The Oak Interior Oxford | 22 October 2020

The Oak Interior Thursday 22 October 2020 at 11am Oxford

VIEWING BY APPOINTMENT Telephone bidding will only be PHYSICAL CONDITION OF IMPORTANT INFORMATION ONLY accepted on lots with a lower LOTS IN THIS AUCTION The United States Government Friday 16 October estimate in excess of £500. PLEASE NOTE THAT THERE IS NO has banned the import of ivory 9am to 4pm REFERENCE IN THIS CATALOGUE into the USA. Lots containing Sunday 18 October Live online bidding is available TO THE PHYSICAL CONDITION ivory are indicated by the symbol for this sale 11am to 3pm OF ANY LOT. INTENDING Ф printed beside the lot number Monday 19 October Please email [email protected] BIDDERS MUST SATISFY in this catalogue. 9am to 4pm with ‘live bidding’ in the subject line THEMSELVES AS TO THE Tuesday 20 October 48 hours before the auction to CONDITION OF ANY LOT AS REGISTRATION 9am to 4pm register for this service. SPECIFIED IN CLAUSE 14 OF THE IMPORTANT NOTICE Wednesday 21 October NOTICE TO BIDDERS CONTAINED Please note that all customers, 9am to 4pm ENQUIRIES & CONDITION AT THE END OF THIS REPORTS irrespective of any previous CATALOGUE. activity with Bonhams, are SALE NUMBER David Houlston required to complete the Bidder 26030 +44 (0) 1865 853 667 As a courtesy to intending bidders, Registration Form in advance of [email protected] Bonhams will provide a written the sale. The form can be found CATALOGUE Indication of the physical condition at the back of every catalogue CUSTOMER SERVICES of lots in this sale if a request is £25.00 and on our website at www. Monday to Friday 08.30 to 18.00 received up to 24 hours before the bonhams.com and should be auction starts. This written BIDS +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 returned by email or post to Indication is issued subject to the specialist department or +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 ILLUSTRATIONS Clause 3 of the Notice to Bidders. to the bids department at +44 (0) 20 7447 7401 fax [email protected] To bid via the internet please Front cover: Lot 467 (detail) visit bonhams.com Inside front cover: Stationer’s Company Lots 321 - 326 To bid live online and / or leave internet bids please go to Please note that bids should be Inside back cover: Lot 374 (detail) Back cover: Lot 514 www.bonhams.com/ submitted no later than 4pm on the auctions/26030 and click on day prior to the sale. New bidders the Register to bid link at the must also provide proof of identity top left of the page. when submitting bids. Failure to do this may result in your bid not being processed.

Bonhams 1793 Limited Registered No. 4326560 Registered Office: Montpelier Galleries Montpelier Street, London SW7 1HH

