Antique French Charles X Burr Maple & Ormolu

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Antique French Charles X Burr Maple & Ormolu anticSwiss 29/09/2021 20:57:50 http://www.anticswiss.com Antique French Charles X Burr Maple & Ormolu Bookcase 19th C FOR SALE ANTIQUE DEALER Period: 19° secolo - 1800 Regent Antiques London Style: Restaurazione Carlo X +44 2088099605 447836294074 Height:184cm Width:130cm Depth:54cm Price:6900€ DETAILED DESCRIPTION: This is an fine and beautiful antique French Charles X burr maple bookcase with fabulous ormolu mounts, circa 1820 in date. It has been crafted from the finest burr maple and is decorated with finely cast ormolu mounts typical of the Empire style. It features a pair of astragal glazed doors enclosing two adjustable shelves, above a further pair of panelled doors enclosing an adjustable shelf, flanked by maple columns with finely detailed ormolu Corinthian Capitals. The cabinet is raised on decorative shaped block feet. This opulent bookcase will be the focal point of any room and will blend very well with contemporary interiors. Complete with the original working locks and keys. Condition: In excellent condition having been cleaned, polished and waxed in our workshops, please see photos for confirmation. Dimensions in cm: Height 184 x Width 130 x Depth 54 Dimensions in inches: Height 72.4 x Width 51.2 x Depth 21.3 1 / 3 anticSwiss 29/09/2021 20:57:50 http://www.anticswiss.com Charles X Charles Philippe; 9 October 1757 – 6 November 1836, was known for most of his life as the Count of Artois before he reigned as King of France from 16 September 1824 until 2 August 1830. An uncle of the uncrowned King Louis XVII, and younger brother to reigning Kings Louis XVI and Louis XVIII, he supported the latter in exile and eventually succeeded him. His rule of almost six years ended in the July Revolution of 1830, which resulted in his abdication and the election of Louis Philippe, Duke of Orléans, as King of the French. Exiled once again, Charles died in Gorizia, then part of the Austrian Empire. The reign of Charles X is closely linked to the decorative style that carries his name. Furniture kept the heavy aspect it acquired during the Empire period, yet forms became suppler and lighter following the romantic trend and a renewed passion for the Gothic period. Society was also changing as the king no longer incarnated the taste to observe; now, decorative arts adapted themselves to the demands of the new bourgeois population. The art of marquetry returned with decorative flowers, garlands and rosettes. Ormolu - (from French 'or moulu', signifying ground or pounded gold) is an 18th-century English term for applying finely ground, high-carat gold in a mercury amalgam to an object of bronze.The mercury is driven off in a kiln leaving behind a gold-coloured veneer known as 'gilt bronze'. The manufacture of true ormolu employs a process known as mercury-gilding or fire- gilding, in which a solution of nitrate of mercury is applied to a piece of copper, brass, or bronze, followed by the application of an amalgam of gold and mercury. The item was then exposed to extreme heat until the mercury burned off and the gold remained, adhered to the metal object. After around 1830 because legislation had outlawed the use of mercury other techniques were used instead. Electroplating is the most common modern technique. Ormolu techniques are essentially the same as those used on silver, to produce silver-gilt.. Our reference: A1041 https://www.anticswiss.com/en/fine-art-antiques/antique-french-charles-x-burr-maple--ormolu-bookcase-19th-c-18568 2 / 3 anticSwiss 29/09/2021 20:57:50 http://www.anticswiss.com Gallery 3 / 3 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org) Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org).
