ 319 AN EXCEPTIONAL CASED PAIR OF 30 BORE SILVER-MOUNTED FLINTLOCK DUELLING PISTOLS OF PRESENTATION QUALITY BY JOHN MANTON, LONDON, NO. 1921, LONDON 1790/1, SILVER MAKER’S MARK OF MICHAEL BARNETT, PROBABLY MADE FOR FRANCIS INGRAM SEYMOUR-CONWAY (1743-1822), 2ND MARQUESS OF HERTFORD with heavy octagonal browned twist scratch rifled barrels signed in gold capitals, fitted with gold fore-sights, the breeches with blued steel back-sights, inlaid with a gold line and with gold-lined vents (two very small areas of light pitting, minor scratches), engraved case-hardened tangs decorated with trophies-of-arms and scrolls, signed stepped case-hardened bevelled locks fitted with cocks en suite, engraved case-hardened steels with rollers, blued bolt safety-catches also locking the steels, gold-lined semirainproof pans, detents, and blued set triggers, highly figured walnut half-stocks with finely formed chequered swelling ‘bag-shaped’ butts, very fine full silver mounts en rocaille comprising trigger-guards engraved with trophies-of-arms on the bows and each struck with Paris petite garantie mark used from 1819, the terminals chased with trophies involving a classical helmet, side-plates chased in high relief with elaborate trophies-of-arms, butt-caps decorated with further trophies centring on a Satyr mask at the front and with a classical armour beneath a canopy at the base of the spine, each struck with Paris mark en suite with the trigger-guards, escutcheons with small traces of the owner’s engraved crest (partially erased) and with borders chased en suite, rear ramrod-pipes chased with further trophies and a rococo bow, silver fore-end caps, silver barrel bolt escutcheons, original horn-tipped ramrods, retaining most of their original finish and perhaps unfired: in their fitted mahogany case, probably the original (cracks, ivory key escutcheon replaced), the interior with green baize (perhaps early), with leather-covered imitation tortoise shell three-way flask (small losses), and cleaning rod, with a small card typed and inscribed with provenance details 25.5 cm; 10 in barrels 38.2 cm; 15 in overall Provenance Probably, Francis Ingram Seymour-Conway (1743 - 1822), 2nd Marquess of Hertford Major Hugh Pollard, sold December 1922 for £30 Major H. W. Hall, sold Sotheby’s 1967 Macdonald Beathy, sold 1968 Wilfred Ward, sold Christie’s King Street, 27th October 1993, lot 105, £32,200
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These pistols have been associated with a Marquess of Hertford since the early 20th Century. What remains of the crest would reinforce this attribution though insufficient detail remains to be absolutely certain of this. The attribution of the original owner to Richard, 5th Marquis of Hertford, must be discounted as he was born in 1818. The second Marquis, cited above is perhaps the most plausible candidate, passing to his son, Francis Charles Seymour-Conway, 3rd Marquess and from him to Richard SeymourConway, 4th Marquess, whose widow founded the Wallace Collection. The latter spent his early life in Paris and this might explain the later French marks on the trigger-guards and butt-caps. Francis Ingram-Seymour-Conway, Second Marquess of Hertford (1743-1822), was educated at Eton College and Christ Church, Oxford followed by a grand tour with his tutor, the antiquary Walter Bowman, in 1764-5. He entered the House of Commons in 1766 as member for Lostwithiel and took over the borough of Orford in 1768. He spoke regularly in the House of Commons and was credited ‘if not with eloquence, at least with knowledge of the subject’. During the American War of Independence he was a reliable supporter of Lord North’s administration and held ministerial offices including lord of the Treasury and a privy councillor for Great Britain from 1780. However, he never attained the post of secretary at war to which he aspired. While a strong supporter of the political links between Britain and Ireland, he argued against the formal political and commercial union of the two countries. In the later part of his career in the Commons he was generally associated with the Foxite opposition against Pitt, but in 1793 spoke in favour of the Aliens Bill, seconding Pitt’s address to the king, which paved the way for the abandonment of neutrality in favour of war with revolutionary France. Later in the same year he was employed as an informal roving ambassador to the king of Prussia and to other German courts, and was given a military mission in that area the following year. In 1797 he acquired the lease of Manchester (later Hertford) House which became his principal London residence, and it remained within the Hertford family until the establishment of the Wallace Collection by his grandson. On Pitt’s return to government in 1804 Hertford was appointed master of the horse (1804-6) and later installed as a Knight of the Garter. Through his wife’s influence at court he became lord chamberlain of the household (1812-21). He died on 17 June 1822 at Hertford House, Manchester Square, London, and was buried in the family vault in Ragley, Warwickshire. Literature John A. Atkinson, The British Duelling Pistol, p. 74 D.H.L. Back, The Mantons, 1993, p. 33 B. Dickens, “M·B” The Gun Makers’ Silversmith - A Question of Attribution” in Journal of the Arms & Armour Society, March 1999, pp 110 - 114 W. Keith Neal & D.H.L. Back, The Manton Supplement, 1978, p.54 Wilfrid J. Ward, Duels & Duelling, in, Guns Review, June 1983, p.449, British Pistol Duelling & its Weapons in Man at Arms, volume six, number four, July/August, 1984, p.10 and front cover Weapons of Honour, in Country Life, 3rd October, 1985, p.965 An Honourable Affair - The Duelist’s Code, in Lloyd’s Log, November, 1985, p.42 An x-ray of the trigger-guards reveals hallmarks including the date letter for 1790/91. The x-ray also shows evidence of a trigger-guard spur that was probably not fitted. These pistols belong to a group of only four known examples by this maker with exceptionally elaborate silver mounts, all of the same design, by Michael Barnett. The others comprise: a cased pair, formerly in the Keith Dill collection, with serial number 2837 and hallmarked for 1797, sold Rock Island Auctions, 6 May 2017, lot 2169 (£80,500 ($103,500), including premium); an uncased pair attributed to the ownership of General James Hope Grant, formerly in the collection of Norman Dixon, with serial number 1166 and hallmarked for 1789 sold Bonhams, Knightsbridge 18th April 2012, lot 317, (£31,250 including premium); and another pair, serial numbered 1919 and hallmarked for 1790, remain in the Keith Neal Collection. The present pair is the only example in the group that are half-stocked, a notably early feature. It is also the finest of the group to be offered for sale. Further information, including x-rays, a discussion of the provenance and the silver mounts, is included with this lot and will be available to prospective bidders. £35000-45000 94
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VARIOUS OWNERS 320 A PAIR OF 20 BORE SILVER-MOUNTED FLINTLOCK TURNOFF PISTOLS BY T. RICHARDS, CIRCA 1770 with cannon barrels moulded at the muzzles, struck with the maker’s mark, Birmingham private view and proof marks at the breeches, tangs of shaped outline, signed rounded locks (signatures worn, top-jaws and screws replaced), figured walnut half-stocks (repairs), inlaid with silver wire scrolls and pellets about the tangs, silver mounts cast and chased in low relief, comprising openwork dragonesque side-plates, grotesque mask butt-caps, and vacant escutcheons, and engraved iron trigger-guards with acorn finials 14.5 cm; 5 ¾ in barrels (2) £1500-2000
321 AN 18 BORE FLINTLOCK LIVERY PISTOL BY GRIFFIN & TOW, CIRCA 1772-82 with tapering barrel inscribed ‘London’ within a linear frame extending to a loop over the breech, struck with the barrelsmith ‘s mark and proof marks, signed rounded lock (cock retaining screw replaced, cleaned), full stock (fore-end replaced), brass mounts including engraved flush-fitting scrolling side-plate, trigger-guard with finial of shaped outline, spurred pommel, and border-engraved vacant escutcheon (later ramrod) 17.8 cm; 7 in barrel Joseph Griffin and Benjamin Tow were in partnership 1772-82. £600-800
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322 A 140 BORE FLINTLOCK MUFF PISTOL BY COOK, BATH, CIRCA 1800 with turn-off barrel engraved with foliage around the muzzle, box-lock action signed in an oval carried by trophies-of-arms on the left and inscribed ‘Bath’ on the right, sliding thumb-piece safety-catch also locking the steel, folding trigger and flat-sided walnut butt 2.8 cm; 1 ⅛ in barrel
322
