A Rare Triangular-Bore Flintlock Sporting Rifle
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus bu… Read more
A Rare Triangular-Bore Flintlock Sporting Rifle

BY LEWIS (LOUIS) BARBAR, LONDON, CIRCA 1725

Details
A Rare Triangular-Bore Flintlock Sporting Rifle
By Lewis (Louis) Barbar, London, circa 1725
With earlier swamped octagonal sighted German barrel signed 'Sander A Hannover' at the breech, foliate engraved tang, signed rounded lock with raised border (top jaw and screw associated) moulded figured walnut full stock (bruised, grip with contemporary working repair) carved in relief with a shell behind the barrel tang and rear ramrod-pipe, engraved iron mounts finely chiselled in relief against a punched ground with interlaced strapwork on the butt-plate and trigger-guard, pierced and chiselled side-plate, folding aperture back-sight, single iron ramrod-pipe, and later horn-tipped ramrod (iron parts with some surface pitting), with an iron bullet mould, a bag of triangular bullets, and a target shot by Keith Neal in 1958
30½in. (77.5cm.) barrel (4)
Provenance
The Marquess of Bath, Longleat House (by gift)
Literature
W. Keith Neal and D.H.L. Back, Great British Gunmakers 1540-1740, p. 299, plates 118 a-e
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.

Lot Essay

Louis 1 Barbar (d. 1741), a French Protestant, born in Essendun, Poitou, came to London circa 1688 to avoid persecution, and was naturalised in 1700. In 1704 he was made free of the Gunmakers' Company, and his proof piece ('a very fine piece') was passed. He was appointed Gentleman Armourer to King George I in 1717, and to George II in 1727

Today the largest group of firearms by Lewis Barbar is preserved in the armoury of the Duke of Buccleuch at Boughton House. They were made to the order of John, 2nd Duke of Montagu (1709-49), who was Master General of Ordnance from 1740 to 1749. The accounts at Boughton record payments to Barbar which include '£150 for 200 Muskets', and a letter of 7 June 1718 to the 2nd Duke of Montagu from his vicar mentions that Barbar was responsible for the display of the firearms in the house at that date

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