Lot Essay
Lacquer decoration of this type is almost certainly derived from Japanese raden work and is extremely rare in a European context at this date.
This hitherto unrecorded pistol belongs to a very small group of early 17th Century French wheel-lock firearms stocked in this manner and preserved to-day in Vienna and Dresden. Three of them, a pair of pistols in Dresden (No. F 287), and a carbine in Vienna (No. A 1097) also bear the same unidentified IP mark
A French gunstocker's casket with similar lacquer was sold in these Rooms, 29 October, 1986, lot 96
The engraving on the mother-of-pearl probably derives from the designs of Johann Theodore de Bry and Michel le Blond and is of a type widely used for the decoration of watches, cutlery, silver and firearms during the first half of the 17th Century
See H. Schedelmann, Die grossen Büchsenmacher, 1972, pp. 48-9, plate IX; J. Schöbel, Prunkwaffen, 1973, pl. 126; M. von Ehrenthal, Führer durch das Königliche Historische Museum zu Dresden, 1899, p. 131; T. Lenk, The Flintlock, 1965, pl. 107
This hitherto unrecorded pistol belongs to a very small group of early 17th Century French wheel-lock firearms stocked in this manner and preserved to-day in Vienna and Dresden. Three of them, a pair of pistols in Dresden (No. F 287), and a carbine in Vienna (No. A 1097) also bear the same unidentified IP mark
A French gunstocker's casket with similar lacquer was sold in these Rooms, 29 October, 1986, lot 96
The engraving on the mother-of-pearl probably derives from the designs of Johann Theodore de Bry and Michel le Blond and is of a type widely used for the decoration of watches, cutlery, silver and firearms during the first half of the 17th Century
See H. Schedelmann, Die grossen Büchsenmacher, 1972, pp. 48-9, plate IX; J. Schöbel, Prunkwaffen, 1973, pl. 126; M. von Ehrenthal, Führer durch das Königliche Historische Museum zu Dresden, 1899, p. 131; T. Lenk, The Flintlock, 1965, pl. 107