+44 (0) 20 7393 3900 +44 (0) 20 7393 3905 fax eadinton aies

Sale Shipton Rd

A4095

Banbury Rd

Information A4260 Oxford Rd

Kidlington, Oxford and A40 Upper Campsfield Rd

A4095

A44 Airfield

BIDS BUYERS COLLECTION & STORAGE AND HANDLING SYMBOLS +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 STORAGE AFTER SALE CHARGES ON SOLD LOTS † VAT 20% on hammer price and +44 (0) 20 7447 7401 fax All sold lots will remain in Oxford RETURNED TO HEADINGTON buyer’s premium To bid via the internet please visit Free of charge until 5pm Thursday CARRIERS www.bonhams.com 5 November 2020 lots not collected Storage * VAT on imported items at a by this time will be transferred to Charges will apply from 7am Friday 6 preferential rate of 5% on hammer PAYMENTS Headington Carriers at the buyer’s November 2020 price and the prevailing rate on Buyers expense. buyer’s premium +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 Storage Charges +44 (0) 20 7447 7401 fax HEADINGTON CARRIERS LTD £2.00 + VAT per lot per day Y These lots are subject to Address: (Please note: Charges apply every CITES regulations, please read Sellers The Straight Mile day including weekends and Public the information in the back of the Payment of sale proceeds Upper Campsfield Road Holidays) catalogue. +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 Woodstock +44 (0) 20 7447 7401 fax OX20 1PW Uplift Charge Telephone: 01993 811 276 £45.00 + VAT per lot VALUATIONS, TAXATION Email: enquiries@headingtoncarriers. & HERITAGE co.uk PAYMENT Opening hours 7am -5.30pm +44 (0) 20 7468 8340 All charges due to Headington +44 (0) 20 7468 5860 fax Collections are by appointment only Carriers may be paid to them in [email protected] & a booking email or phone call are advance either by bank transfer or at required in advance to ensure lots the time of collection in cash. (Please CATALOGUE SUBSCRIPTIONS are ready at time of collection, note: Payments by card are not To obtain any Bonhams catalogue photographic id will be required at accepted). When making a bank or to take out an annual time of collection & if a third party is transfer payment please add your subscription: collecting written authorisation from Name & Lot number.) Subscriptions Department the successful buyer is required in +44 (0) 1666 502200 advance. Photographic id of the third Information on charges due is +44 (0) 1666 505107 fax party will be requested at the time of available either by [email protected] collection. To arrange a collection email at enquiries@ time please send a booking email to: headingtoncarriers.co.uk SHIPPING [email protected] or by telephone call to +44 (0)1993 811 276 For information and estimates on or telephone call to +44 (0)1993 811 domestic and international shipping 276 to ensure lots are ready at time of collection. Bank Details For Headington as well as export licenses please Carriers contact Alban Shipping on Name: Lloyds Bank +44 (0) 1582 493 099 Account Number:87409760 [email protected] Sort Code:30-96-35 ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT All electrical equipment in this sale has either been tested by a suitably qualified electrician or has been operationally disabled. If the intention is to reconnect this equipment we recommend that this is carried out by a suitably qualified electrician. 1 AN EXTREMELY RARE AND FINE QUEEN ANNE PEWTER Provenance: GADROONED MUG, ALE-PINT CAPACITY, CIRCA 1705 The Margaret Hand Collection Touchmark inside base of John Compere, London, (fl.1699-1724), The Michael Boorer Collection, purchased 1984. (No.0884). (OP1061, PS1865), the truncated cone body with crowned AR mark to rim, a band of lenticular beading above alternating convex and Literature: concave diagonal gadrooning to lower body rising from right to left, Illustrated Journal of the Pewter Society, Vol. 7, No. 3, Spring 1990, p. engraved to rim with a hand holding a tipstaff, and engraved to centre 99, (group photograph, centre left). Ioseph Ewen at ye hand ‘&’ Tipstaff in gravel lane, Southwark, single- Carl Ricketts, Early English Pewter Drinking Mugs (2018), p. 43, pl. 98. curve handle with cast beading and boot-heel terminal, ownership triad IED to upper handle, 20.75 fl.oz. 12.5cm high A survey undertaken in 1984, by renowned pewter expert on beer mugs and wine measures, Michael Boorer, recorded just two other £6,000 - 8,000 known pint capacity straight-sided gadrooned mugs. All with Queen Anne verification marks to rim and similar decoration. The second The will of a Joseph Ewen, ‘baskett maker’ of the Parish of St. example, listed as part of The Higgins Collection, bears the touchmark Saviours, Southwark, was probated on 2 January 1714. of John Thomas, (fl.1698-?), (PS 9312),and is engraved to body Arnold Swingscoe Att ye Greyhound Att Worden, illustrated Ronald F. Michaelis, Antique Pewter of the British Isles, pl.VIII, fig.30. The third, with no identifiable maker’s mark, is engraved to body John Wallhope Att the Bell Att Turvey 1703; illustrated Ronald F. Michaelis, British Pewter, p. 53. A fourth example, posthumously discovered in 2000, sold Bonhams, 22 November 2002, Lot 141.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 3 2 3 4

