A PORTUGUESE SILVER-GILT SALVER
A PORTUGUESE SILVER-GILT SALVER

APPARENTLY UNMARKED, CIRCA 1530-40, THE COAT-OF-ARMS AND FEET PROBABLY 18TH CENTURY

Details
A PORTUGUESE SILVER-GILT SALVER
APPARENTLY UNMARKED, CIRCA 1530-40, THE COAT-OF-ARMS AND FEET PROBABLY 18TH CENTURY
Circular with raised central boss, the three later feet cast as lions sejant attached to the border with foliage-headed screws, the centre repousse and chased in high relief with harpies, winged centaurs and grotesque winged monsters, within scrolling foliage and divided by columns headed by winged figures, the raised central boss chased with further winged monsters flanking urns and with central applied coat-of-arms within laurel wreath, marked on border with later Dutch and French control marks
the dish 12 in. (30.5 cm.) diameter
37 oz. (1,181 gr.)
The arms are those of Portugal quartering León for the family of de Sousa of Prado, Portugal, descendants of an illegitimate son of King Alphonso III of Portugal (d. 1279). The arms are surmounted by what appears to be a marquess' coronet. However, there was little codification of coronets in Portugal prior to the 17th century. The family was elevated from Counts of Prado to Marquesses of Minas in the 18th century.

If it were the case that the feet were added to the dish already in the collection of the de Sousa family, it is possible that the dish was made for Don Pedro de Sousa, 1st Count of Prado who died on 23 March 1555. The son of Rui de Sousa, Lord of Sagres and Beringel, ambassador to the Courts of St. James and of Castille, he was a leading Royal councillor, soldier and poet.

Alternatively the arms could be those of the Count of Prado's first cousin, Martim Afonso de Sousa. Equally distinguished, he was Governor of India from 1542 until 1545 and a soldier, navigator and one of the first colonisers of Brazil. He died in Lisbon in 1564.
Provenance
The Sousa family, Portugal
Sir Julius Wernher, 1st Bt., (1850-1912), Bath House, London, in the safe, by whom bequeathed, with a life interest to his widow, Alice, Lady Wernher, subsequently Lady Ludlow (1862-1945), to his son Sir Harold Wernher, 3rd Bt. G.C.V.O. (1893-1973), Bath House, London and from 1948, Luton Hoo, Bedfordshire, and by descent.
The Wernher Collection; Christie's, London, 5 July 2000, lot 10.
Literature
1913 Bath House Inventory, p. 138, no. 680, in the safe.
1914 Wernher Inventory, p. 94, no. 460.
Exhibited
Bedford, Cecil Higgins Museum, 1959-1960

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Arne Everwijn
Arne Everwijn

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Lot Essay

The border decoration is extremely similar to that on a magnificent salver with matching ewer engraved with the arms of the de Sousas of Prado surmounted by a Count's coronet. This belonged to Fernando II (b. 1816, King Consort of Portugual, 1837, d. 1885), and is now in the Royal Collection in the Ajuda Palace, Lisbon (L. d'Orey, 'Silverware of Portuguese Kings', in Royal Treasures, Lisbon, 1992, nos. 338-339). In addition, a salver on stand from the collection of Fernando II with the arms of de Sousa beneath a Marquis' coronet is in the Ajuda Palace Collection (ibid., no. 334).

The salver on stand in the Ajuda Palace is engraved on the reverse, no. 8, an inventory number used on silver in Fernando II's collection. The present salver is also engraved with an inventory number and, although the numeral has been deliberately erased, it is still at least partly visible, and is probably a 9. However, it should be pointed out that there is another 18th century salver on foot in the Ajuda Palace with the number 9 inventory number (ibid. no. 336).

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