Recommended publications
  • Introduction: the Queen Versus the People 1
    N OTES Introduction: The Queen versus the People 1 . J e a n n e L o u i s e C a m p a n , Memoirs of the Court of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France , ed. M de Lamartine (Philadelphia, PA: Parry and McMillan, 1854), pp. 158–159. 2 . Nancy Nichols Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” in Proceedings of the Consortium on Revolutionary Europe (1989): 136–143. 3 . Barker, “Revolution and the Royal Consort,” p. 136. 4 . Clarissa Campbell Orr notes in the introduction to a 2004 collection of essays concerning the role of the European queen consort in the Baroque era that “there is little comparative work in English on any facet of European Court life in the period from 1660 to 1800.” See Clarissa Campbell Orr, “Introduction” in Clarissa Campbell Orr (ed.), Queenship in Europe: 1660–1815: The Role of the Consort (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p. 2. There are strong exceptions to Orr’s conclusion, including the works of Jeroen Duidam and T.C.W. Blanning, which compare the culture, structure, and politics of Early Modern courts revealing both change and continuity but these stud- ies devote little space to the specific role of the queen consort within her family and court. See Jeroen Duindam, Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe’s Dynastic Rivals 1550–1780 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), and T.C.W. Blanning, The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture: Old Regime Europe 1660–1789 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002). 5 . See Kevin Sharpe, The Personal Rule of Charles I (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1996); Bernard Bourdin, The Theological-Political Origins of the Modern State: Controversy between James I of England and Cardinal Bellamine (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2010), pp.
    [Show full text]
  • Marie Antoinette
    Louis XVII - CHILD PRISONER 0. Louis XVII - CHILD PRISONER - Story Preface 1. A ROYAL CHILDHOOD 2. THE YOUNG ANTOINETTE 3. WEDDING at the PALACE of VERSAILLES 4. DEATH of LOUIS XV 5. A GROWING RESENTMENT 6. CHILDREN of MARIE ANTOINETTE 7. THE DIAMOND NECKLACE AFFAIR 8. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 9. EXECUTION of LOUIS XVI 10. THE GUILLOTINE 11. TRIAL of MARIE ANTOINETTE 12. MARIE ANTOINETTE and the GUILLOTINE 13. Louis XVII - CHILD PRISONER 14. DNA EVIDENCE and LOUIS XVII Jean-Louis Prieur (1759-1795) created this illustration of Louis-Charles, the French Dauphin, depicting his treatment in prison. The title of this 1794 work is: Simon le cordonnier et Louis XVII au Temple (“Simon the Shoemaker and Louis XVII at the Temple”). Once his father was executed, royalists referred to the Dauphin as King Louis XVII. The illustration is maintained at the BnF and is online via Gallica (the BnF’s digitized gallery). Louis-Charles, the orphaned son of a king and—to royalists—a king (Louis XVII) himself, would have been better off had his captors simply killed him. Instead, he endured unimaginable conditions in Temple prison, existing in a room above his sister. When first imprisoned, he was a bright, good-looking child: ...his blue eyes, aquiline nose, elevated nostrils, well-defined mouth, pouting lips, chestnut hair parted in the middle and falling in thick curls on his shoulders, resembled his mother before her years of tears and torture. All the beauty of his race, by both descents, seemed to reappear in him. (Campan, Memoirs of Marie Antoinette, Supplement to Chapter IX - scroll down 60%.) An acquaintance of Robespierre, Antoine Simon (often called "Simon the shoemaker"), was charged with caring for the young prince.