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For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 4 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 6 Lots 2 - 13: Property of a Gentleman A RARE NAMED LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY WHITE 2 METAL-MOUNTED LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH, CIRCA A SMALL AND RARE LATE 17TH CENTURY WHITE METAL- 1700 MOUNTED LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH The mount to the rim engraved ‘John Hasleham’, the frustum-shaped Mounted with a rare strapwork rim, the baluster-shaped body punch- body decorated with the initials ‘RL’ within four punched stylised decorated with nine flowers forming a lozenge, typical stitched rims flowers, forming a lozenge, typical stitched seams and curving handle, and handle, 14.5cm high 13.5cm high

£1,000 - 1,500 £1,000 - 1,500

3 On 2 September 1707, John Hasleham , a weaver of Red Lyon Street, A LATE 17TH CENTURY WHITE METAL-MOUNTED LEATHER Spitalfields, married Sarah Garrard. It is possible that the initials ‘RL’ to BLACKJACK, ENGLISH the body of this tankard refer to the Red Lion/Lyon inn or pub which With narrow, plain silver mount to the rim, a faint (now illegible) coat of stood on that street until the 19th century. arms to the baluster-shaped body, typical stitched seams and high, triangular handle, 15cm high 7 A SMALL MID-18TH CENTURY WHITE METAL-MOUNTED £1,000 - 1,500 LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1760 Cylindrical, and with lambrequin-edged mount to the rim, typical 4 stitched seams and handle, 11.5cm high A SMALL LATE 17TH CENTURY WHITE METAL-MOUNTED LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH £700 - 1,000 With scallop-edged mount to the rim, and baluster-shaped body punch-decorated with nine flowers forming a lozenge, typical stitched 8 seams and handle, the underside with a printed paper label reading A SMALL MID-18TH CENTURY WHITE METAL-MOUNTED ‘BROUGHTON’, 15.5cm high LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1760 The mount with lambrequin edge above an applied white metal £1,000 - 1,500 oval engraved with a crest, a stag’s head erased on a torse, typical stitched seams and curving handle, 11cm high 5 A SMALL LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY WHITE METAL- £700 - 1,000 MOUNTED LEATHER BLACKJACK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700 The rim with deep, lambrequin-edged mount, the frustum-shaped 9 body punch-decorated with five floral or stellar roundels forming a A MID-18TH CENTURY WHITE METAL-MOUNTED LEATHER cross, typical stitched seams and curving handle, 14.5cm high BLACKJACK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1760 Cylindrical, and with lambrequin-edged mount to the rim, typical £1,000 - 1,500 stitched seams and handle, 11.5cm high

£700 - 1,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 5 11

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10 12 A WILLIAM III LEATHER COSTREL, DATED 1695 A LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY LEATHER COSTREL, Of typical form, marked to one side with a possibly heraldic motif, and ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700 to the other side with the date ‘1695’, the initials ‘E (or I?)D’ to one Of typical form with stitched seams, 17cm wide x 14cm deep x 17cm end, ‘TA’ to one side, the number ‘81’ to the underside, and a partial high, (6 1/2in wide x 5 1/2in deep x 6 1/2in high) inked paper sticker reading ‘From Oakham...Rutlandsh...’, 21cm wide x 17cm deep x 20.5cm high, (8in wide x 6 1/2in deep x 8in high) £500 - 800

£800 - 1,200 13 A SMALL LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY LEATHER 11 COSTREL, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700 A VERY SMALL LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY LEATHER Of typical form, with stitched seams, the sides each decorated with COSTREL, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700 five shamrock-type motifs, one side and one end with the initials ‘IC’, Of typical form, with stitched seams, 10.5cm wide x 8cm deep x 13cm wide x 11.5cm deep x 14cm high, (5in wide x 4 1/2in deep x 5 10.5cm high, (4in wide x 3in deep x 4in high) 1/2in high)

£600 - 800 £400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 6 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 14

14 16 A GOOD AND LARGE EARLY 18TH CENTURY ELM AND ASH A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1690 TRESTLE-END TABLE, ENGLISH Having a boarded ovolo-moulded top, a single drawer framed by The top of three well-figured elm boards with end-cleats, on robust double-reeded applied mouldings, on baluster over acorn-turned waisted-rectangular end-supports joined by a pegged-tenon and legs, joined by robust edge-moulded stretchers, on pear-shaped feet, round-ended bold mid-stretcher, on sledge-type feet, 301.5cm wide x 80.5cm wide x 54.5cm deep x 71.5cm high, (31 1/2in wide x 21in 97.5cm deep x 74cm high, (118 1/2in wide x 38in deep x 29in high) deep x 28in high)

