A SET OF TWELVE GEORGE III SILVER DINNER PLATES
PROPERTY FROM A NORTH CAROLINA COLLECTION
A SET OF TWELVE GEORGE III SILVER DINNER PLATES

MARK OF THOMAS HEMING, LONDON, 1779

細節
A SET OF TWELVE GEORGE III SILVER DINNER PLATES
MARK OF THOMAS HEMING, LONDON, 1779
Each of shaped circular form, the border gadrooned and engraved with the Royal badge between monogram GR and two crests, beneath an Earl's coronet, each marked on reverse and with scratch weights No 1 - 16-2; No 2=16-8; No 3= 16"8; No 4= 16"7; No5= 16"14; No6=16"10; No 7=16 17; N-8 - 16 16; N-9=16-14; No10=16"13; No 11=16"19; No12=16"14
9 ½ in. (24.3 cm.) diameter; 194 oz. (6,046 gr.)
來源
Supplied to King George III
Presumably purchased by George Byng Esq., M.P. (d.1847), following the disposal of much of the Royal Plate in 1808 and then by descent to his brother, John, 1st Earl of Strafford G.C.B. (1772-1860).

榮譽呈獻

Nick Dinerstein
Nick Dinerstein

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拍品專文

The Royal badge is that of King George III and crests are those of Byng, for John, 1st Earl of Strafford G.C.B. (1772-1860).

These plates are described in the Manuscript Inventory of Pictures and Plate created Heirloom under the Will of the late George Stevens Byng, Earl of Strafford, December 1887.J.E. Boodle, Surveyor, 89 Chancery Lane, WC1: The Plate in the Custody of Messrs Garrard & Co, 25 Haymarket, SW1, 'thirty-six shaped gadroon dinner plates, 582.50oz.'

These Royal dinner plates may have been acquired by George Byng Esq. directly from Messrs. Rundell, who were responsible for the disposal of much of the Royal plate in 1808, in one of a succession of Royal sales - particularly of silver and plate - that took place between 1808 and 1843. The sales were triggered by the financially reckless pace set by George, Prince of Wales as well as his willingness to discard the outmoded and embrace the newest fashions.

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