    [Show full text]
  • FRENCH REVOLUTION PART 3 from the Directory 1794-1799 To
    FRENCH REVOLUTION PART 3 From the Directory 1794-1799 to Napoleon Bonaparte The Terror July 1793-July 1794 Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety Inscription on Engraving from 1795, after pyramid: Thermidor “Here lies all Robespierre guillotines the France.” executioner, after all France has been guillotined Constitutions of 1791 and 1793 are beneath his feet COUP D’ĖTAT OF THERMIDOR JULY Execution of Robespierre, 1794 Saint Just, Couthon July 1794 End of the Jacobin Terror, start of White Terror" -- execution of 72 leading Jacobins in one day The Directory takes power 1794- 1799 The Directory: July 1794-1799 Paul Barras one of the five Directors making up the executive council Legislature under Directory is Drawing of bicameral: member of Council of Council of Elders = upper house Elders -- pseudo-Roman Council of 500 = lower house robes Constitution of the Year V 1795 Third constitution – one every two years 1791, 1793 Ends universal male suffrage Indirect elections (electoral college like USA) Bicameral legislature upper house as more elite restraint on lower house LOUIS XVII -- never reigned son & heir of Louis XVI & Marie Antoinette b. 1785 d. 1795 June in prison of illness at age 10 (age 8 at time of Marie Antoinette’s trial) Set back for royalist hopes for restoration of monarchy – but the eventual Louis XVIII restored in 1814 was the brother (in exile since 1792) of King Louis XVI executed in Jan 1793. REVOLT OF GERMINAL (Spring 1795): Parisian sans culottes riot, call for "bread & Constitution of 1793," but no more political
    [Show full text]
  • The Pitiful King: Tears, Blood, and Family in Revolutionary Royalism
    The Pitiful King: Tears, Blood, and Family in Revolutionary Royalism Victoria Murano Submitted to Professors Lisa Jane Graham and Linda Gerstein In partial fulfillment of the requirement of History 400: Senior Thesis Seminar Murano 1 Abstract When the French Revolution erupted in 1789, revolutionaries strove to foster a sense of freedom of expression, guaranteeing a brief freedom of the press. The eleventh article of the 1791 Declaration of the Rights of Man asserts that “The free communication of thoughts and opinions is one of man’s most precious rights; all citizens may therefore speak, write, print freely, except to answer for the abuse of this liberty in cases determined by law.” However, as France became further embroiled in the Revolution, it abandoned its allegiance to the universality of these rights, propagating pro-republican thought, and persecuting anyone who did not share these views. The royalist press was a major concern to the new republican government, because it continued to speak out in support of the king and criticize the Revolution. The existence of royalist journalists and writers thus posed a problem for revolutionaries who wanted to establish a monolithically-minded republic. Therefore, over time, they enacted repressive censorship and punishment to crack down on royalist sympathizers. Although they sent many royalist writers to prison or the guillotine, the revolutionaries ultimately failed to silence their political enemies. This thesis uses newspapers, images, and other printed media to explore royalist coverage of three events that diminished royal power: Louis XVI’s flight to Varennes in June 1791, his execution in January 1793, and the death of his nine-year-old son and heir, Louis XVII, in June 1795.
    [Show full text]
  • Marie Antoinette
    THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 0. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION - Story Preface 1. A ROYAL CHILDHOOD 2. THE YOUNG ANTOINETTE 3. WEDDING at the PALACE of VERSAILLES 4. DEATH of LOUIS XV 5. A GROWING RESENTMENT 6. CHILDREN of MARIE ANTOINETTE 7. THE DIAMOND NECKLACE AFFAIR 8. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION 9. EXECUTION of LOUIS XVI 10. THE GUILLOTINE 11. TRIAL of MARIE ANTOINETTE 12. MARIE ANTOINETTE and the GUILLOTINE 13. Louis XVII - CHILD PRISONER 14. DNA EVIDENCE and LOUIS XVII Marie Antoinette with her children and Madame Élisabeth, facing the mob which had broken into the Tuileries Palace on June 20, 1792. This painting (located at the Musée de la Révolution française) depicts that event. Madame Campan, in her Mémoires sur la vie de Marie-Antoinette (Paris: Nelson Éditeurs, 1823), provides the facts behind this episode: Sitting behind a large table and surrounded by her children and entourage, Marie Antoinette was insulted by one of the most rabid Jacobin women. The queen replied: “But did you ever see me before?” “No.” “Did I ever harm you personally?” “No, but you harmed the nation.” “That is what others told you, but you were all deceived. I am the wife of the King of France and mother of the Dauphin. I am a French woman and will never see again the land of my birth. Thus, I can only be happy or wretched in France…and I was happy when the people loved me.” At these words, the Jacobin began to weep and said: This happened because I did not know you, but now I see how good you are." (Campan, page 336.) Louis XVI inherited a job that would have been nearly impossible for just about anyone.