£300-400 323 A 54 BORE FLINTLOCK POCKET PISTOL BY BENNET SOUTHAMPTON, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1830, AND ANOTHER SIGNED NOCK, LONDON, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1830 each with run-off barrel, box-lock actions engraved with trophies and signed on the left, sliding thumb-piece safety-catches also locking the steels, the first with folding trigger and the second with engraved trigger-guard, and flat-sided walnut butt (the iron parts pitted) the first: 4.0 cm; 1 ½ in barrel (2) £250-350
323
324 A 32 BORE PERCUSSION POCKET PISTOL BY FOWLER, DUBLIN, CIRCA 1820 AND ANOTHER, 54 BORE, BY COLE, WHITCHURCH the first with turn-off barrel retaining traces of blued finish, box-lock action signed within an oval carried by trophies-of-arms on the left and inscribed ‘Dublin’ within an oval on the right, sliding thumb-piece safety-catch, folding trigger, flat-sided walnut butt vacant silver escutcheon; the second with turn-off barrel, box-lock action signed on a trophy-of-arms on the left, sliding thumbpiece safety-catch also protecting the nipple, and flat-sided walnut butt the first: 4.0 cm; 1 ½ in barrel (2) £250-350 325 A 56 BORE PERCUSSION POCKET PISTOL SIGNED NOCK, LONDON, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1840 AND A BELGIAN PIN-FIRE REVOLVER, LIÈGE, CIRCA 1870 the first with tapering turn-off barrel, signed box-lock action, sliding thumbpiece safety-catch, flat-sided walnut butt and engraved iron trigger-guard; the second with octagonal signed barrel, plated cylinder and frame, the latter with loading-gate on the right, folding trigger, and ebonised butt the first: 6.0 cm; 2 ⅜ in barrel (2) £300-400
324
326 A 16 BORE TRAVELLING PISTOL BY BARNETT, LONDON, CIRCA 1810 AND A 16 BORE FLINTLOCK HOLSTER PISTOL OF EAST INDIA COMPANY TYPE, EARLY 19TH CENTURY the first with tapering sighted barrel formed with a long flat, signed stepped bolted lock (top-jaw and bolt replaced), figured walnut full stock, engraved iron trigger-guard and stirrup ramrod (the iron parts polished and with areas of pitting); the second with tapering barrel, rounded lock of regulation type, full stock impressed opposite the lock, brass mounts including flat butt-cap with iron ring for a lanyard and no provision for a ramrod the first: 23.0 cm; 9 in barrel (2) £500-700
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327 A HIGHLAND FLINTLOCK DRESS PISTOL BY CHRISTIE, TOWER PRIVATE PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1820 with blued iron barrel with fluted breech and faceted muzzle, the middle section engraved with a broad band of symmetrical scrollwork inhabited by a bird-of-prey against a matted ground, signed lock decorated en suite, fitted with matching cock and sliding bolt safety, gilt-copper stock chiselled in low relief with elaborate patterns of scrolling foliage and flowers over its full length, demon mask butt-cap, blued iron trigger-guard and associated iron ramrod (the iron parts reblued, the gilding rubbed on the high points) 18.5 cm; 7 ¼ in barrel A similar pair of pistols by this maker, formerly on loan to the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland, were sold Sotheby’s Olympia, 7th December 2001, lot 271 (£17,550, including premium). John Christie is recorded working in the Small Gun Office, the Tower of London 1794-1830. £2500-3000
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328 A 28 BORE GERMAN WHEEL-LOCK HOLSTER PISTOL, CIRCA 1640-50 with tapering octagonal barrel, rounded lock retained by three side nails (one shortened), fitted with external wheel retained by a small bracket and sliding pan-cover with button release, figured walnut full stock moulded about the tang and over the fore-end, compressed swelling butt bound with an iron band, iron mounts comprising trigger-guard, ramrod-pipe and iron fore-end cap, and iron-tipped wooden ramrod (the iron parts polished bright) 46.4 cm; 18 Âź in barrel ÂŁ1500-2000
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THE PROPERTY OF A EUROPEAN COLLECTOR 329 A FINE 18 BORE FRENCH SILVER-MOUNTED ROYAL FLINTLOCK HOLSTER PISTOL MADE FOR JOHN V, KING OF PORTUGAL (1689, 1706-50) BY LE HOLLANDOIS A PARIS AUX GALLERIES CIRCA 1726 with lightly swamped barrel octagonal over the breech, formed with a long shaped flat decorated with gilt scrollwork, monsterhead tendrils, a mask and the barrelsmiths monogram (Neue Støckel 8128) the underside of the barrel with some early blued finish, engraved tang decorated with a classical profile and with the inventory number ‘31’, bevelled lock decorated with a delicate dog tooth border, chiselled with a monstrous espagnolette mask on a gilt ground on the tail, signed in a rectangular frame observed by a putto above and with a trophy-of-arms on the right, chiselled and gilt cock, chiselled top-jaw and steel , the latter en suite with the tail, engraved faceted pan, highly figured walnut full stock moulded over the fore-end, carved with delicate leafy tendrils and strapwork about the rear ramrod-pipe and the tang, decorated with a small scalloped moulding ahead of the lock side-plate and behind the tang, full silver mounts cast and chased in low relief against a finely matted gilt ground (rubbed, gilding missing in some places), comprising side-plate decorated with two trophiesof-arms within a dogtooth framework, spurred pommel decorated with tendrils matching the stock, trophies-ofarms, a mask on each side, and a further trophy on the cap, trigger-guard decorated with a framed profile portrait of Diana the huntress beneath a canopy with a trophy-of-hunting suspended from the frame, two ramrod-pipes decorated with leafy tendrils carrying a monstrous mask, and escutcheon decorated with the crowned Royal Arms (later ramrod) 31.0 cm; 12 ¼ in barrel Provenance Rainer Daehnhardt By tradition this was presented to King John V of Portugal in 1727 following the fire that devastated the Portuguese Royal Manufactory the preceding year. Le Hollandois was the son of the gunmaker of the same name who worked in partnership with Thuraine in the third quarter of the 17th century, perhaps best known for the remarkable pattern books that bear their names. The younger Le Hollandois was called Adrien Reynier, and is recorded in Paris as a journeyman in 1705, received French nationality 1711, became Arquebusier Ordinaire du Roi 1723 and was given a logement at the Louvre on 18th January 1724, as successor to Bertrand Piraube. See Hayward 1963, p. 47 and Lenk 1965, p. 80. £8000-12000
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331 330
332
330 A 180 BORE LIÈGOIS FOUR BARRELLED TAP-ACTION FLINTLOCK POCKET PISTOL BY AUGUST FRANCOTTE, CIRCA 1830 with tapering barrels arranged in a cluster, border-engraved breech stamped with the maker’s mark (Neue Støckel 1257) on the left, engraved box-lock action with a bouquet on each side, fitted with tap-lever on the left and with sliding thumbpiece safety-catch also locking the steels, chequered walnut butt carved with palmette behind the action, fitted with a hardwood oval at the base, and engraved trigger-guard 3.0 cm; 1 ⅛ in barrels £1000-1200 331 A 22 BORE FRENCH FLINTLOCK HOLSTER PISTOL BY CHASTEAU A PARIS, CIRCA 1760 with tapering barrel fitted with silver bead fore-sight and formed with a flat, chiselled with scrolls enclosing a warrior rondel over the breech on a gilt ground, engraved grooved tang, stepped lock signed on a scroll beneath the pan, engraved with trophies-of-arms and scrolls on a gold ground, full stock carved with scrolls of foliage in low relief (rubbed), iron mounts chiselled and gilt en suite with the lock and breech, comprising openwork side-plate, trigger-guard with moulded finial, and spurred pommel (the iron parts with areas of pitting, rubbed and patinated) 20.5 cm; 8 in barrel Chasteau was arquebusier du Roi to Louis XV, see Hayward 1963, p. 45. £600-800
332 A 32 BORE NORTH ITALIAN FLINTLOCK PISTOL, EARLY 18TH CENTURY with tapering barrel formed in four stages, signed ‘Domenico Bomo’ over the breech, plain tang, rounded lock chiselled with a green man mask on the tail, engraved with a reclining putto beneath the pan, chiselled lock, pan and steel, moulded walnut full stock (fore-end replaced), carved with a raised moulding about the tang, iron mounts comprising finely pierced and engraved side-plate involving a demi-figure on an elaborate panel of scrolling foliage, spurred pommel and trigger-guard each chiselled en suite with the lock, two engraved ramrodpipes, and later ramrod 23.0 cm; 9 in barrel The signature is perhaps a version of Domenico Bonomino whose name appears on a large number of firearms. In this instance it might be for one Domenico B, possibly a merchant, recorded buying barrels in 1697 and 1720. See Carpegna 1997, pp. 153-4. £700-900 333 A PAIR OF 54 BORE BELGIAN PERCUSSION POCKET PISTOLS, LIÈGE, MID-19TH CENTURY AND A 50 BORE PERCUSSION POCKET PISTOL, 19TH CENTURY the first with octagonal brass barrels moulded at the muzzles, integral brass box-lock actions, walnut butts and iron triggerguards; the second with octagonal barrel, box-lock action, walnut butt and iron trigger-guard the first: 6.0 cm; 2 ⅜ in barrels (3) £250-350
