A GEORGE II SILVER-MOUNTED LIGNUM VITAE WASSAIL BOWL
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… 显示更多
A GEORGE II SILVER-MOUNTED LIGNUM VITAE WASSAIL BOWL

THE BOWL LATE 17TH CENTURY, LATER ADAPTED AS A MONTEITH, WITH THE MARK OF SAMUEL WASTELL, LONDON, CIRCA 1720

细节
A GEORGE II SILVER-MOUNTED LIGNUM VITAE WASSAIL BOWL
THE BOWL LATE 17TH CENTURY, LATER ADAPTED AS A MONTEITH, WITH THE MARK OF SAMUEL WASTELL, LONDON, CIRCA 1720
The footless vessel with a scalloped rim, engraved with the arms of Delmar impaling Abbot, the silver struck four times with the makers mark only
11½ in. (29 cm.) diameter
来源
Presumably acquired by William Delmar (d.1867) to commemorate his marriage to Emma Abbot in 1811.
注意事项
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

拍品专文

The arms are those of Delmar impaling Abbot for William Delmar (1786 - 1867) and his wife Emma, second daughter of John Abbot, whom he married in 1811. William Delmar was educated at St. John's College, Cambridge, and was admitted to Lincoln's Inn in 1808. He was both a Justice of the Peace and Deputy Lieutenant of Kent.

Wassail bowls, typically made in the 17th and early 18th Centuries, derive their name from the Anglo-Saxon 'Waes-hael', equivalent to 'Good health'. Though they have been particularly associated with Christmas festivities, wassailing ceremonies were held at other times of the year. The introduction of Lignum vitae in the late 16th Century allowed bowls of far greater size to be easily turned than had generally been the case with English woods, and while generally turned with a stem and foot, examples without are not uncommon. A bowl similar to the Sainsbury example is illustrated in Jonathan Levi, Treen for the table, Woodbridge, 1998, p. 21, plate 1/8. Edward H. Pinto, in Treen and other Wooden Bygones, London, 1969, notes that monteiths made in wood are relatively rare.