An English bronze mortar
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more
An English bronze mortar

17TH CENTURY

Details
An English bronze mortar
17th century
Cast twice with the Royal Arms of Charles I
6 9/16in. (16.7cm.) diameter; 5 1/8in. (13cm.) high;
and an associated bronze pestle, late 17th or early 18th century -- 8¾in. (22.2cm.) long (2)
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis This lot is subject to Collection and Storage charges

Lot Essay

The form of the present mortar is identical to that used by Abraham Rudhall I, of Gloucester (c.1680), who was a staunch Royalist. The ornamental devices are extremely similar to the enamelled bosses found on pewter chargers of the period, and may have been cast from such a pattern.

A similar mortar was sold in these rooms, The John Fardon collection, Christie's South Kensington, 1 May 1996, lot 219, and later resold in Christie's Great Rooms, A Collection of Important Early Oak Furniture and Metalware, The Manor House, Bramcote, Nottingham, 24 May 2001, lot 343.

COMPARATIVE LITERATURE:
Peter Hornsby, English Decorated Mortars, Collector's Guide, January 1990. It is uncertain whether these mortars cast with the Arms of Charles I predate the Civil War, it is possible various founders cast them after the Restoration.

More from OAK, COUNTRY FURNITURE, FOLK ART AND WORKS OF ART

View All
View All