    [Show full text]
  • V320141212.Pdf
    1 Institut d'Anthropologie Moléculaire, 75005 Paris France 2 Cercle d'Etudes Historiques Louis XVII, 78000 Versailles, France Abstract: We complete in the present paper our previous work (Lucotte et al. 2014, Int J Sciences, 3 (7): 28-32) on DNA marker of Karl Wilhelm Naundorff by the study of his Y-chromosome profile. For fourteen Y-STRs studied allelic values are identical to those of Hugues de Bourbon, the living 4th generation descendant of the Naundorff' elder branch. These datas establish that H. de Bourbon is patrilinealy related to K.W. Naundorff. Keywords: Y-chromosome markers; short tandem repeats (STRs); allelic values; Hugues de Bourbon; members of the Naundorff' family Introduction The king of France Louis XVI and the Queen Marie- MATERIAL AND METHODS Antoinette were beheaded in 1793, during the french Naundorff’ genomic DNA used is that which was Revolution. Their two children Marie-Thérèse extracted from his hair number 3 (Lucotte et al., Charlotte (1778-1851) and Louis-Charles (1785- 2014), that had a bulb and was covered by numerous 1795?) remained imprisoned in the Temple (in Paris) dandruff. where they survived to the death of their parents. According to the official records, Louis-Charles From this DNA, we amplified 15 Y-STRs by using (Louis XVII) died of tuberculosis in the Temple on 8 the AmpFirst Identifiler PCR amplification kit (Amp June 1795. But this version of his death has been FIRSTY filerTM, Applied Biosystems), according to repeatedly questioned; one of the most persistent the instructions given by the Company; this theories claims that it was a substitute who died on 8 amplification kit is specially adapted to the study of June.
    [Show full text]
  • Edmund Burke and His Impact on the British
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Master's Theses Graduate School 2010 Edmund Burke and his impact on the British political, social and moral response during the French Revolution (1790-1797) Guy Brendan Gonzalez Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses Part of the History Commons Recommended Citation Gonzalez, Guy Brendan, "Edmund Burke and his impact on the British political, social and moral response during the French Revolution (1790-1797)" (2010). LSU Master's Theses. 2706. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/2706 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Master's Theses by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EDMUND BURKE AND HIS IMPACT ON THE BRITISH POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND MORAL RESPONSE DURING THE FRENCH REVOLUTION (1790-1797) A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College [inverted pyramid in partial fulfillment of the form] requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in The Department of History by Guy Brendan Gonzalez B.A., Loyola University of New Orleans, 2006 May 2010 Table of Contents Abstract………………………………………………………………………………………….iii Chapter 1 Introduction ……………………………………………………………………...1 Chapter 2 Contextual Background for Burke’s Political and Moral Philosophy …….....4 Chapter 3 November 1790 – January 1793 ………….……………………………………13 Burke‟s Reflections and A Letter to a Member of the National Assembly………………….13 Support for the Bourbons…………………………………………………………………….15 Purs vs.
