A DUTCH BASSE-TAILLE ENAMELLED GOLD WEDDING FORK AND KNIFE
A DUTCH BASSE-TAILLE ENAMELLED GOLD WEDDING FORK AND KNIFE
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A DUTCH BASSE-TAILLE ENAMELLED GOLD WEDDING FORK AND KNIFE

PROBABLY AMSTERDAM, CIRCA 1608

细节
A DUTCH BASSE-TAILLE ENAMELLED GOLD WEDDING FORK AND KNIFE
PROBABLY AMSTERDAM, CIRCA 1608
Comprising a knife and a two-pronged fork, each with tapering handle with trefoil shape terminal, enameled in bright translucent colors with exotic birds and fruiting scrolls and with a lady's coat-of-arms and a gentleman's coat-of-arms beneath a knight helm, the iron blade and prongs etched and gilded with foliate branch, enameled on the side of both with the name ANNA ROELOFFS, apparently unmarked, with later French import mark in use between 1838 and 1864
7 ¼ in. (18.5 cm.) long, the knife; 7 5⁄8 in. (19.2 cm.) long, the fork
2 oz. 15 dwt. (87 gr.) gross weight
来源
Jacob Jacobsz Bicker (1581 - 1626) and his wife Anna Roelofs de Vrij (c.1589 - 1626).
Baron Alphonse de Rothschild (1827-1905), in Entresol, hôtel Saint-Florentin, Paris.
Baron Édouard de Rothschild (1868-1949), in Fumoir sur la cour, hôtel Saint-Florentin, Paris.
Confiscated from the above by the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg following the Nazi occupation of France in May 1940 (ERR no. R 2506).
Recovered by the Monuments Fine Arts and Archives Section from the Altaussee salt mines, Austria (no. 1170), and transferred to the Munich Central Collecting Point, 28 June 1945 (MCCP no. 1371/87 and 1371/88).
Returned to France on 11 July 1946 and restituted to the Rothschild family.
By descent to the present owners.
出版
The Rothschild Archive, London, Inventaire après le décès de Monsieur le Baron Alphonse de Rothschild, A. Cottin Notaire, 16 October 1905, (hôtel Saint-Florentin, Entresol: 'Une fourchette émaillée XVIe siècle, estimée cinq cent francs' and 'Petit couteau émaillé XVIe siècle, estimé cinq cent francs').

拍品专文

The arms featured are those of Jacob Jacobsz Bicker (1581-1626) and his wife Anna Roelofs de Vrij (c.1589-1626) whom he married on 11 June 1608.

Cutlery sets were a common wedding present in the Lowlands in the 17th century, the present lot being a particularly early example. This knife and fork were presumably a wedding gift from the Roelofs family to the newly married bride Anna Roelofs (1589-June 1626), the daughter of Roelof Egbertsz (d.1619) burgomaster (mayor) of Amsterdam in 1611, 1614, and 1617, and Grietgen Jansdr Valckenier (1553-1621).

Jacob Jacobsz Bicker (1581-1626) was a wealthy merchant in Amsterdam whose patrician family, known as the Bickerse league, played an important political role during the Dutch Golden Age, opposing the House of Orange and striving for the abolition of stadtholdership and the full sovereignty of the individual regions comprising the Republic of the United Seven Netherlands. Jacob worked for the family business founded by his uncle Gerrit Bicker (1554-1604), an international grain merchant and brewer and one of the founders of the East India Company, which provided the family a strong position to trade across the globe. Upon his death, Jacob left a substantial estate estimated at 375,000 florins (J. E. Elias, De vroedschap van Amsterdam 1578-1795, Amsterdam, 1963, vol. 1, p. 359).

The Waddesdon Bequest holds in its collection a nearly identical knife (WB.201) also dated circa 1608 with the arms of De Bordes and of Commelin of Amsterdam, as well as a wedding knife and fork (WB.203) dated 1600-1700, both were bequeathed to the British Museum by Ferdinand Anselm Rothschild (1839-1898).

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