Lot Essay
Sir William Morice of Warrington (1602-1672) played an important role in the politics of the Commonwealth period, maintaining Royalist loyalties. Elected Member of Parliament for Devon in 1648, he was among the MPs excluded in "Pride's Purge" on the suspicion that they did not support Parliament and the New Model Army.
Morice spoke in Parliament in favor of restoring Charles II to the throne and met him upon his arrival at Dover from his exile in the Netherlands; Charles knighted him that same day. Subsequently, Morice was appointed Secretary of State for the Northern Department, a position responsible for relations with Northern England, Scotland, and the Protestant states of Northern Europe. In this capacity, he negotiated with the Hanseatic League (including the states of Lubeck, Bremen and Hamburg), which was eager to maintain the trading privileges it had enjoyed under the old regime.
In addition to the present lot, the States of Lubeck gave Sir William a silver dish by the Hamburg goldsmith Hans Lamecht III (now in the Kunstgewerbemuseum, Hamburg). In the opinion of Erich Schliemann, author of the definitive work on Hamburg goldsmiths, the present lot originated "North but not north of the Elbe" (see catalogue for The Dimitri Mavrommatis Collection, sold Sotheby's, London, 8 July 2008, lot 2).
Morice spoke in Parliament in favor of restoring Charles II to the throne and met him upon his arrival at Dover from his exile in the Netherlands; Charles knighted him that same day. Subsequently, Morice was appointed Secretary of State for the Northern Department, a position responsible for relations with Northern England, Scotland, and the Protestant states of Northern Europe. In this capacity, he negotiated with the Hanseatic League (including the states of Lubeck, Bremen and Hamburg), which was eager to maintain the trading privileges it had enjoyed under the old regime.
In addition to the present lot, the States of Lubeck gave Sir William a silver dish by the Hamburg goldsmith Hans Lamecht III (now in the Kunstgewerbemuseum, Hamburg). In the opinion of Erich Schliemann, author of the definitive work on Hamburg goldsmiths, the present lot originated "North but not north of the Elbe" (see catalogue for The Dimitri Mavrommatis Collection, sold Sotheby's, London, 8 July 2008, lot 2).