£6,000 - 8,000 £400 - 600

Provenance: 17 Doughton Manor, Tetbury, Gloucestershire. A CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOL, CIRCA 1680 Having a fielded back-panel, a foliate and crown-carved cresting rail, 15 pyramidal-finials, boarded seat, block and baluster-turned front legs AN 18TH CENTURY ASH LONG BENCH, ENGLISH joined by a baluster-turned fore-rail, 47cm wide x 42.5cm deep x Having an impressive thick single board top, with chamfered under 116cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 45 1/2in high) edge, on rectangular-shaped splayed legs morticed through the well- figured top, hand-shaped end-stretchers, 295cm wide x 23.5cm deep £300 - 400 x 50cm high, (116in wide x 9in deep x 19 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Doughton Manor, Tetbury, Gloucestershire.

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For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 7 18 (detail)

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18 20 A RARE AND GOOD ELIZABETH I/JAMES I JOINED OAK OPEN A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED YEW-WOOD GATELEG TABLE, ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1600-20 CIRCA 1700 Having a back of two panels, each with raised moulded front and Having an oval drop-leaf top, each leaf formed from a single board, ribbed or stylized ‘linenfold’-carved back, below a deep run-moulded atop an end-frieze drawer, on baluster over ball-turned legs, joined by top rail, a single-board seat with moulded edge, and relatively flat paired baluster-turned end-stretchers and plain long stretchers, each scroll-ended arms, on inverted ‘peg’-baluster turned front supports, elaborate gate with matching turned uprights, ‘acorn’-turned stretcher with matching front legs, joined all the way round with run-moulded and ogee-profiled top rail, waisted-turned feet, 105cm wide x 94.5cm stretchers, and with an exceptionally rare central upright between the deep x 72cm high, (41in wide x 37in deep x 28in high) seat and front stretcher, 65cm wide x 45cm deep x 86cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 33 1/2in high) £500 - 800

£3,000 - 5,000 21 A CHARLES II BOARDED OAK CHEST, CIRCA 1660 Literature: Of good height, having a twin-board top with triple-reeded edge, For a comparable Anglo-Welsh armchair see Tobias Jellinek, Early the front board with a broad flat run-moulding and dog-tooth and British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. 81, pl. 70, from the flowerhead punch-decoration to each end, a vertical run-moulding Clive Sherwood Collection and sold in these rooms 18 September repeated to each side, over V-shaped cut-away ends, 107cm wide x 2018, Lot 323. 47.5cm deep x 73cm high, (42in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 28 1/2in high)

19 £300 - 400 A WALNUT FORM OR BENCH, NORTH EUROPEAN, PROBABLY FRENCH, CIRCA 1600 Provenance: Constructed of five boards, the seat with a central S-shaped aperture, The Clive Sherwood Collection. an ogee-profiled apron to each long side, the shaped and gently splayed end-supports mortised through seat, and with V-shaped 22 * cutaway ends, 150cm wide x 33cm deep x 42cm high, (59in wide x A WILLIAM & MARY WALNUT AND OAK CANDLESTAND, 12 1/2in deep x 16 1/2in high) CIRCA 1700 Having an octagonal top with ovolo-moulded edge, a ball and £400 - 600 baluster-turned pillar, hexagonal collar and three outsplayed and relatively flat scroll-shaped legs, 34.5cm wide x 34.5cm deep x 71cm high, (13 1/2in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£300 - 500

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 8 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 23

