A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE
A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE
A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE
A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE
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A Treasured History: The Stream Family Collection
A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE

BY FABERGÉ, WORKMASTERS STEFAN AND KONSTANTIN VÄKEVÄ (WÄKEVÄ), AND JULIUS RAPPOPORT, ST. PETERSBURG, 1899-1904

Details
A FIVE-PIECE SILVER TEA SERVICE
BY FABERGÉ, WORKMASTERS STEFAN AND KONSTANTIN VÄKEVÄ (WÄKEVÄ), AND JULIUS RAPPOPORT, ST. PETERSBURG, 1899-1904
Comprising a teapot, kettle with detachable stand and burner, cream jug, sugar bowl, and a strainer, each of baluster form, with fluted lower bodies, the upper bodies with a band of palmettes, with leaf-capped reeded loop handles, the teapot and kettle with conforming gadrooned hinged covers with a cone finial, all engraved with a Slepowron coat-of-arms with the motto ‘Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re’ surmounted by a count's coronet, with ivorine insulators and handle, interiors gilt, marked under bases with ‘K. Fabergé’ in Cyrillic beneath the Imperial warrant and workmasters' initials
The kettle on stand, 13 3⁄8 in. (34 cm.) high
134 oz. 18 dwt. (4,197 gr.) gross weight
Provenance
Probably Stanislaw Kazimierz Kossakowski (1837-1905).

Brought to you by

Julia Jones
Julia Jones Head of Sale

Lot Essay

This silver tea service, produced by Fabergé between 1899 and 1904, was likely commissioned by Stanislaw Kazimierz Kossakowski (1837-1905), a member of the Polish-Lithuanian nobility, noted heraldist, photographer, and landowner. Each piece is engraved with the Slepowron, an ancient Polish coat-of-arms documented since the 13th century. Although the Slepowron coat-of-arms was borne by numerous Polish noble families, the Latin motto 'Suaviter in modo, fortiter in re' ('Gently in manner, firmly in action') was associated exclusively with Count Kossakowski.

Kossakowski was the son of Stanislaw Szczęsny Kossakowski (1795-1872), a Polish diplomat in the Russian Empire. He inherited the Vaitkuškis Manor in Lithuania from his father and, through his mother, acquired extensive estates in the Penza and Simbirsk Governorates, as well as copper mines in Arkhangelsk and a palace in Warsaw.

The author of three volumes of Historical and Genealogical Monographs of Some Polish Families, Kossakowski also left behind an important photographic archive documenting the social and cultural life of Belarus, Lithuania, and Poland in the late 19th century.

We are grateful to Dr. Elena A. Yarovaya, an expert on heraldry, for her assistance with the research of the present lot.

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