细节
A rare mid-18th Century silver four-train quarter striking and repeating with alarm coachwatch by Mathias Golling, Munchen, in fine pierced repousse case depicting a deer hunt with a stag and hind, three hounds and horseman, with roccoco scroll design to the rim and bezel and gimballed pendant, the (later) engraved silver dial with stylised Arabic numerals, foliate engraved blued steel hands, the signed gilt fusee verge movement with pierced, chased and engraved silver bridge-cock depicting two pheasants, silver regulation disc with Roman numerals, pierced and faceted scroll mount to the top-plate, engraved barrels for the hour, quarter and alarm springs, applied decorative silver mounts to the half-round pillars (one mount damaged), decorative turning to the hammers, shaped blued-steel worm set-up, striking and repeating the hours and quarters on a bell, with pull-repeat cord at 6 and press piece at 2 o'clock, in gilt-tooled leather travelling case, 4 3/8in (112cm) diam
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Andreas Girgl, Munich, born before 1680 died 1738/39, was appointed clockmaker to the Court in 1715 and attended to the clocks and watches in the Residenz for nearly 25 years. Mathias Golling was apprenticed to Andreas Girgl for nine years and succeeded him to the post of clockmaker to the Court on 17 April 1939 until his death in 1772.
We understand this watch has been in the owner's family since being found on the field of battle at Waterloo.
We understand this watch has been in the owner's family since being found on the field of battle at Waterloo.