Lot Essay
On 20 January 1752, an engraving celebrating the Hanoverian succession was re-issued according to an Act of Parliament to reflect the death of the then Prince of Wales, Frederick, and his son's consequent creation as Prince of Wales. The print first published in 1748 shows the then monarch King George II with Queen Caroline beneath a portrait of King George I, with below the Prince and Princess of Wales and their children, surrounded by allegorical figures, among them Liberty who is presented trampling the Pope, Justice and Plenty. This snuff-box was probably a present to celebrate the passing of the title. The use of sugarcanes to decorate this box suggests that it may have been used for sweets rather than for snuff, especially as the Prince was then only 13 years old.
Paul Robert (1720-1779) entered his mark in 1747, his work is found in the Louvre, the Musée Cognacq-Jay, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Victoria and Albert Museum and Waddesdon Manor.