THE BRIEG CUP: A HIGHLY IMPORTANT GERMAN RENAISSANCE SILVER-GILT AND ENAMEL CUP AND COVER
THE BRIEG CUP: A HIGHLY IMPORTANT GERMAN RENAISSANCE SILVER-GILT AND ENAMEL CUP AND COVER

BRESLAU, CIRCA 1538, MAKER'S MARK AV OR VA MONOGRAM (ROSENBERG 1388)

Details
THE BRIEG CUP: A HIGHLY IMPORTANT GERMAN RENAISSANCE SILVER-GILT AND ENAMEL CUP AND COVER
BRESLAU, CIRCA 1538, MAKER'S MARK AV OR VA MONOGRAM (ROSENBERG 1388)
The cover surmounted by a figure holding a spear and a shield enamelled with the coat-of-arms of Liegnitz quartering those of Brieg, above a support of colonettes and basse-taille enamel, the lower tier set with three wrought figures of crowned tritons, one holding a silver shield, above the cover set with three parcel-gilt medallions of Roman emperors inscribed "NERVAE TRAIANO, DIVVS AVGVST, DIVI IVLII", the cover chased with three biblical scenes above enamelled inscriptions: Lot and his Daughters/"MEMORES ESTOTE VXORIS LOT.", the Drunkeness of Noah "VERECVNDIA IN VINO RARA.", and the Sacrifice of Isaac/"PATER FIDEI IN CHRISTVM RO. 4"; the interior of the cover set with parcel-gilt enamelled medallion of the arms of the City of Brieg within the inscription "ILL[USTRISSIMI]: PR[INCIPIS]: D[OMINI]: FRID[ERICI]: MUN[US]: NUP[TIAE]: CIVI[TATIS]: BREG[ENSIS]; the cup with broad lip engraved with a triumphal procession, above a band of basse-taille enamel set with three wrought dolphins, over a convex band chased with figures and foliage and set with three medallions depicting: Hercules and the Nemean lion, Samson and the Pillars with inscription "PLUS ULTRA", and a figure embracing a unicorn, symbol of Purity, each medallion separated by a lozenge set with a flowerhead, above three scrolled brackets enclosing an enamelled band inscribed "VITA AMICO. INVIDIA MORTI. COMPARANDA EST", the tiered stem mounted with wrought nereids alternating with bucrania, symbols of Sacrifice, with cherub's heads above and colonettes below surrounding bands of basse-taille enamel, the dome of the foot with convex band chased with scenes of Ceres, Minerva, and Mercury, and applied with three parcel-gilt medallions of the Roman emperors Hadrian, Augustus, and Vespasian; the interior of the cup applied with a parcel-gilt portrait medallion of the Duke of Liegnitz; marked with maker's mark three times under base; also with the lightly scratched inscription "ICH OPUS FECIT [illegible script signature]"
18 5/8 in. (47.3 cm.) high; 86 oz. 10 dwt. (2,693 gr.)
Provenance
Frederick III, Duke of Liegnitz, presented to him by the city of Brieg, Silesia, on the occasion of his marriage in 1538

The family of Rhumy of Zala County (now Hungary), by tradition a gift from the Dukes of Liegnitz in the 16th century as a payment for service to the court

Otto Förster of Sárvár, Vas County (bordering Zala County), who married a woman of the Rhumy family, owner in 1884

Baron Karl von Rothschild, Frankfurt, purchased from Otto Förster by 1885

Victor Rothschild Collection, sold Sotheby's, London, 26 April 1937, lot 203
Literature
Tudományos Gyüjtemény [Scientific Collection], 1825, VI, pp. 59-63, described in an article on Zala County and the Rhumy family, owners of the cup in 1825.
Magyar történeti ötvösmü-kiállítás [Hungarian Historical Goldsmiths' Works Exhibition], Budapest, 1884, no. 5, ill. pp. 151-155.
Pulsky, Molinier, and Radisics, Chefs d'oeuvre d'orfèvrerie à l'exposition de Budapest, 1884, vol. II, illus. pp. 97-100.
Erwin Hintze, Die Breslauer Goldschmiede, Breslau, 1906, 40a
Marc Rosenberg, Der Goldschmiede Merkzeichen, 1922, no.1388, pp. 282-283, illus. tables 28, 29; signature illlustrated p. 282
Exhibited
Hungarian Historical Goldsmiths' Works Exhibition, Hungarian National Museum, Budapest, 17 February-30 June, 1884

Lot Essay

The inscription inside the cover translates:
A wedding gift from the city of Brieg to the most illustrious Prince Lord Frederick

The three inscriptions on the cover translate:
Be mindful of the wife of Lot
There is little sense of shame in wine
Behold the father of the faith of Christians


The inscription on the stem translates:
Life should be compared with a friend, but hatred with death


The Dukes of Liegnitz were sovereign-princes in Silesia and were also styled Dukes of Silesia-Liegnitz and Brieg. Frederick III, Duke von Schlesien zu Liegnitz (22 February 1520-15 December 1570) married Duchess Katharina von Mecklenburg-Schwerin on March 3rd, 1538.

The cup then descended through the Rhumy family, who were courtiers in the Duchy of Liegnitz in the 16th century. In the 19th century, a Rhumy daughter married Otto Förster, a Hungarian collector who lent this cup and two other pieces to the celebrated Budapest silver exhibition in 1884. The early history of this cup is given in the catalogue to the exhibition. Marc Rosenberg wrote in 1922 that he had seen the cup first in Budapest and then a year later at the house of Karl von Rothschild in 1885, with recently added feet and other embellishments in the Rothschild taste. These additions were also described in the Victor Rothschild auction catalogue in 1937, but have since been removed.

This cup is an extremely fine and very early example of Breslau silver. Its superb technical quality and high renaissance design both suggest a Nuremberg-trained master. Another very fine silver-gilt, enamelled and engraved German tankard, thought to be of Dresden origin, is similarly outstanding in its region and attributable to a Nuremberg-trained goldsmith. Interestingly the finials on the present cup and the tankard are cast from the same model (see Christie's, London, 13 June 2001, lot 230), again suggesting influence from South Germany in Breslau and nearby Dresden in the 16th century.

The maker's mark AV or VA monogram was attributed to Franz Bartel by Erwin Hintze in his book on Breslau goldsmiths of 1906, probably based on the partly legible signature under the base of the cup. Rosenberg suggests that the signature represents the designer rather than the silversmith, and that the signature could also be read as that of Wentzel Goldschmidt. In 1884, at the time of its exhibition in Budapest, the signature was read as Hoc opus fecit Wentzeslaus Aelsscher.

CAPTIONS FOR DETAILS:
Detail of cup interior with portrait of Frederick III, Duke of Liegnitz (1520-1570)

Detail of cover interior with arms of the City of Brieg and presentation inscription to the Duke of Liegnitz

Detail of cover with the Sacrifice of Isaac

Detail of cup with Hercules and the Nemean Lion

Detail of rim with engraved procession

Finial of soldier holding a shield with the arms of Liegnitz quartering those of Brieg, as borne by the Dukes of Liegnitz

Detail of cover with triton

Detail of stem with nereid

Detail of stem with bucranium

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