A Meissen armorial tureen, cover and stand from the Münchhausen service
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A Meissen armorial tureen, cover and stand from the Münchhausen service

CIRCA 1740, UNDERGLAZE BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARK AND PRESSNUMMER 21 TO TUREEN, ENAMEL BLUE CROSSED SWORDS MARK, K. AND PRESSNUMMER 20 TO STAND

Details
A Meissen armorial tureen, cover and stand from the Münchhausen service
Circa 1740, underglaze blue crossed swords mark and Pressnummer 21 to tureen, enamel blue crossed swords mark, K. and Pressnummer 20 to stand
The handles of the tureen formed as black and grey boar's heads, the cover with puce pomegranate finial with green foliage terminals, the cover, stand and each side of the tureen gilt and painted in puce with a fantastic beast in a stylised landscape with flowering shrubs, trees and rocks surrounded by scattered indianische Blumen, insects and birds in flight, the cover and stand each with a coat of arms supported by puce scrolling foliage surmounted by a gilt coronet, within borders of puce foliage scrolls and double gilt line rims, the stand with shaped double gilt line rim (tureen with two adjacent minute rim chips and slight branching crack from rim, minute chipping to handles, cover with minute areas of restoration to edges of terminals, stand with slight areas of wear)
The stand 11 7/8 in. (30.2 cm.) wide
Provenance
Anon., sale Christie's Geneva, 2nd October 1969, lot 121 (part).

There are only two known tureens and stands from this service. The other one, which formed part of lot 121 in the sale cited above, was subsequently sold again by Christie's Geneva on 16th November 1981, lot 96 and again by Christie's Geneva on 11th May 1987, lot 189.

For plates from this service (all 23.5 cm. diam.) sold in these Rooms, see the example sold on 10th March 1970, lot 48; another example on 30th September 1991, lot 155 and a pair on 1st June 1992, lot 43.

For an illustrated sugar-caster and plate in the Hoffmeister Collection, Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg, see Katalog der Sammlung Hoffmeister (Hamburg 1999), Vol II, pp. 552-553, nos. 368 and 369, and p. 602 for more detailed discussion of Münchhausen's life.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price plus buyer's premium.

Lot Essay

The arms, a Cistercian monk on a field or, is that of Gerlach Adolf von Münchhausen (1688-1770), and not of Freiherrn Karl Heronymus von Münchhausen (1720-1797) as previously thought.

A younger son of a Saxon nobleman, Münchhausen was appointed to the court of appeals in Dresden in 1714 and a year later entered into the service of Brunswick-Hanover. George II of England, also Elector of Hanover, appointed him to the Court in Celle and from 1732 he governed the English King's lands in the area on his behalf. He increasingly rose to prominence in political circles, developing a particularly strong relationship with the Kings of England. After George II's death, George III appointed him first minister of Brunswick-Hanover.

It would appear that the service was a gift from Augustus III, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony as Münchhausen engineered, after some negotiation, a loan of 3.5 million thalers from Brunswick to Saxony. Correspondence between Graf von Hennicke and Münchhausen (now in the Dresden archives) also record Hennicke urgently requesting a drawing of Münchhausen's coat of arms (letter dated 4th January 1745), and by April, Münchhausen wrote to thank him for 'the magnificent gift of porcelain from His Majesty'. There has been some speculation as to which monarch Münchhausen was referring, either George II of England or Augustus III, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, but it is much more probable that it was a reference to Augustus III.

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