23 25 A GEORGE II JOINED OAK HIGH DRESSER, CARDIGANSHIRE/ A PAIR OF WILLIAM & MARY SLAT-BACK SIDE CHAIRS, DENBIGHSHIRE, CIRCA 1730-50 YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1690 The boarded rack with two shelves, the fully-enclosed lower-section Each with three leafy-carved slats, morticed between a double S-scroll with three fielded drawers, above a pair of arched fielded panelled carved cresting and a geometric punch-decorated ogee-shaped lower cupboard doors, centred by a similar narrow panel, 136cm wide x back rail, the lozenge-shaped punches repeated to the scroll-finial 50cm deep x 194cm high, (53 1/2in wide x 19 1/2in deep x 76in high) carved back uprights, panelled seat, on block and baluster-turned legs, joined matching turned fore-rails and H-form stretchers, 47.5cm £2,000 - 3,000 wide x 40cm deep x 118cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 46in high) (2) 24 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK AND INLAID COURT CUPBOARD, £500 - 800 YORKSHIRE/DERBYSHIRE, CIRCA 1640 The upper cupboard with two panelled doors, each having an inner- 26 frame design of inlaid chequered bands, and centred by a similar A JOINED OAK AND SPINDLE-FILLED MURAL CUPBOARD recessed panel, enclosed by baluster-turned end columns, the lower- Having a pair of cupboard doors, each with an arched spindle-filled section with two large triple-panelled cupboard doors, each with leafy- panel, above a raised fielded panel, enclosing a single shelf, 87.5cm lunette carved upper panel, one panel to each side with ventilation wide x 30cm deep x 68.5cm high, (34in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 26 holes, three impressive single-piece backboards, 145cm wide x 1/2in high) 50.5cm deep x 143cm high, (57in wide x 19 1/2in deep x 56in high) £600 - 800 £1,000 - 1,500 Provenance: Purchased from John Caspall, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 9 27

27 * 28 AN UNUSUAL PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OAK FIGURAL- AN INTERESTING 17TH CENTURY OAK TRESTLE-END TABLE, CARVED BACKSTOOLS, CHESHIRE/LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1670 GERMAN One back panel carved with a portrait of Charles II, the other a Predominantly of wedge-and-peg construction, the impressive single- ‘Windsor Beauty’ after the celebrated portraits by Sir Peter Lely piece rectangular top with rounded corners, above a central drawer (1618-1680), each half-portrait within an arcade, the king with angel- opening on runners attached to the underside of the top and resting carved spandrels, the female courtier with leaf-and-berry spandrels, on a broad open-shelf, with single board scroll-profiled ends joined by both flanked by carved terms, and with a scroll-profiled cresting (one a central low stretcher and foot-stretchers overlapping each end of pierced) centred by an ownership triad, ‘H’ over ‘H H’, pyramid-finials the shaped sledge feet, 170cm wide x 62cm deep x 73.5cm high, (66 and split baluster-turned mouldings to uprights, boarded seat with 1/2in wide x 24in deep x 28 1/2in high) double-reeded edge, baluster-turned front legs joined all round by low plain stretchers, slight variances in design and dimensions, 49cm wide £3,000 - 5,000 x 42cm deep x 107cm high, (19in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 42in high) (2) Provenance: Barling of Mount Street Ltd., London £4,000 - 6,000 Beedham Antiques Ltd., Hungerford, Berkshire

Provenance: Purchased from Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, 2004.

28 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 10 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 29

29 30 A GOOD CHARLES I JOINED OAK LIVERY CUPBOARD, WEST A GEORGE III JOINED OAK OPEN LOW DRESSER, CIRCA 1770 COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 The top of two main boards with narrow reeded edge, above three lip- Having a top of two ovolo-moulded boards, a palmette and guilloche- moulded drawers, raised on baluster-silhouette front supports, joined carved top rail, and a pair of panelled cupboard doors, each with by a pot-board, 167cm wide x 44.5cm deep x 73.5cm high, (65 1/2in interlaced palmette-carved panel above a larger plain panel, on narrow wide x 17 1/2in deep x 28 1/2in high) run-moulded extended stile supports, the quadruple-panelled sides with matching carved top rail, single interior shelf, 103.5cm wide x £800 - 1,000 49cm deep x 118.5cm high, (40 1/2in wide x 19in deep x 46 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

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For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 11 31