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334 A PAIR OF 15 BORE AUSTRIAN FLINTLOCK HOLSTER PISTOLS BY IOHANN ZEFFEL IN WIENN, CIRCA 1720 with swamped barrels grooved inside the muzzles, signed in full on a long flat and fitted with brass fore-sights, the breeches chiselled with an engraved strapwork panel enriched with a gilt fish-roe ground, engraved breech tangs numbered ‘1’ and ‘2’ respectively, strongly bevelled brass locks chiselled with foliage and grotesques (one inoperative, one steel chipped), full stocks moulded over the fore-ends, about the locks and the mounts (small cracks and repairs), carved with foliage and a flower in low relief about the tangs, inlaid in silver wire with the owner’s initials ‘FN’ in a shield, full brass mounts including openwork sideplates involving scrolling foliate demi-figures, trigger-guards chiselled with grotesques on the bows and with foliate terminals, spurred pommels decorated with strapwork, and a pair of ramrod-pipes, horn fore-end caps and each with horn-tipped wooden ramrod, perhaps the original 35.2 cm; 13 ⅞ in barrels (2) Johann Zeffel of Wiesenthal is recorded as master gunstocker in Wiener Neustadt 22 June 1711. See Schedelmann 1944, p. 35. £3500-4500
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PROPERTY FROM A FRENCH COLLECTION 335 TWO SAXON LONG WHEEL-LOCK HOLSTER PISTOLS, DRESDEN, CIRCA 1610, ALMOST CERTAINLY MADE FOR THE TRABANTENLEIBGARDE OF THE PRINCE ELECTOR CHRISTIAN II almost forming a pair, with long slender barrels formed in two stages, chiselled with a band of beadwork over the octagonal breeches, stamped ‘HS’ for Hans Stockmann (Neue Støckel 3099) and with a series of decorative marks, plain locks retained by two side nails, fitted with domed iron wheel-covers, sliding pan-covers with button releases, and moulded dogs, fruitwood full stocks inlaid over their length in staghorn with foliate plaques about the tangs (one incomplete), with further engraved staghorn pellets, including rosettes, and, about the side nails, a snail and a marine monster, the rear portion set within segmental lines, fluted lemon-shaped pommels decorated en suite (one stock cracked, small losses), engraved horn ramrod-pipes and fore-end caps, iron trigger-guards, one incorporating trigger-return spring (the other missing), and horn-tipped ramrods, probably the original 48 cm; 18 ⅞ in barrels (2) Provenance The former Saxon Electoral Armoury, Dresden Hans Stockman is recorded working in Dresden from 1590 until his death in 1639. He became a master of the gunmaker’s guild in 1603 and Burger of Dresden in 1605. He made a number of arms for the Electoral Armoury of which well over one hundred still remain. See Schaal 1975, p. 46. These pistols are almost identical to other examples made for the Electoral Guard. However, they do not include the Electoral Arms and the Archmarshallship of the Holy Roman Empire which are present on other examples. £10000-12000
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336 A CASED PAIR OF 28 BORE FRENCH REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD FLINTLOCK RIFLED OFFICER’S PISTOLS BY BOUTET DIRECTEUR ARTISTE MANUFRE A VERSAILLES, CIRCA 1794-1799 with signed octagonal swamped sighted polygroove rifled barrels stamped with the barrelsmith’s marks (Neue Støckel 95 and 7249) at the breeches and fitted with standing back-sights, stepped bevelled locks inscribed ‘Manufre a Versailles, one lock struck with a mark, ‘V3’ beneath a Phrygian cap, figured walnut full stocks, angular butts, iron mounts of shaped outline, comprising trigger-guard with shaped finial, oval butt-cap, a pair of moulded ramrod-pipes, and horn-tipped wooden ramrods, one perhaps the original: in a later case (interior stripped), with a mallet 21.3 cm; 8 ⅜ in barrels The mark on the lock is discussed in the 1993-4 Versailles exhibition of this maker’s work, p. 90. £5000-7000
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337 A FINE AND RARE CASED PAIR OF 28 BORE FRENCH FLINTLOCK PISTOLS OF PRESENTATION QUALITY BY BOUTET ET FILS A VERSAILLES, CIRCA 1800 reconverted from percussion, with lightly swamped octagonal sighted multi-groove rifled barrels decorated along their length with a finely matted pattern sown with minute gold stars, decorated with a gold band at the muzzles and with a broad band at the breech, the latter struck with gold-lined marks comprising the letters, ‘LC’, ‘Boutet’, and two further marks (Neue Støckel 95 and 97), engraved burnished steel tangs decorated with neo-classical designs and incorporating the back-sights, signed locks with fluted borders, formed with stepped tails decorated with a batwing design, set triggers, figured walnut full stocks, characteristic finely chequered butts encircled with silver nails around the base, full burnished steel mounts cast and chased in low relief, comprising trigger-guards with baluster terminals decorated with vine fruit and foliage and long foliate terminals involving three ram’s heads, butts with oval caps decorated with foliage around the edges, two-piece bat-wing side-plates, rear ramrod-pipe en suite with the trigger-guard, moulded forward ramrod-pipe, early ivory-tipped whale-bone ramrods: in fitted case, perhaps the original, the lid veneered in burrwood (cracked) and with flush-fitting carrying handle, the interior lined in blue velvet, and complete with accessories including lyre-shaped flask, bullet mould, mainspring clamp, turn-screw, wad-cutter and oil bottle 31.0 cm; 12 ¼ in barrels Nicolas-Noël Boutet (1761-1833) the distinguished maker of armes de luxe inherited the position of gunmaker to Louis XIV from his father-in-law, Pierre de Sainte (active 1747-88). In 1792 he became technical Director at the new Versailles Manufactory and in 1800 rose to Directeur Artiste with overall control. He held this position until the closure of the manufactory in 1818. Boutet died fifteen years later in poverty, his career having survived six French Political regimes. His son, Pierre-Nicolas, (1789-1816) worked with him as Boutet et Fils. £20000-30000
104
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338
338 A CASED PAIR OF 32 BORE FRENCH PERCUSSION RIFLED TARGET PISTOLS BY VASSELLON A MARSEILLES, MID-19TH CENTURY with octagonal etched twist sighted barrels inscribed ‘Canons Damas De Paris’ in gold script in a gilt linear frame, scroll-engraved breeches with pronounced fences about the percussion bolsters and stamped ‘A Bernard’ beneath, engraved tangs incorporating the back-sights, scroll-engraved stepped flush-fitting locks signed in gilt capital letters, blued triggers, highly figured walnut halfstocks carved with scrollwork over the fore-ends, fluted butts, engraved spurred steel trigger-guards and butt-caps, and no provision for ramrods: in their original case veneered in exotic wood on the outside, fitted interior lined in blue velvet, the lid with tooled and gilt leather maker’s label, complete with accessories including copper powder-flask with a game vignette and bullet mould 25.5 cm; 10 in barrels £3500-4500
106
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339
339 A CASED PAIR OF 100 BORE BELGIAN PERCUSSION RIFLED TARGET PISTOLS, LIĂˆGE PROOF, NO. 3611, CIRCA 1860 each with octagonal blued sighted multi-groove rifled barrel, scroll-engraved case-hardened breech, scroll-engraved case-hardened tang with adjustable back-sight, scroll-engraved case-hardened stepped flush-fitting lock decorated en suite with the breech and tang, highly figured walnut half-stock with finely chequered fore-end and butt, finely engraved case-hardened steel mounts comprising spurred trigger-guard (one with light rust) and butt-caps, no provision for a ramrod, and retaining much finish throughout: in their original veneered case with fitted interior lined in plum velvet, complete with accessories including moulds for ball and rifle bullets, nipple wrench and mallet 25.5 cm; 19 in barrels ÂŁ3000-4000
107
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340
342
343
340 A PAIR OF FRENCH 54 BORE PERCUSSION POCKET PISTOLS, MID-19TH CENTURY with turn-off barrels, scroll-engraved actions, folding triggers, and fluted ebonised butts, in a later case 5.7 cm; 2 ¼ in barrels £350-450 341 A COMBINATION TOOL IN 17TH CENTURY STYLE AND A BULLET MOULD the first: of turned iron with brass centre, incorporating a wheel-lock spanner and a small pricker; the second of brass and formed of two hinged pieces, with provision for ball and conical bullets, and fitted with iron spru-cutter the first: 16.0 cm; 6 ¼ in (2) £150-200
