A pair of Louis XV silver candlesticks with George II silver two-light  branches
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more Property from the Collection of the Late Duke of Sutherland
A pair of Louis XV silver candlesticks with George II silver two-light branches

MARK OF ELIE PACOT, LILLE, 1709-1710, THE BRANCHES, SOCKETS AND DRIP-PANS, MARK OF WILLIAM CRIPPS, LONDON, 1757

Details
A pair of Louis XV silver candlesticks with George II silver two-light branches
Mark of Elie Pacot, Lille, 1709-1710, the branches, sockets and drip-pans, mark of William Cripps, London, 1757
Each on octagonal foot and with octagonal stem, cast and chased with strapwork, shells, flowers, trophies of music and of arms, and male and female busts, on a partly-textured ground, with urn-shaped socket, the branches with flame central finial and foliage-capped scroll arms, cast and chased with shells and strapwork, the two detachable circular drip-pans with ovolo border and urn-shaped socket cast with diaperwork and acanthus and with partly-fluted rim, the bases engraved with a crest with a duke's coronet above, marked on bases, branches, drip-pans and sockets, one base with maker's mark four times only
The candlesticks, 10½in. (26.7cm.) high without branches; with branches, 16,½in. (31.9cm.) high
The candlesticks, 82oz. (2,558gr.); the branches, 59oz. (1,853gr.)
The crest is that of Egerton, presumably for Scrope, 1st Duke of Bridgewater (1691-1745).
Provenance
John, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650-1722) and presumbably then by descent to his third daughter
Lady Elizabeth (d.1713/14), who married Scrope, 1st Duke of Bridgewater (1681-1745) and then by descent to
Francis, 3rd Duke of Bridgewater (1736-1803) and then by descent to his nephew
George, 2nd Marquess of Stafford K.G. (1758-1833), later created 1st Duke of Sutherland in 1833, and then by descent.
Literature
The Althorp Papers, British Library (D.15), Manuscript Inventory, 23 September 1713, Plate sent by Earl Cadogan (1671/2-1726) to Aix-la-Chapelle and Anvers, '3 pairs 1/2 of wrought candlesticks of the same size, square, carved, large'.
The Althorp Papers, British Library (D.15), Manuscript Invenory, 1 March 1714, 'Four pairs of candlesticks La[dy] Sutherland'.
The Althorp Papers, British Library (D.15), Manuscript Invenory, 8 Movember 1715, 'Four pairs of large candlesticks La[dy] Sutherland'.
Exhibited
Hampton Court Palace, 1995-2005
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

It would appear that these candlesticks are a pair from a set of three pairs which were commissioned by John, 1st Duke of Marleborough from the Lille silversmith Elie Pacot during his campaigns in Flanders. Marlborough had sailed for the Continent on 29 March 1708, landing at the Hague. In the following months he fought the battles of Oudenarde in July 1708 and Malplaquet in September 1709. Lille had fallen in October 1708 following 120 days of bloody siege. Following the fall of Lille gifts were made by the town to the beseiging army and a number Allied officers commissioned silver from the town's silversmiths. N. and I. Cartier in their article 'The Elie Pacot Surtout', The Silver Society Journal No. 6, 1994, pp. 296-301 note that the gifts of the town are recorded in the Magistrate's Account Books. They record a number of these Allied purchases including the magnificent surtout by Pacot, nineteen pieces from which were sold from the collection of late Lord Gwydir at Christie's in 1829. They also record a pair of candlesticks by Mathais Gruart of Lille, 1710-11, given to a church in Rotterdam by an officer returning from the campaign. Another pair of candlesticks, in this instance also by Pacot, entered the collection of the Royal Jewel House and were presented to Philip, 4th Duke of Chesterfield as part of his grant of plate for his embassy to the Hague in 1727. At this time the London silversmith Paul Crespin was commisssioned to make cast copies of the candlesticks.

Recent research by Nicole Cartier in the Althorp Papers at the British Library has uncovered a facinating and complicated provenance for the Marlborough/Bridgewater candlesticks. They first appear in an inventory prepared on 23 September 1713 when the Duke's silver was being transported to Aix-la-Chappelle and Antwerp. Marlborough was in self-imposed exile having been dismissed from all his offices by Queen Anne in December 1711. Nicole Cartier notes that the extensive inventories kept by Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough record the candlesticks from 1 March 1714 and also the intended gift of them to her daughter Anne, Countess of Sunderland. Following Anne's death in 1716 the candlesticks described as 'Candlesticks La[dy] Sunderland' were sent to Blenheim Palace. One pair from the set are later listed as 'a pair of these that were Lady Sunderland' being given to John Spencer (1708-1746), son of Anne, Countess of Sunderland. Presumably the present pair were intended for Elizabeth, second daughter of the Duke and Duchess Marlborough and due to her early death in March 1713/14 they passed to her widower Scrope, 1st Duke of Bridgewater.

We are grateful to Nicole Cartier for the information above, which forms part of her forthcoming book on Lille silver L'Orfèvre de Lille.

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