31 A SMALL CHARLES II JOINED AND BOARDED OAK SPINDLE MURAL LIVERY CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1660 The single-piece top with chamfered under-edge, the central cupboard door of four open baluster-turned spindles flanked by a fixed panel with small pierced holes arranged in a lozenge-shape, the base board matching the top board in reverse, a single narrow rear shelf to the interior, 70cm wide x 26.5cm deep x 42cm high, (27 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 16 1/2in high)

£1,200 - 1,600

32 A VERY NEAR-SET OF SIX LATE 17TH CENTURY JOINED OAK HIGH-BACK CHAIRS, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1685 Each with moulded slat-back, a bold double C-scroll carved cresting, inward-facing scroll-ended uprights, and panelled seat, on block and baluster-turned legs, joined by a ball-turned fore-rail and multiple plain stretchers, 47cm wide x 40cm deep x 109.5cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 43in high) (6)

£1,200 - 1,800

33 * A CHARLES II JOINED OAK DINING GATELEG TABLE, PROBABLY YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1680 Having a thick oval drop-leaf top, a single end-frieze drawer atop a fretted scrolling rail, on baluster-turned legs, joined by paired peg- baluster turned end-stretchers and baluster and ‘egg’-turned long stretchers, the elaborate turnings repeated to each gate, 165cm wide x 136.5cm deep x 72.5cm high, (64 1/2in wide x 53 1/2in deep x 28 1/2in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

34 A RARE CHARLES I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK, 34 FRUITWOOD AND PARQUETRY-INLAID MURAL LIVERY CUPBOARD, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having a cyma-recta and dentilated cornice, a flowing frilly-leaf carved frieze with mask carved terminals, and a pair of spindle-filled cupboard doors, the door rails and carcase front rails with parquetry-inlay, the projecting cupboard below enclosed by a strapwork cartouche-carved boarded door, flanked to the right by a fixed leafy S-scroll carved panel, with matching carved uprights and linear inlay, base moulding, 78.5cm wide x 31cm deep x 87cm high, (30 1/2in wide x 12in deep x 34in high)

£6,000 - 8,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 12 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 35

35 (detail) 35 (detail)

35 * 36 A SPLENDID ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK AND INLAID PANEL- A GEORGE II JOINED OAK CHEST-ON-STAND, CIRCA 1730-50 BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, CIRCA 1600 With cyma-recta cornice, two short and three long graduated and The back panel designed with an inlaid knot-pattern, enclosed within lip-moulded drawers, the stand with one long over two short matching an arcade carved with alternating roundels, lozenges and four-petal drawers, and an ogee-arched apron applied with short half-round flowerheads, and with paired pointed-leaf carved spandrels, the top linear mouldings, on four cabriole legs, 103cm wide x 56cm deep x rail having an unusual overhang terminating in short inlaid uprights with 161cm high, (40 1/2in wide x 22in deep x 63in high) ball finial and acorn pendant, and carved with a pair of grotesque- scrolls supporting a shield carved with the initials ‘G H’, the arched- £600 - 800 shaped cresting again carved with grotesque heads, and with rare linear-carved detail to the rear, the back uprights leafy-carved and the 37 lower back rail carved with cable motifs, the downswept open arms A CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1670 on parallel-baluster front supports, the single seat board with narrow Having a top of two boards with ovolo-moulded edge, a single frieze moulded edge, atop cable-carved seat rails, the baluster-turned front drawer above a double flattened ogee-arched apron, on ball-turned legs with lozenge chequer-inlaid blocks, the stretchers with upper and and block centred legs, joined by a matching turned fore-rail, with lower moulded edges, 57cm wide x 50cm deep x 119cm high, (22in plain side and rear stretchers, on pear-shaped feet, 89cm wide x wide x 19 1/2in deep x 46 1/2in high) 57.5cm deep x 74cm high, (35in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 29in high)

£12,000 - 18,000 £400 - 600

Inventory number ‘92.9.226’ inscribed to the underside of the seat and to the rear of one seat rail. For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 13 38