342 A 54 BORE FRENCH LEFAUCHEUX FIVE-SHOT SINGLEACTION PIN-FIRE PEPPERBOX REVOLVER, CIRCA 1850 with tapering browned twist barrel group each formed in two stages, scroll-engraved rounded action decorated with vine foliage signed ‘Lefaucheux Brevete Iteur a Paris’ and stamped with the maker’s mark (Neue Støckel 7770) around the fence, ring trigger decorated en suite, and fluted ebonised butt 7.2 cm; 2 ¾ in barrels £800-1200 343 A 54 BORE SIX-SHOT PERCUSSION TRANSITIONAL REVOLVER BY PARKER, FIELD & CO., 233 HOLBORN, LONDON, CIRCA 1860 with signed rebrowned sighted barrel fitted with sprung rammer with scroll-engraved pivoting terminal on the right, plain cylinder with London proof marks, scroll-engraved action fitted with long spurred hammer, finely chequered butt, engraved iron trigger-guard and butt-cap, the latter with trap (areas of pitting) 15.5 cm; 6 ⅛ in barrel £800-1200
108
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344
344 A RARE 7.8MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO. 5/1897 SELF-LOADING PISTOL, NO. 396, WITH SHOULDER STOCK NO. 534 with blued round barrel fitted with blued block-mounted pyramidal blade fore-sight, the slide stamped ‘Pistolet Bergmann / Patent Brevete S.G.D.G.’, frame with blued adjustable open-sights from ‘100’ to ‘1000’ metres, side-safety, associated box magazine (not numbered, probably later, top clip chipped and detached) with circular inspection ports corresponding to its housing, and chequered hard-rubber grips with Bergmann gothic ‘B’ on each face, with associated leather shoulder-stock holster serial numbered 534, with side pouch and suspension strap, and with some original finish throughout 7.7 cm; 3 in barrel (2) The Bergman model 1897 underwent trials by both the Swiss and British military before being ultimately rejected. The British rejected it as they were looking for a 11mm calibre weapon. Around 800 pistols of this type are believed to have been made most of which went to commercial customers. See Ezell 1981 p. 369. £4000-6000
109
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345
346
345 A RARE 6.5MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO.3/1896 SELF-LOADING PISTOL, NO. 468 with blued sighted barrel, the frame engraved ‘Patent Bréveté S.G.D.G.’ with German inspection mark and ‘278’ above, side lever-safety on left, Bergman miner mark on the right, sprung downward loading gate with inspection ports on the right, chequered wooden grips, and integral iron lanyard ring 9.5 cm; 3 ¾ in barrel
346 A RARE 8MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO.4/1896 SELF-LOADING PISTOL, NO. 2634 with blued sighted barrel, the frame engraved ‘Patent Bréveté S.G.D.G.’ with German inspection mark above, side leversafety on left, Bergman miner mark on the right, sprung downward loading gate with inspection ports on the right, chequered wooden grips, and integral iron lanyard ring 9.5 cm; 3 ¾ in barrel
£1000-1500
£1000-1500
110
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347
348
347 A RARE 8MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO.4/1896 SELF-LOADING PISTOL, NO. 4133 with associated sighted blued barrel, the frame engraved ‘Patent Bréveté S.G.D.G.’ with German inspection mark above, side lever-safety on left, Bergman miner mark on the right, sprung downward loading gate with inspection ports on the right engraved ‘Pistolet Bergmann’, chequered hard-rubber grips with Bergmann gothic ‘B’ on each face, and integral iron lanyard ring 9.5 cm; 3 ¾ in barrel
348 A RARE 8MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO.4/1896 SELF-LOADING PISTOL, NO. 3565 with sighted barrel, the frame engraved ‘Patent Bréveté S.G.D.G.’ with German inspection mark above and with side lever-safety on left, Bergman miner mark on the right, sprung downward loading gate stamped ‘Pistolet Bergmann’ and with inspection ports on the right, chequered wooden grips, and integral iron lanyard ring 16.0 cm; 6 ¼ in barrel £800-1000
£1000-1500
111
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349
350
349 A RARE 5MM (BERGMANN) BERGMANN NO.2/1896 SELFLOADING PISTOL, NO. 1179 with blued sighted barrel, blued frame engraved ‘Patent Bréveté S.G.D.G.’ with German inspection mark and the number ‘611’ above, Bergman miner mark and side leversafety on left, sprung downward loading gate with inspection ports on the right, hard rubber grips with Bergmann gothic ‘B’ on each face, and integral iron lanyard ring 7.5 cm; 3 in barrel £800-1000
112
350 A 5MM SPANISH CHAROLA ANITUA PATENT SECOND MODEL PISTOL with blued sighted barrel inscribed ‘I. CHAROLA, EIBAR, CAL 5 m/m’, blued action with registered mark on the left, polished bone grips, iron trigger-guard and iron lanyard ring 9.5 cm; 3 ¾ in barrel Around 900 of these pistols were manufactured in the late 19th century. £400-500
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351
351 A FINE CASED BELGIAN 70-BORE COLLETTE PATENT GRAVITY-FED BREECH-LOADING TARGET PISTOL RETAILED BY JONGEN FRERES A LIEGE, NO VC 1106, CIRCA 1860 with blued octagonal rifled barrel, blued sighted magazine-cover, blued pivoting bullet-seater, bright rising breech-block and hammer with chequered spur, blued knurled thumb-piece safety-catch, engraved case-hardened rounded tapering action decorated with scrolling foliage and signed on a scroll on the left, signed ‘V. Coleette Brevete’ around the tang screw, engraved case-hardened spurred trigger-guard and butt-cap each en suite with the action, rounded fluted butt carved with a panel of foliage on each side, and much original finish throughout: in its fitted oak case lined in green velvet with full accessories including engraved case-hardened bullet mould en suite with the action, extra strikers, the exterior of the lid with circular brass escutcheon, Liège proof 23.0 cm; 9 in barrel Victor Collette (1836-1909) patented his gravity-fed multi-shot system in Belgium in 1857 having shown it at the Paris exhibition of 1855. The tube magazine holds around forty rounds of self-contained bullets. It proved unfavourable as it was difficult to clean. £2000-3000
113
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352
352 A RARE 9MM FRENCH MODEL 1854 PIN-FIRE RIFLED PISTOL BY TREUILLE DE BEAULIEU FOR THE ‘CENT GARDE’ OF NAPOLEON III, CIRCA 1854 with sighted barrel rifled with four grooves and moulded at the muzzle, patent action including vertical breech-block operated by a knurled looped lever, regulation figured walnut full stock, spurred trigger-guard, butt-plate with a loop on the left for suspension, and the metal parts chromed throughout 29.0 cm; 11 ⅜ in barrel The Cent-Gardes were created by Napoleon III. The contract for their firearms was awarded to Treuille de Beaulieu. Baron Antoine Hector Thésée Treuille de Beaulieu (1809-1886) was a French General and Captain Inspector of the Châtellerault manufactory. He was a similar age to the Emperor, Napoleon III, and they enjoyed a shared a passion for artillery and firearms. Following a period of study at the Bourges Artillery School he presented a paper on breech-loading, barrel rifling and the use of small calibres in 1842. In 1854 he made the pin-fire muskets for the ‘Cent-Gardes’ of Napoleon III. Three carbines from this group were sold in these rooms, 29th June 2016, lots 437, 438 and 439. Another pistol from this group is preserved in the Musée Art et Industrie, St Etienne. For others see Brooker 2006, pp. 212-213. £2000-3000
114
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353
354
353 A BELGIAN 11MM LEMAT TEN-SHOT CENTRE FIRE REVOLVER, LIÈGE PROOF, CIRCA 1860 with 4 ½ in octagonal sighted barrel stamped ‘Colonel Lemat Patent’ on the top flat and fitted with rammer on the right, nine-shot cylinder, 22 bore central buckshot barrel, rammer with additional pivoting nose for the buck-shot barrel, frame numbered ‘111’ on the right, walnut butt, trigger-guard numbered 210, and with suspension loop ahead 24.5 cm; 9 ⅝ in overall
354 A 54 BORE DEANE HARDING PATTERN REVOLVER BY CALVERT LEEDS, CONVERTED TO .442 CALIBRE RIMFIRE, NO 5409L, CIRCA 1860 with blued sighted barrel, signed border-engraved blued topstrap, border-engraved blued frame signed and numbered on the right, numbered cylinder, chequered walnut grip,blued trigger-guard and butt-cap, bright rammer and some early finish 15.2 cm; 6 in barrel £600-800
Dr. LeMat patented his revolver in America in 1856 and subsequently in a number of European countries. The present revolver is the last model of this type. £2000-3000
115
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355 AN 11MM MODEL 1870 MARINE SIX-SHOT DOUBLE ACTION REVOLVER BY LEFAUCHEUX, PARIS, CIRCA 1870 with signed sighted barrel, frame with integral extractor rod, and walnut grips with lanyard ring 12.0 cm; 4 ¾ in barrel £600-800
355
