A VICTORIAN IVORY STAUNTON CHESS SET
Prospective purchasers are advised that several co… Read more
A VICTORIAN IVORY STAUNTON CHESS SET

BY JAQUES, LONDON, CIRCA 1870

Details
A VICTORIAN IVORY STAUNTON CHESS SET
BY JAQUES, LONDON, CIRCA 1870
The white king stamped JAQUES LONDON, one knight and rook to each side stamped with crown
The king 3 3/8 in. (8.5 cm.) high; the pawn -- 1½ in. (3.7 cm.) high
Together with a carton-pierre box with red label circa 1870, printed 'THE STAUNTON CHESS-MEN REGISTERED NO. 58,607, 5 & 6 VICT. CAP. 100. IVORY JAQUES, LONDON.' and signed facsimile H. STAUNTON; and a Victorian carton-pierre mounted leather folding board, late 19th century, the exterior modelled with pierced Gothic tracery, the interior gilt-tooled with interlaced border and inscribed 'BLACK' and 'WHITE' at either end, together with 'LEUCHARS PICCADILLY'
Literature
Hans & Barbara Holländer, Schach Partie Durch Zeiten und Welten, Museum Für Kunst und Gewerbe, Hamburg, 2005, fig. 218, page 239.
Special notice
Prospective purchasers are advised that several countries prohibit the importation of property containing materials from endangered species, including but not limited to coral, ivory and tortoiseshell. Accordingly, prospective purchasers should familiarize themselves with relevant customs regulations prior to bidding if they intend to import this lot into another country.

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Lot Essay

William Leuchars, a London retailer on Piccadilly, sold Jaques chess sets from 1849 and designed a board to compliment the carton-pierre box. Nathaniel Cook's design was patented in 1849 and several months later John Jaques gained the manufacturing right and started to supply retailers, such as W. Leuchars of Piccadilly. The dating of these classic chess sets has evolved into an academic art. Alan Fersht notes that ivory kings were stamped 'J. Jaques London', like this example offered, during the first years of production. See fig. 5, dated 1849-50. The knights' heads of early sets closely followed the examples from the Parthenon frieze, much admired in the British Museum from 1832, although different horses were selected as models. This one relates to the Selene Chariot horses. Alan Fersht, Jaques Staunton Chess Set 1849-1939, published, 2007 The ubiquitous Jaques' Staunton chess men were first exalted in the Times of 9th November 1849, "it is to be remarked that, while there is so great an accession to elegance of form, it is not attained at the expense of practical utility". At this time a set, carton-pierre box and handbook on the game was priced at 5,50 shillings. The chess champion, Howard Staunton, was recruited by Jaques as a means of marketing the sets and protecting his manufacturing right. Each box was originally issued with individually signed labels. As production accelerated the labels,(red were used between approximately 1850-60), included the number of the set and a facsimile of Staunton's autograph.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
Michael Mark, British chess sets, V&A Museum and Chess Collectors International, 1986

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