    [Show full text]
  • The French Revolution of 1789 Powerpoint Presentation
    The French Revolution © Student Handouts, Inc. www.studenthandouts.com The Old Regime (Ancien Regime) • Old Regime – socio-political system which existed in most of Europe during the 18th century • Countries were ruled by absolutism – the monarch had absolute control over the government • Classes of people – privileged and unprivileged – Unprivileged people – paid taxes and treated badly – Privileged people – did not pay taxes and treated well Society under the Old Regime • In France, people were divided into three estates – First Estate • High-ranking members of the Church • Privileged class – Second Estate • Nobility • Privileged class – Third Estate • Everyone else – from peasants in the countryside to wealthy bourgeoisie merchants in the cities • Unprivileged class The Three Estates Estate Population Privileges Exemptions Burdens First •Circa 130,000 •Collected the tithe •Paid no taxes •Moral obligation (rather than legal •Censorship of the press •Subject to Church obligation) to assist the poor and •High-ranking •Control of education law rather than civil needy clergy •Kept records of births, deaths, law •Support the monarchy and Old marriages, etc. Regime •Catholic faith held honored position of being the state religion (practiced by monarch and nobility) •Owned 20% of the land Second •Circa 110,000 •Collected taxes in the form of •Paid no taxes •Support the monarchy and Old feudal dues Regime •Nobles •Monopolized military and state appointments •Owned 20% of the land Third •Circa 25,000,000 •None •None •Paid all taxes •Tithe (Church tax) •Everyone else: •Octrot (tax on goods brought into artisans, cities) bourgeoisie, city •Corvée (forced road work) workers, •Capitation (poll tax) merchants, •Vingtiéme (income tax) peasants, etc., •Gabelle (salt tax) along with many •Taille (land tax) parish priests •Feudal dues for use of local manor’s winepress, oven, etc.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter-1 Worksheet-1
    Chapter-1 Worksheet-1 Choose the correct option: 1. The French society, before 1789, was divided into three estates, hence, it was called a a) Society of estates b) The Old Regime c) Policy of Monarch d) none of the above 2. The society of estates was part of the a) Feudal system b) Ryotwari system c) Zamindari system d) New Revenue system 3. Name the direct tax levied on the third estate. a) Taille b) Tithe c) Custom duty d) Livee © PRAADIS 4. Whom did Louis XVI get married to? a) Princess Marie Antoinette of Austria b) Princess MarryEDUCATION Augusta of Austria c) Princess Marie Roberto of Britain d) Princess Marry Amber of Checks 5. Which of the following is the author of ‘The Social Contaract’? a) Rosseau DO NOT COPY b) Voltire c) Montesquieu d) Mirabeau 6. Which period is known as ‘Reign of Terror’? a) The period from 1793 to 1794 b) The period from 1789 to 1794 c) The period from 1789 to 1785 d) The period from 1789 to 1799 7. When was a legislative, to free all the slaves in the French overseas possession passed? a) In 1783 b) In 1793 c) In 1795 d) In 1794 8. Louis XVI became the King of France in: a) 1772 b) 1774 c) 1776 d) 1778 9. The Spirit of Laws was written by: a) Rosseau b) Voltire c) Montesquieu d) Mirabeau 10. What happened in the month of July? a) The ©city of ParisPRAADIS was set on fire b) The city of Paris became free c) The city of Paris was in state of alarm d) Louis XVII became the king EDUCATION Answer the following Questions.
    [Show full text]
  • The Queen of Chantilly and a Scandal at the Heart of Victorian Society
    The Queen of Chantilly and a Scandal at the Heart of Victorian Society by ROBERT STEPHEN PARRY To Ruby eBook based on the paperback ISBN-13: 978-1514777879 Copyright Robert Stephen Parry 2016 All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the purposes of commentary or review, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form, electronic, mechanical or otherwise without the prior permission of the author and publisher. Also by the same author: ‘The Hours Before’ 2015 ‘Elizabeth’ 2014 ‘Wildish’ 2013 ‘The Arrow Chest’ 2011 ‘Virgin and the Crab’ 2009 Contents INTRODUCTION Map of the Area Described in the Journal Prominent Historical Figures Mentioned in these Pages JOURNAL - APRIL 1862 JOURNAL: MAY 1862 JOURNAL: JUNE 1862 THE TESTAMENT JOURNAL: LATE JUNE 1862 JOURNAL: JULY 1862 JOURNAL: AUGUST 1862 JOURNAL: SEPTEMBER 1862 JOURNAL: OCTOBER 1862 JOURNAL: NOVEMBER 1862 PRESS CUTTING EPILOGUE INTRODUCTION hen, in 1862, my grandfather was called to the Royal Residence at Osborne to take up the post of W junior archivist, he discovered a number of curious objects in the house where he was staying, and which have remained in the possession of our family ever since. His predecessor, who had also stayed in the same building, had remained in the job for only a few months. My grandfather never met him, and it is not clear who might have placed the items there or for what purpose. As you will see, for obvious reasons we have been obliged to keep this matter confidential for some years.