356 AN 11MM BELGIAN SIX-SHOT REVOLVER, NO. 15153, CIRCA 1870 with sighted two-stage octagonal barrel inscribed ‘Acier Fondu’ on the left, and finely chequered walnut grip with lanyard 11.0 cm; 4 ⅜ in barrel £400-500 357 AN 11MM BELGIAN TYPE 74 SIX-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION CONTINENTAL REVOLVER, CIRCA 1873 with chequered walnut grip 12.6 cm; 5 in barrel £300-400
356
357
116
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358 AN 11MM FRENCH MODEL 1874 SIX-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION REVOLVER, MANUFACTURE D’ARMES ST ETIENNE, NO.15734 with sighted barrel stamped ‘S1877’ on the right, numbered barrel, frame, cylinder and trigger-guard, chequered grip with lanyard, and most of its finish throughout 11.2 cm; 4 ⅜ in barrel £400-500 359 AN 11MM FRENCH MODEL 1873 SIXSHOT DOUBLE-ACTION REVOVER, NO. J8014 with blued sighted numbered barrel, cylinder, trigger-guard and frame, chequered walnut grips (refinished) 11.4 cm; 4 ½ in barrel
358
£300-400 360 AN 11MM FRENCH WARNANT DOUBLE-ACTION SIX-SHOT REVOLVER, CIRCA 1870 with sighted barrel, inscribed ‘Manufacture France Armes St Etienne’ on the top-strap, double hinge spring opening, and finely chequered ebonised grips 24.2 cm; 9 ½ in barrel
359
£200-300
360
117
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361
361 AN 11MM BELGIAN SIX-SHOT PIN-FIRE REVOLVER BY CHAMELOT & DELVIGNE, LIÈGE PROOF, CIRCA 1860 with octagonal sighted barrel signed ‘Chamelot & Delvigne Inv. Btee’ on the right at the breech, the top-strap screwed into the frame behind the cylinder, fitted with clearing rod and loading gate on the left, the latter with a top lever and pivoting backwards, knurled hammer, chequered grip, plain trigger-guard and lanyard ring 14.0 cm; 5 ½ in barrel £700-900
362
362 A RARE 7MM FRENCH LEFAUCHEUX OVER-AND-UNDER 20-SHOT DOUBLEACTION PIN-FIRE VOLLEY REVOLVER, NO. 1226, CIRCA 1870 with sighted barrels, the upper signed ‘E. Lefaucheux Bvte SGDG a Paris’ (feint), fluted cylinder formed of two concentric rings each of ten chambers, numbered frame stamped with a mark (Neue Støckel 7770), double hammer with knurled thumb-catch, folding trigger, later chromed finish, figured walnut grips and chromed lanyard ring 12.5 cm; 4 ⅞ in barrels £1000-1500 363 A CASED 11MM CONTINENTAL SIX-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION PIN-FIRE REVOLVER, NO. 3789, LIÈGE PROOF, CIRCA 1860 with blued octagonal sighted barrel, signed ‘Loron Breveté’ on the left, blued cylinder struck with proof marks, bright hammer, case-hardened frame, fitted with bright barrel release, trigger-guard and butt-cap, select quality walnut butt, and much original finish: in its fitted oak case lined in green baize, the lid with brass carrying handle, and with a turnscrew 17.0 cm; 6 ¾ in barrel £1000-1500
363 118
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364 A FRENCH 15MM SIX-SHOT PIN-FIRE REVOLVER, CIRCA 1860 with rounded sighted barrel, engraved faceted breech, fitted with clearing rod on the right, scroll-engraved cylinder, scrollengraved action with loading gate on the right, chequered grip, engraved triggerguard (areas of light rust and wear), and the butt with lanyard ring 16.0 cm; 6 ½ in barrel £400-600
364
365 AN 11MM FRENCH LEFAUCHEUX SIX-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION PIN-FIRE REVOLVER, NO. 18786, CIRCA 1860 with rounded sighted barrel with traces of a signature, plain cylinder, action signed ‘Inv. E. Lefaucheux Brevette Paris’ on the left, numbered and stamped with the maker’s mark (Neue Støckel 7770) on the left, hardwood grip, spurred trigger-guard and iron butt-cap with lanyard ring 16.0 cm; 6 ½ in barrel £400-500 366 AN 11MM FRENCH LEFAUCHEUX SIX-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION PIN-FIRE REVOLVER, NO. 11549, CIRCA 1860 with rounded sighted barrel signed ‘E. Lefaucheux Bvte SGDG a Paris’, plain cylinder, numbered action stamped with the maker’s mark (Neue Støckel 7770) on the left, hardwood grip, walnut grips, iron trigger-guard and iron butt-cap with lanyard ring 12.8 cm; 5 in barrel
365
£300-400
366
119
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367
367 A 54 BORE FIVE-SHOT DOUBLE-ACTION ‘WEDGE-FRAME’ WEBLEY PATENT PERCUSSION REVOLVER BY WEBLEY & SON, LONDON, NO. 2778, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1860 with blued octagonal barrel of ‘hog’s back’ form fitted with associated case-hardened rammer beneath, blued signed top-strap, border-engraved blued frame numbered on the left, bright hammer, chequered walnut butt, border-engraved blued trigger-guard and butt-cap, and some early finish throughout: in its fitted mahogany case lined in green velvet, complete with some associated accessories 16.2 cm; 6 in barrel £2000-2500
120
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368
368 A CASED 54 BORE FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION ADAMS PATENT 1851 MODEL SELF-COCKING REVOLVER BY LANG, 22 COCKSPUR STREET, LONDON, LONDON PROOF MARKS, NO.30,636, CIRCA 1855 with blued octagonal sighted barrel, signed blued top-strap, numbered blued cylinder, border-engraved numbered blued frame, bright trigger and hammer, finely chequered grip, and blued trigger-guard and butt-cap, refinished throughout: in early fitted oak case (lid lining replaced), with associated accessories including bullet mould 16.0 cm; 6 ¼ in barrel £1200-1800
121
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369
369 A CASED 54 BORE FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION DOUBLE ACTION BEAUMONT ADAMS REVOLVER RETAILED BY DEANE ADAMS AND DEANE, LONDON, LONDON PROOF MARKS, NO. 15,787, MID-19TH CENTURY with octagonal sighted blued barrel engraved with the retailer’s details on the top-strap, numbered cylinder, border-engraved blued frame numbered en suite with the cylinder and ‘B155’, patent rammer, blued arbour-pin with blued threaded catch, safety-stop, chequered butt, plain trigger-guard and butt-cap, and some early finish throughout: in original fitted oak case lined in green baize (some wear), the lid with trade label for 30 King William Street, complete with copper flask by Dixon & Sons and patent bullet mould 14.5 cm; 5 ¾ in barrel £1200-1500
122
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370 A 50 BORE FIVE-SHOT BELGIAN PERCUSSION DOUBLE-ACTION REVOLVER ON THE BEAUMONTADAMS PATENT, BY AUGUSTE FRANCOTTE, LIÈGE, LIÈGE PROOF, CIRCA 1860 with octagonal sighted barrel, fitted with loading lever on the left, frame struck with the maker’s mark on the right (Neue Støckel 1244) and further marks, plain cylinder, figured walnut butt, and iron mounts including lanyard ring 15.2 cm; 6 in barrel
370
£400-600 371 A 40 BORE BENTLEY PATENT SIXSHOT SELF-COCKING PERCUSSION REVOLVER, LONDON PROOF MARKS, CIRCA 1860 with blued octagonal sighted barrel fitted with associated hinged rammer beneath, engraved open-topped brass frame, chequered grip, engraved trigger-guard, and some early finish 16.0 cm; 6 ¼ in barrel £800-1200 372 A 40 BORE FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION ADAMS PATENT 1851 MODEL SELFCOCKING REVOLVER BY DEANE ADAMS & DEANE, 30 KING WILLIAM STREET, LONDON BRIDGE, LONDON PROOF MARKS, NO.11,135R, CIRCA 1855 with blued octagonal sighted barrel, signed blued top-strap, numbered cylinder, border-engraved numbered blued frame, blued trigger, finely chequered grip, trigger-guard with some blued finish, and iron butt-cap with trap 19.0 cm; 7 ½ in barrel
371
£1000-1500
372
123
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373
374
373 A .44 CALIBRE REMINGTON NEW MODEL ARMY PERCUSSION REVOLVER, NO.117519, CIRCA 1865-73 of standard production specifications, with octagonal sighted blued barrel with three line makers details, stamped ‘W’ on the right of the breech, blued frame, blued cylinder walnut grip, brass trigger-guard and some early finish throughout 20.3 cm; 8 in barrel £1000-1200
124
374 A .36 CALIBRE REMINGTON BEALS MODEL 1858 PERCUSSION NAVY REVOLVER, NO. 248, CIRCA 1860 of standard production specifications, with octagonal sighted barrel with maker’s details, plain cylinder, walnut grips, and brass trigger-guard (rammer restored) 19.0 cm; 7 ½ in barrel £800-1200
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375
377
376
VARIOUS OWNERS 375 AN AMERICAN .41 CALIBRE RIM-FIRE REMINGTON DOUBLE DERINGER, CIRCA 1870-80 of standard production specifications, fitted with mother-of-pearl grips (one chipped), and minute traces of early finish 7.7 cm; 3 in barrels £300-400
376 A 120 BORE DUMONTHIER B.S.C.D. COMBINED PIN-FIRE REVOLVER AND DAGGER, NO. 6154, CIRCA 1870 with robust blade formed with a clippedback point, etched on each face with a trophy-of-arms and scrolling foliage (worn), the back-edge incorporating the barrel, signed on the left of the breech, scroll-engraved cylinder, scroll-engraved numbered action with loading-gate on the right, chequered hardwood grips, and scroll-engraved trigger-guard and butt-cap 37.0 cm; 14 ½ in overall £800-1000
