Dent. A fine, large and rare 18K gold hunter case two train 8-day minute repeating keyless lever watch

SIGNED DENT, NO. 32885, WATCHMAKER TO HER LATE MAJESTY, 34, COCKSPUR STREET, LONDON, CASE STAMPED WITH LONDON DATE LETTER FOR 1905

细节
Dent. A fine, large and rare 18K gold hunter case two train 8-day minute repeating keyless lever watch
Signed Dent, No. 32885, Watchmaker to Her late Majesty, 34, Cockspur Street, London, case stamped with London date letter for 1905
Nicole Nielsen three quarter plate two train gilt-finished lever movement wound by turning the crown to either side, bimetallic compensation balance, finely engraved barrels, minute repeating on two hammers onto a gong, gold cuvette, white enamel dial, Roman numerals, subsidiary seconds, large circular plain case, repeating slide in the band, case and cuvette numbered and stamped RN for Robert North, dial and movement signed and numbered
60 mm. diam.

荣誉呈献

Dr. Nathalie Monbaron
Dr. Nathalie Monbaron

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拍品专文

The firm E. Dent & Co. was originally founded by the English watchmaker Edward John Dent (1790 - 1853), renowned for his high quality pocket and marine chronometers, regulators as well as large clocks he made for the Royal Exchange and Westminster (Big Ben). He worked in the workshops of Vulliamy and Paul Philippe Barraud and went into partnership with the famous John Roger Arnold 1830. When the partnership of "Arnold & Dent" expired in 1840, he established himself at 82 Strand (later moving to 61) and also took workshops at 34 Cockspur Street and inside the Royal Exchange.

After Edward John's death, the businesses were taken over by his stepsons Frederick and Richard, followed by their successors. The company's name was consequently changed to E. Dent & Co.

Nicole Nielsen
The ébauche of the present watch was supplied by Nicole, Nielsen & Co., who towards the end of the Victorian era and for the first 30 years of the 20th Century crafted some of the finest and most complicated English watches ever made.

In 1839, Adolphe Nicole and Jules Capt, both talented Swiss watchmakers, set up business in London at 80B Dean Street. Nicole & Capt were highly successful and won medals in many international exhibitions. In 1876 Jules Capt died and in the same year his place as partner was filled by the Danish-born watchmaker Sophus Emil Nielsen and the company became Nicole, Nielsen & Co. By 1880, the firm was being run by Nielsen. They specialized in the manufacture of super-complicated keyless watches incorporating features such as perpetual calendar, chronograph, split seconds chronograph, repeating, grande and petite sonnerie, temperature, equation of time as well as their most famous escapement, the Nicole Nielsen tourbillon.

Many of their best watches were made for the leading English retailers, notably Dent & Co.