    [Show full text]
  • Bourbon Restoration 1 Bourbon Restoration
    Bourbon Restoration 1 Bourbon Restoration Royaume de France Kingdom of France 1814–1815 ← 1815–1830 → Flag Royal Coat of arms Anthem Le Retour des Princes Français à Paris "The return of the French Princes in Paris" The Kingdom of France in 1815. Capital Not specified Language(s) French [1] Religion Roman Catholicism Government Constitutional Monarchy King - 1814–1824 Louis XVIII - 1824–1830 Charles X President of the Council - 1815 Charles de Talleyrand-Périgord (first) - 1829–1830 Jules de Polignac (last) Bourbon Restoration 2 Legislature Parliament - Upper house Chamber of Peers - Lower house Chamber of Deputies History - Louis XVIII restored 6 April 1814 - Hundred Days 1815 - Second Restoration 1815 - France invades Spain 1823 - July Revolution July 1830 - Louis-Philippe I declared the King of the French 9 August 1830 Currency French Franc The Bourbon Restoration is the name given to the period following the successive events of the French Revolution (1789–1799), the end of the First French Republic (1792–1804), and then the forcible end of the First French Empire under Napoleon (1804-1814/1815) — when a coalition of European powers restored by arms the monarchy to the heirs of the House of Bourbon who once again became possessors of the Kingdom of France. The Bourbon restoration existed from (about) April 6th, 1814 until the popular uprisings of the July Revolution of 1830, excepting the interval of the "Hundred Days"[2] less than a full year into the restoration when the Bourbon monarchy again had made themselves so unpopular with the general population of France that the family had to once more flee Paris and France to Ghent ahead of exploding civil disorders and collapsing civil authority.
    [Show full text]
  • Christie's Succession Sale of the Late Monseigneur Le
    For Immediate Release 21 July 2008 Contact : Paris Capucine Milliot +331 40 76 84 08 [email protected] Paris Carine Decroi +331 40 76 85 88 [email protected] London Alexandra Kindermann +4420 7389 2289 [email protected] CHRISTIE’S SUCCESSION SALE OF THE LATE MONSEIGNEUR LE COMTE DE PARIS AND MADAME LA COMTESSE DE PARIS Christie’s Paris Tuesday 14 October 2008 Paris – Christie’s are proud to announce that The Princes and Princesses of La Maison de France have entrusted them to sell items from their late parent’s estate in Paris. This succession sale will be the last testimony of this historic family who reigned over France for almost 1000 years. Nearly 600 lots, mainly from the Monseigneur le Comte de Paris and Madame la Comtesse de Paris’s latest residence in rue Miromesnil in Paris, will be sold at Christie’s Paris on Tuesday, 14 October. The collection consists of important silver, paintings, furniture, miniatures, works of art and jewels. These objects reveal precious and personal memories of the Royal Family, notably of Louis-Philippe, Marie-Amélie, Marie-Antoinette, Louis XVII, as well as other members of d’Orléans family and numerous foreign sovereigns who are related to them. Extremely rare and personal historical pieces • A wallet embroidered by Queen Marie-Antoinette whilst she was in captivity in prison promises to be one of the particularly touching pieces of the sale. It was given to the Dauphin’s governess, Madame de Tourzel, who passed it on to Marie-Antoinette’s daughter Madame Royale in December 1795 when she was released from “La prison du Temple” as a final memory of her late mother.
    [Show full text]