377 AN 8MM FRENCH FIVE-SHOT CENTRE-FIRE GAULOIS PATENT PALM PISTOL BY MANUFACTURE FRANCAISE D’ARMES DE ST ETIENNE, NO. 2512, CIRCA 1880 with short barrel stamped ‘Mitrailleuse’ on the flat (fore-sight missing), engraved engine turned white metal action decorated with a trellis pattern filled with flowerheads, fitted with safety on the left, sprung squeezer action, and bakelite palm 13.0 cm; 5 ⅛ in overall See Winant 1956, p.83 fig. 74. £250-350 125
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378
378 A RARE MATCHED PAIR OF 54 BORE SIX-SHOT FRENCH MODEL 1854 PERCUSSION REVOLVERS BY DEVISME, A PARIS, NOS 1285 AND 1295, CIRCA 1855-60 each with signed octagonal barrel (fore-sight removed), signed and numbered on the right of the barrel lug and fitted with locking lever on the left (one retaining screw incomplete), cylinder struck with the maker’s mark and with Thovenin pillars in each chamber, action with internal hammer and knurled spur, figured walnut butt with chequered grip, iron mounts comprising trigger-guard and butt-plate, and the latter with short threaded rammer forming a pommel 16.2 cm; 6 ⅜ in barrels (2) £1500-2000
126
379 TWO CASED BELGIAN PIN-FIRE REVOLVERS, LIÈGE, CIRCA 1870 with sighted barrels, one with fluted cylinder, actions with loading-gates on the right, and hardwood grips (one hammer spur chipped), each in its original fitted case, one with traces of the gilt Royal Arms of Great Britain and Ireland the first: 8.8 cm; 3 ½ in barrel (2) £400-500
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380
380 A 54 BORE BEAUMONT ADAMS FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION REVOLVER PRESENTED TO CAPTAIN THE HONOURABLE F. ELPHINSTONE S.F.GUARDS FROM LORD ELPHINSTONE, BY THE LONDON ARMOURY COMPANY, 36447R, CIRCA 1860 with blued octagonal sighted barrel stamped ‘L.A.C.’ on the left, blued top-strap with presentation inscription, serial numbered blued cylinder ((one small area of wear) and frame, the latter border-engraved and also numbered B20,677, blued trigger-guard and butt-cap, blued rammer, safety-stop, arbor-pin and catch, chequered rounded butt, and much original finish throughout: in its original fitted leather case, the lid embossed with the owner’s name in black capital letters (the lid with a small crack, light wear), the interior lined in green velvet and retaining original accessories including patent brass bullet mould, powder-flask, oil bottle and paper-wrapped bullets 14.5 cm; 5 ¾ in barrel Provenance Robin Wigington, Arbour Antiques Ltd, 26th April 1990 John Frederick Buller Elphinstone (1837-74) was promoted to Lieutenant 17th August 1855 in the Scots Fusilier Guards, Captain 16th August 1859 and Lieutenant Colonel 29th May 1866. £4000-6000
127
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381
381 A FINE CASED 120 BORE FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION ADAMS PATENT 1851 MODEL SELF-COCKING REVOLVER BY DEANE ADAMS & DEANE, 30 KING WILLIAM STREET, LONDON, LONDON PROOF MARKS, NO.16,128R, CIRCA 1855 with blued octagonal sighted barrel, signed blued top-strap, numbered case-hardened cylinder, border-engraved numbered blued frame, blued trigger, bright hammer, finely chequered grip, trigger-guard and butt-cap each with some blued finish, and the barrel, frame and cylinder with much original finish: in original fitted oak case lined in green baize (the lid with one small crack), the lid with trade label for 30 King William Street, complete with accessories including Adams patent brass bullet mould and Dixon & Sons copper flask 10.7 cm; 4 ¼ in barrel £1800-2200
128
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382
382 A CASED 120 BORE FIVE-SHOT PERCUSSION DOUBLE ACTION BEAUMONT ADAMS REVOLVER RETAILED BY DURS EGG, 4 PALL MALL, LONDON, BIRMINGHAM PROOF MARKS, NO. 31621, MID-19TH CENTURY with octagonal sighted blued barrel engraved with the retailer’s details on the top-strap, numbered blued cylinder, border-engraved numbered blued frame, blued rammer, arbour-pin with threaded catch, safety-stop, chequered butt, plain blued trigger-guard and butt-cap, and much early finish throughout: in original fitted oak case lined in green baize (light moth and areas of staining), the lid with trade label for no. 4 Pall Mall on the inside, complete with copper flask by Dixon & Sons and oil bottle 11.4 cm; 4 ½ in barrel £1800-2200
129
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383 A VERY FINE 54 BORE ROYAL BEAUMONT ADAMS FIVE-SHOT DOUBLE ACTION PERCUSSION REVOLVER BY ROBERT ADAMS, NO. 76 KING WILLIAM STREET, LONDON, E.C., NO. 30260R, CIRCA 1860 with engraved blued octagonal sighted barrel, engraved blued top-strap with retailer’s details in full, profusely engraved blued serial numbered cylinder and frame, the latter also numbered B14,596, engraved case-hardened trigger-guard and butt-cap, blued rammer, safety-stop, arbor-pin and catch, chequered rounded butt, the engraving involving a very finely executed close-set design of neo-rococo scrolls, flowers and foliage, and much original finish: in its original select quality highly figured walnut case with brass mounts, the escutcheon engraved with the initial ‘A’ beneath the coronet of a Prince (the lid with small cracks and staining, key escutcheon missing), the interior fitted and lined in green baize (light wear), the lid with trade label for 1858-65, complete with accessories including bullet mould, powder-flask, bullet pouch, cleaning rod and oil bottle 14.5 cm; 5 ¾ in barrel The coronet is for a Royal Prince, placing this pistol in the ownership of Queen Victoria’s sons Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (1844-1900) or Arthur, Duke of Connaught (1850-1942. Given their ages it would appear that Prince Alfred is the most likely. Prince Alfred joined the Navy in 1858 at the age of fourteen. On the abdication of King Otto of Greece in 1862, he was chosen by the Greeks to succeed him, but political conventions made it impossible for the British government to accede to their wishes. Meanwhile, Alfred pursued his naval career. In 1863 he was promoted to Lieutenant and three years later to Captain. By 1893 he was Admiral of the Fleet and was a highly respected, wellinformed and able fleet leader. The superb engraving is notable and relates to other finely decorated objects of the period. It compares closely to a snuffbox marked of the slightly earlier date 1836/37) with maker’s mark of Charles Rawlings and William Summers. See Culme 1977, p. 144. £8000-12000
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384 384 A FINE AND RARE CASED 54 BORE IRISH SIX-SHOT PERCUSSION PEPPERBOX REVOLVER BY WILLIAM & JOHN RIGBY, DUBLIN, NO. 10718 FOR 1855 with case-hardened fluted tapering serial numbered barrel group, engraved with foliage ahead of the nipples and behind the muzzle, released by a blued stud on each side of the action, the spindle serving as a ramrod, engraved blued rounded action decorated with characteristic scrolling foliage, signed on a scroll on the left and inscribed ‘Dublin’ on the right, blued knurled sliding thumb-piece safety-catch, engraved blued trigger-guard, engraved blued back-strap, finely chequered figured walnut butt, retaining much blued finish and in fine, perhaps unfired, condition: in original fitted mahogany case (the lid with a closed crack), lined in green baize, with brass escutcheon on the outside, the interior with trade label for 24 Suffolk Street, complete with its original spare serial numbered barrels, and accessories including brass charger, copper three-way flask, nipple wrench, and turn-screw 9.5 cm; 3 ¾ in barrels Provenance Property of Messrs. John Rigby & Co. (Gunmakers) Ltd., sold Christie’s, 7th July 1964, lot 219, £290 to Neal. The catalogue states ‘There is a possibility that this pistol has never left the gunmakers’ hands….’ Literature David Back, Messrs Rigby, 1992, p. 138 ‘Six-shot pistol and extra barrels, cased’ ‡ £10000-15000 END OF SALE 132
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Sale Results for 28th June 2017 The following prices are the hammer prices GBP/ÂŁ. Unsold lots are not shown. Thomas Del Mar Ltd is not responsible for typographical errors or omissions 3 5 6 7 8 9 11 12 13 14 15 16 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 33 35 36 39 41 43 45 46 47 50 51 54 55 57 58 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 68 69 70 71 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 83 84 85 87 88 89 90 91 92
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280 650 480 500 900 3800 1600 380 220 300 480 550 650 400 600 900 220 1300 700 500 900 650 160 220 750 170 220 260 250 220 180 240 180 180 220 400 180 2800 950 900 420 550 450 2600 2200 150 1100 200 160 85 600 80 320 6000 240 500 80 200 1700 550 1400 1000 360 900 150 1500 60
