A REGENCY ORMOLU-MOUNTED AND BRASS-INLAID ROSEWOOD LIBRARY BOOKSTAND DRUM TABLE

Details
A REGENCY ORMOLU-MOUNTED AND BRASS-INLAID ROSEWOOD LIBRARY BOOKSTAND DRUM TABLE
Inlaid overall with satinwood lines, the circular top surmounted by three circular graduated revolving tiers of bookshelves, the divisions applied with gold-tooled leather book-spines, the top row embossed 'MILTON', 'POPE', 'STURM', 'KNOX'S ESSAYS', 'ADVENTURER', 'OSSIAN', the middle row embossed 'EURIPIDES', 'MARMONTEL', 'LOUNGER', BOYD'S DANTE', 'HUDIBRAS', 'WEALTH OF NATIONS' and the bottom row embossed 'RAMBLER', MORDAUNT', METASTASIO', 'WORLD', and 'CICERO', the central shaft with dark-brown marbling, the frieze of the base fitted with four mahogany and cedar-lined drawers, one with a ratchetted adjustable green velvet-lined writing-surface, and a hinged fitted ink-drawer, on six ring-turned column-supports with gadrooned bases and engine-turned collars, on three hipped downswept legs with sunk panels and scrolled paw-feet, brass castors, with printed label to the base '9 10 1947 ', restorations;
sold with a collection of 118 mostly leather and cloth-bound books, 8vo and smaller, formed to fit the shelves
44in. (112cm.) diam.; 57½in. (146cm.) high
Provenance
Supplied to George William Frederick Osborne, 6th Duke of Leeds (d. 1838) for Hornby Castle, Yorkshire and mentioned in the 'Third Drawing room leading from Grand Staircase' in an inventory taken in 1839
Purchased from Partridge

Lot Essay

A pattern for such a circular 'Library Table' containing a drawer with a ratchetted and leather-lined desk and with a drum pedestal supported by Grecian-scrolled 'claws' featured in Thomas Sheraton's, The Cabinet Dictionary, London, 1803 (pl.55), while a 'circular movable bookcase' patented by Messrs. Morgan and Sanders of The Strand was discussed at length in Rudolph Ackermann's, The Repository of Arts, March, 1810 (illustrated in P. Agius, Ackermann's Regency Furniture and Interiors, Marlborough, 1984, pl.13). Its border of brass-inlaid ribbon guilloche in the French manner reflects the fashion of 'Buhll bordering' promoted by cabinet-makers such as George Oakley (d.1840) of Old Bond Street. In 1810 Oakley supplied a library table with this type of decoration for George, Prince Regent, later King George IV (The Dictionary of English Furniture Makers 1660-1840, Leeds, 1986, pp.658-660).

This library table was commissioned by George Osborne, 6th Duke of Leeds (d.1838) for Hornby Castle, Yorkshire and is mentioned in an inventory taken soon after his death entitled Inventory of Furniture at Hornby Castle, Selected by Her Grace The Dowager Duchess of Leeds 1839. It is listed as number 204 in the 'Third Drawing room leading from Grand Staircase' as 'An Inlaid rosewood & Buhl Circular Lib'y Table on 6 Pillars & Claws & Cont'g 4 drawers & Circular Book Stand on top with 4 Shelves' (Yorkshire Archaeological Society, ref. DD5/12/66, p. 20). In a photograph of the Great Hall taken for Country Life in 1906, there are several pieces of Regency furniture, the seat furniture is upholstered in a Regency striped material and there are Regency curtains, so it is probable that the library table was acquired at the time of the 6th Duke's refurbishment of the castle circa 1810 ('Hornby Castle, Yorkshire', Country Life, 14 July 1906, p.57 and C. Latham, In English Homes, London, 1907, vol. II, p.87).

A related library drum-table is illustrated in M. Jourdain, Regency Furniture 1795-1830, London, rev.ed., 1965, p.83, fig.198.

More from The Coke Collection from Jenkyn Place

View All
View All