A WILLIAM IV SILVER-GILT WAGER-CUP
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A WILLIAM IV SILVER-GILT WAGER-CUP

MARK OF JOSEPH AND JOHN ANGELL, LONDON, 1833

Details
A WILLIAM IV SILVER-GILT WAGER-CUP
MARK OF JOSEPH AND JOHN ANGELL, LONDON, 1833
Formed as a female figure, her skirt realistically chased, supporting a pivoting cup, chased with foliage, marked on rim and rim of cup
6¾ in. (17 cm.) high
9 oz. (272 gr.)
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

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Rodney Woolley

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Lot Essay

A wager-cup in the form of a maiden, or junffrauenbecher, developed in Germany during the sixteenth century. As Hannelore Muller has remarked, "... they turned the solemn rite of drinking into an amusing game. The elegant lady's skirt can, if the small figure is turned upside down, be used as a drinking vessel in addition to the tumbler that she holds aloft. A favourite joke was to invite a bridal couple to perform the feat of draining both vessels simultaneously without spilling a drop" (The Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection: European Silver, London, 1986, p. 202). Wager-cups enjoyed a small revival in England in the nineteenth century though surviving examples from this period are rare.

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