93 94 95 96 97 98 99 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 111 112 113 114 116 117 118 119 120 121 123 124 126 127 128 129 130 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 156 157 159 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170
150 150 100 600 2600 400 1600 420 400 4800 1050 1400 900 550 700 1050 3500 850 950 3400 600 650 800 850 1400 1100 1000 1500 1050 900 3000 950 1200 2200 1200 2200 1100 420 480 600 320 1000 670 260 300 800 600 280 1800 1200 380 500 900 30 40 30 160 130 900 400 1300 1100 300 450 380 310 130
171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 191 192 193 195 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 210 211 213 214 215 217 218 219 220 221 222 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 239 241 242 243 244 245 246 247
1300 550 85 480 950 80 4200 1600 400 750 220 1900 1300 2000 1400 700 3000 400 1300 1500 1400 650 650 1100 550 650 850 650 950 900 600 950 1700 550 750 750 800 320 300 550 320 600 950 400 800 200 2200 850 2200 1100 750 60 280 200 170 180 240 130 130 160 200 350 2000 1500 1700 380 240
249 250 251 255 257 258 259 260 261 262 266 268 269 270 272 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 288 289 290 291 292 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 306 307 310 311 313 314 315 316 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 333 335 336 337 338
320 800 280 1100 500 550 500 650 1700 2800 320 2400 2200 5000 2000 2200 3200 240 6500 3500 1300 100 2600 2400 800 350 700 1200 700 1600 750 220 50 300 3500 1100 200 1400 120 420 950 1400 750 750 3600 600 600 700 600 750 600 900 800 550 300 480 1100 1100 850 220 190 130 600 70 220 260 320
339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 369 370 372 373 374 375 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408
300 280 240 6500 200 380 300 420 800 750 750 320 200 20 1000 1550 500 90 260 500 300 220 280 90 380 150 350 160 280 130 170 700 1000 1200 300 400 160 300 350 550 2800 7500 280 24000 1600 1100 2800 900 950 700 1500 1000 1100 800 1300 650 1600 1600 1500 1400 1500 1900 450 70 2600 7500 6000
409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 428 429 430 431 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477
900 900 1200 480 3000 320 1500 950 800 850 700 900 800 550 3800 1800 1200 1000 1100 750 2000 380 700 300 160 160 130 450 140 120 90 110 50 150 140 140 400 500 380 900 500 1000 180 150 550 90 130 30 110 280 110 80 420 40 260 300 550 50 300 110 850 150 80 220 260 160 50
478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544
300 450 260 240 450 160 110 1300 2000 550 900 110 40 120 30 60 550 160 220 200 250 550 50 750 300 180 220 160 40 2600 3200 15000 3000 6500 10000 5000 26000 2200 2800 600 380 200 580 240 220 1800 2200 7000 3200 4200 1500 800 4000 17000 11000 13000 20000 14000 12000 16000 4800 2200 500 170 180 1300 1300
547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 607 608 609 610 613 614 615 616 617 618
20 170 50 650 350 650 700 180 40 450 20 900 420 11 220 850 650 450 100 2000 85 140 160 170 220 3000 1200 550 400 750 950 1300 950 400 750 320 550 750 280 1200 1400 1000 600 650 320 150 160 2900 1200 550 1300 700 700 500 320 320 160 380 3800 4000 9500 2400 3500 1200 1400 900 850
619 620 621 622 623 624 625 627 629 630 631 633 636 637 639 640 641 642 645 646 647 650 651 652 653 654 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 698 700
420 900 1200 2600 420 2200 5500 2500 22000 1100 1100 450 200 400 450 350 7000 900 380 200 50 200 3000 3000 2200 850 800 950 80 130 300 400 130 380 750 220 650 160 100 140 3200 260 240 190 650 100 250 2200 200 4500 4000 3500 1700 1100 1500 350 800 1300 500 400 500 5000 6000
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Thomas Del Mar Ltd Antique Arms, Armour & Militaria Wednesday 27th June 2017
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Conditions of Business for Buyers 1.
Introduction (a) The contractual relationship of Thomas Del Mar Ltd. and Sellers with prospective Buyers is governed by:(i) these Conditions of Business for Buyers; (ii) the Conditions of Business for Sellers displayed in the saleroom and available from Thomas Del Mar Ltd.; (iii) Thomas Del Mar Ltd.’s Authenticity Guarantee; (iv) any additional notices and terms printed in the sale catalogue, in each case as amended by any saleroom notice or auctioneer's announcement. (b) As auctioneer, Thomas Del Mar Ltd. acts as agent for the Seller. Occasionally, Thomas Del Mar Ltd. may own or have a financial interest in a lot.
2. Definitions “Bidder” is any person making, attempting or considering making a bid, including Buyers; “Buyer” is the person who makes the highest bid or offer accepted by the auctioneer, including a Buyer’s principal when bidding as agent; “Seller” is the person offering a lot for sale, including their agent, or executors; “TDM” means Thomas Del Mar Ltd., 25 Blythe Road, London, W14 0PD, company number 5368339. “Buyer’s Expenses” are any costs or expenses due to Thomas Del Mar Ltd. from the Buyer; “Buyer’s Premium” is the commission payable by the Buyer on the Hammer Price at the rates set out in the Guide for Prospective Buyers; “Hammer Price” is the highest bid for the Property accepted by the auctioneer at the auction or the post auction sale price; “Purchase Price” is the Hammer Price plus applicable Buyer’s Premium and Buyer’s Expenses; “Reserve Price” (where applicable) is the minimum Hammer Price at which the Seller has agreed to sell a lot. The Buyer’s Premium, Buyer’s Expenses and Hammer Price are subject to VAT, where applicable. 3. Examination of Lots (a) TTDM’s knowledge of lots is partly dependent on information provided by the Seller and TDM is unable to exercise exhaustive due diligence on each lot. Each lot is available for examination before sale. Bidders are responsible for carrying out examinations and research before sale to satisfy themselves over the condition of lots and accuracy of descriptions. (b) All oral and/or written information provided to Bidders relating to lots, including descriptions in the catalogue, condition reports or elsewhere are statements of TDM’s opinion and not representations of fact. Estimates may not be relied on as a prediction of the selling price or value of the lot and may be revised from time to time at TDM’s absolute discretion. 4. Exclusions and limitations of liability to Buyers (a) TDM shall refund the Purchase Price to the Buyer in circumstances where it deems that the lot is a Counterfeit, subject to the terms of TDM’s Authenticity Guarantee. (b) Subject to Condition 4(a), neither TDM nor the Seller:(i) is liable for any errors or omissions in any oral or written information provided to Bidders by TDM, whether negligent or otherwise; (ii) gives any guarantee or warranty to Bidders and any implied warranties and conditions are excluded (save in so far as such obligations cannot be excluded by English law), other than the express warranties given by the Seller to the Buyer (for which the Seller is solely responsible) under the Conditions of Business for Sellers; (iii) accepts responsibility to Bidders for acts or omissions (whether negligent or otherwise) by TDM in connection with the conduct of auctions or for any matter relating to the sale of any lot. (c) Without prejudice to Condition 4(b), any claim against TDM
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and/ or the Seller by a Bidder is limited to the Purchase Price for the relevant lot. Neither TDM nor the Seller shall be liable for any indirect or consequential losses. 5. Bidding at Auction (a) TDM has absolute discretion to refuse admission to the auction. Before sale, Bidders must complete a Registration Form and supply such information and references as TDM requires. Bidders are personally liable for their bid and are jointly and severally liable with their principal, if bidding as agent (in which case TDM’s prior and express consent must be obtained). (b) TDM advises Bidders to attend the auction, but TDM will endeavour to execute absentee written bids provided that they are, in TDM’s opinion, received in sufficient time and in legible form. (c) When available, written and telephone bidding is offered as a free service at the Bidder’s risk and subject to TDM’s other commitments; TDM is therefore not liable for failure to execute such bids. Telephone bidding may be recorded. 6. Import, Export and Copyright Restrictions TDM and the Seller make no representations or warranties as to whether any lot is subject to import, export or copyright restrictions. It is the Buyer's sole responsibility to obtain any copyright clearance or any necessary import, export or other licence required by law, including licenses required under the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). 7.
