A GEORGE II SILVER TABLE PLATEAU
THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
A GEORGE II SILVER TABLE PLATEAU

MARK OF HENRY DUTTON, LONDON, 1755

細節
A GEORGE II SILVER TABLE PLATEAU
MARK OF HENRY DUTTON, LONDON, 1755
Shaped oval and on four openwork scroll, flower, foliage and dragon feet, with cast fruit above, with cast openwork scroll, flower and foliage border, the centre slightly later engraved with a coat-of-arms within elaborate drapery mantling on an ermine ground, marked on reverse and border, with detachable wood base
26¾ in. (68 cm.) diam.
weight of silver 296 oz. (9,206 gr.)
The arms are those of Moore with Coghill in pretence, for Charles, 2nd Baron Moore who was created Earl of Charleville in 1758 and his wife Hester, only surviving child of James Coghill, Esq.
來源
The property from the Estate of Frederick McLean Burgher, Christie's, New York, 22 October 1984, lot 285.
出版
Christie's Review of the Season, 1984.
M. Clayton, Christie's Pictorial History of English and American Silver, London, 1985, fig. 2, p. 218.

榮譽呈獻

Matilda Burn
Matilda Burn

查閱狀況報告或聯絡我們查詢更多拍品資料

登入
瀏覽狀況報告

拍品專文

Charles, son of John Moore, 1st Baron Moore, and Mary Lum, daughter of Elnathan Lum, was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, and succeeded
his father as 2nd Baron in 1725, being created 1st Earl of Charleville in 1758. He served as Governor and Custos Rotulorum of King's County.
His marriage to Hester Coghill was childless and so on his death in
1764 he left his estates to John Bury, for whose son Charles the title of Earl of Charleville was recreated in 1806.

更多來自 <strong>世紀風格:銀器、歐洲瓷器、袖珍肖像及金盒</strong>

查看全部
查看全部