Conduct of the Auction (a) The auctioneer has discretion to refuse bids, withdraw or reoffer lots for sale (including after the fall of the hammer) if (s)he believes that there may be an error or dispute, and may also take such other action as (s)he reasonably deems necessary. (b) The auctioneer will commence and advance the bidding in such increments as (s)he considers appropriate and is entitled to place bids on the Seller’s behalf up to the Reserve Price for the lot, where applicable. (c) Subject to Condition 7(a), the contract between the Buyer and the Seller is concluded on the striking of the auctioneer's hammer. (d) Any post-auction sale of lots shall incorporate these Conditions of Business. 8. Payment and Collection (a) Unless otherwise agreed in advance, payment of the Purchase Price is due in pounds sterling immediately after the auction (the "Payment Date"). (b) Title in a lot will not pass to the Buyer until TDM has received the Purchase Price in cleared funds. TDM will generally not release a lot to a Buyer before payment. Earlier release shall not affect passing of title or the Buyer's obligation to pay the Purchase Price, as above. (c) The refusal of any licence or permit required by law, as outlined in Condition 6, shall not affect the Buyer’s obligation to pay for the lot, as per Condition 8(a). (d) The Buyer must arrange collection of lots within 10 working days of the auction. Purchased lots are at the Buyer's risk from the earlier of (i) collection or (ii) 10 working days after the auction. Until risk passes, TDM will compensate the Buyer for any loss or damage to the lot up to a maximum of the Purchase Price actually paid by the Buyer. TDM’s assumption of risk is subject to the exclusions detailed in Condition 5(d) of the Conditions of Business for Sellers. (e) All packing and handling of lots is at the Buyer's risk. TDM will not be liable for any acts or omissions of third party packers or shippers. 9. Remedies for non-payment Without prejudice to any rights that the Seller may have, if the
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Buyer without prior agreement fails to make payment for the lot within 5 working days of the auction, TDM may in its sole discretion exercise 1 or more of the following remedies:(a) store the lot at its premises or elsewhere at the Buyer’s sole risk and expense; (b) cancel the sale of the lot; (c) set off any amounts owed to the Buyer by TDM against any amounts owed to TDM by the Buyer for the lot; (d) reject future bids from the Buyer; (e) charge interest at 4% per annum above HSBC Bank plc Base Rate from the Payment Date to the date that the Purchase Price is received in cleared funds; (f) re-sell the lot by auction or privately, with estimates and reserves at TDM’s discretion, in which case the Buyer will be liable for any shortfall between the original Purchase Price and the amount achieved on re-sale, including all costs incurred in such re-sale; (g) Exercise a lien over any Buyer’s Property in TDM’s possession, applying the sale proceeds to any amounts owed by the Buyer to TDM. TDM shall give the Buyer 14 days written notice before exercising such lien; (h) commence legal proceedings to recover the Purchase Price for the lot, plus interest and legal costs; (i) disclose the Buyer’s details to the Seller to enable the Seller to commence legal proceedings 10. Failure to collect purchases (a) If the Buyer pays the Purchase Price but does not collect the lot within 20 working days of the auction, the lot will be stored at the Buyer's expense and risk at TDM’s premises or in independent storage. (b) If a lot is paid for but uncollected within 6 months of the
auction, following 60 days written notice to the Buyer, TDM will re-sell the lot by auction or privately, with estimates and reserves at TDM’s discretion. The sale proceeds, less all TDM’s costs, will be forfeited unless collected by the Buyer within 2 years of the original auction. 11. Data Protection (a) TDM will use information supplied by Bidders or otherwise obtained lawfully by TDM for the provision of auction related services, client administration, marketing and as otherwise required by law. (b) By agreeing to these Conditions of Business, the Bidder agrees to the processing of their personal information and to the disclosure of such information to third parties world-wide for the purposes outlined in Condition 11(a) and to Sellers as per Condition 9(i). 12. Miscellaneous (a) All images of lots, catalogue descriptions and all other materials produced by TDM are the copyright of TDM. (b) These Conditions of Business are not assignable by any Buyer without TDM’s prior written consent, but are binding on Bidders' successors, assigns and representatives. (c) The materials listed in Condition 1(a) set out the entire agreement between the parties. (d) If any part of these Conditions of Business be held unenforceable, the remaining parts shall remain in full force and effect. (e) These Conditions of Business shall be interpreted in accordance with English Law, under the exclusive jurisdiction of the English Courts, in favour of TDM.
Thomas Del Mar Ltd.‘s Authenticity Guarantee If Thomas Del Mar Ltd. sells an item of Property which is later shown to be a “Counterfeit”, subject to the terms below Thomas Del Mar Ltd. will rescind the sale and refund the Buyer the total amount paid by the Buyer to Thomas Del Mar Ltd. for that Property, up to a maximum of the Purchase Price. The Guarantee lasts for one (1) year after the date of the relevant auction, is for the benefit of the Buyer only and is non-transferable. “Counterfeit” means an item of Property that in Thomas Del Mar Ltd.’s reasonable opinion is an imitation created with the intent to deceive over the authorship, origin, date, age, period, culture or source, where the correct description of such matters is not included in the catalogue description for the Property. Property shall not be considered Counterfeit solely because of any damage and/or restoration and/or modification work (including, but not limited to, recolouring, tooling or repatinating). Please note that this Guarantee does not apply if either:(i) the catalogue description was in accordance with the generally accepted opinions of scholars and experts at the date of the sale, or the catalogue description indicated that there was a conflict of such opinions; or reports produced by the Buyer, and reserves the right to seek additional expert advice at its own expense. In the event Thomas Del Mar Ltd. decides to rescind the sale under this Guarantee, it may refund to the Buyer the reasonable costs of up to two mutually approved independent expert reports, provided always that the costs of such reports have been approved in advance and in writing by Thomas Del Mar Ltd. (ii) the only method of establishing at the date of the sale that the item was a Counterfeit would have been by means of
processes not then generally available or accepted, unreasonably expensive or impractical; or likely to have caused damage to or loss in value to the Property (in Thomas Del Mar Ltd.’s reasonable opinion); or (iii) there has been no material loss in value of the Property from its value had it accorded with its catalogue description. To claim under this Guarantee, the Buyer must:(i) notify Thomas Del Mar Ltd. in writing within one (1) month of receiving any informationthat causes the Buyer to question the authenticity or attribution of the Property, specifying the lot number, date of the auction at which it was purchased and the reasons why it is believed to be Counterfeit; and (ii) return the Property to Thomas Del Mar Ltd. in the same condition as at the date of sale and be able to transfer good title in the Property, free from any third party claims arising after the date of the sale. Thomas Del Mar Ltd. has discretion to waive any of the above requirements. Thomas Del Mar Ltd. may require the Buyer to obtain at the Buyer's cost the reports of two independent and recognised experts in the relevant field and acceptable to Thomas Del Mar Ltd. Thomas Del Mar Ltd. shall not be bound by any reports produced by the Buyer, and reserves the right to seek additional expert advice at its own expense. In the event Thomas Del Mar Ltd. decides to rescind the sale under this Guarantee, it may refund to the Buyer the reasonable costs of up to two mutually approved independent expert reports, provided always that the costs of such reports have been approved in advance and in writing by Thomas Del Mar Ltd.
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Thomas Del Mar Ltd Catalogue Subscription Form In order to avoid missing a sale why not subscribe and receive the catalogue directly from the printer’s mailing house. Subscribers receive at least two catalogues per annum and are kept up-to-date to sale-related events at Thomas Del Mar Ltd. Name [Block Capitals].............................................................................................................................................................. Address .................................................................................................................................................................................. ................................................................................................................................................................................................ ................................................................................................................................................................................................ Post/Zip Code ..................................................................... Telephone Number ............................................................. Signature ............................................................................ Date .................................................................................... E-mail .................................................................................. SUBSCRIPTION COSTS FOR TWO CATALOGUES AND POSTAGE UK
£36
Europe
£40
Rest of the world
£44
Please make cheques payable to THOMAS DEL MAR LTD and send to Thomas Del Mar Ltd, 25 Blythe Road, London W14 0PD, United Kingdom, or alternatively fax your details to us on +44 (0) 207 6025973 Credit/Debit Card Information Mastercard Visa Debit/Switch Card Number ...................................................................... Expiry Date ......................................................................... 3-Digit Security Code .......................................................... Please debit my card for the amount shown above
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Thomas Del Mar Ltd
Absentee Bid Form (Please print or type)
Sale Title Antique Arms, Armour & Militaria Date 6th December 2017
Name Address
Code: Tiber Please mail, fax, or scan and email to: Thomas Del Mar 25 Blythe Road London W14 0PD Fax +44 (0) 207 602 5973
Important Please bid on my behalf at the above sale for the following Lot(s) up to the hammer price(s) mentioned below. These bids are to be executed as cheaply as is permitted by other bids or reserves and in an amount up to but not exceeding the specified amount. The auctioneer may open the bidding on any lot by placing a bid on behalf of the seller. The auctioneer may further bid on behalf of the seller up to the amount of the reserve by placing responsive or consecutive bids for a lot. I agree to be bound by Thomas Del Mar Ltd’s Conditions of Business. If any bid is successful, I agree to pay a buyer’s premium on the hammer price at the rate stated in the front of the catalogue and any VAT, or amounts in lieu of VAT, which may be due on the buyer’s premium and the hammer price. Methods of Payment Thomas Del Mar Ltd. welcomes the following methods of payment, most of which will facilitate immediate release of your purchases. Wire Transfer to our Bank Electronic transfers may be sent directly to our Bank: HSBC Bank Plc 38 High Street Dartford Kent DA1 1DG
Postcode Telephone/Home
Business
Fax
Vat No.
Email Signed
Date
Card type (Visa/Mastercard/Debit) Card Number Cardholder Name Expiry Date
3 digit security code
Billing Address (if different from above)
Cardholder Signature If you wish Thomas Del Mar Ltd. to ship your purchases, please tick
Lot
Description
£ Bid Price
IBAN No.: GB78MIDL40190481632140 BIC.: MIDLGB22 Sort Code: 40-19-04 Account No.: 81632140 Account Name: Thomas Del Mar Ltd Credit/Debit Card A 3% surcharge is payable on all credit card transactions; there is no charge for UK debit cards. International debit cards attract a 3% surcharge. By signing this form you are authorizing payment for this sale. Sterling Bankers Draft Drawn on a recognised UK bank Sterling Cash or Cheque Cheques must be drawn on a recognised UK bank. We require seven days to clear a cheque without a letter of
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Lot
Description
£ Bid Price
Lot
Description
£ Bid Price
Thomas Del Mar Ltd
Thomas Del Mar Ltd 25 Blythe Road London W14 0PD Tel: +44 (0) 207 602 4805 Fax: +44 (0) 207 602 5973 Email: enquiries@thomasdelmar.com www.thomasdelmar.com