38 * 40 * AN IMPRESSIVE LATE 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK COFFER A TAMBOUR EMBROIDERED VALANCE, CIRCA 1910 FRONT, BREMEN, GERMANY, CIRCA 1570-85 Designed with mainly green and brown wools in the Elizabethan Carved with a complex arrangement of biblical scenes, divided in the manner, with groups of companions in a garden setting, trees and centre by the seated figure of a man beneath a tree, flanked on the buildings in the background, 40cm x 280cm left by a standing, old bearded man (Moses) of the old dispensation, and on the right by a younger, bearded man (John the Baptist) of the £400 - 600 new dispensation, all issuing banderoles with inscriptions, carved to the proper left end of the panel with Adam & Eve and the Tree of 41 * Knowledge, Moses and the Tablets of the Law, the brazen serpent A 19TH CENTURY CARVED WALNUT COAT OF ARMS set up before the Tents of the Israelites, and to the right with the The Royal Arms of England, beneath a helm with closed visor, within Crucifixion, angels with banderoles appearing to the shepherds foliate mantling, a blank banner beneath, probably originally painted, guarding their sheep and, to the far right, Christ rising from the tomb in a moulded frame, 50cm wide x 6cm deep x 58.5cm high, (19 1/2in of the soldier, lacking pilasters at ends and rails at top and bottom, wide x 2in deep x 23in high) some repairs and replacements, 127cm wide x 3cm deep x 53cm high, (50in wide x 1in deep x 20 1/2in high) £1,000 - 1,500

£3,000 - 5,000 The visor is not correct for the English Royal Coat of Arms and should be shown affronté, or facing the viewer. One of a group of coffer fronts all carved with similar scenes. See a related example, with end pilasters carved with coats of arms, in 42 the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum (Museum Number A LARGE EMBOSSED BRASS OCTAGONAL MURAL W5-1909), dated 1586. Another, the so-called ‘Cranach Chest’ in the REFLECTOR, SCANDINAVIAN, CIRCA 1680 church at Abbots Langley, Hertfordshire, bears traces of pigments. The central octagonal boss decorated with a Bacchanalian figure atop It is known that these chests were carved by the ‘snitger’ school a barrel, amongst foliage, the border embossed with animals including of wood-carvers in Bremen. Many of these chests - after the Italian a unicorn, a fox, hounds and deer, with rolled rim, 63cm wide x 7cm fashion - were made to celebrate marriages. deep x 63cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 24 1/2in high)

39 £200 - 300 TWO SIMILAR IRON FIREDOGS, IN THE 16TH CENTURY FRENCH MANNER Both with bulbous capital, the shorter one with the initials ‘WG’ (?), the stems decorated with Renaissance foliage, and now indistinct shields to the divergent front supports, the tallest 47cm high, (2)

£60 - 80

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 14 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 44

43 45 A LARGE EMBOSSED BRASS OCTAGONAL MURAL A 17TH CENTURY TAPESTRY TABLE RUNNER REFLECTOR, SCANDINAVIAN, CIRCA 1680 The Flemish tapestry designed with floral sprays, worked in wool, The central octagonal boss decorated with a standing man, flanked mainly in shades of umber and ochre, with metallic braid and end- by a standing man and woman to the rim, amongst fruits, meandering fringe, 207cm wide x 27cm deep foliage and putti, 69cm wide x 9.5cm deep x 68cm high, (27in wide x 3 1/2in deep x 26 1/2in high) £400 - 600

£200 - 300 Provenance: Purchased from Peta Smyth, Pimlico, London. Literature: P. Hornsby, Collecting Antique Copper & Brass (1989), Plate 14. 46 THREE WILLIAM & MARY PANELS, CIRCA 1690 44 Mounted on card, in the form of a dismantled casket, worked in A MID-18TH CENTURY TAPESTRY, FRENCH, CIRCA 1750 coloured silks on a linen ground in a variety of stitches, one panel The hunting scene designed with two gentleman archers, dressed in depicting a queen, saint, flowers, birds and insects, 27cm x 35cm, frock-coats, two courting couples, and a basket of refreshments, with another of a baby, griffin, flowers and birds, 26.5cm x 33.5, and a long floral border, worked with coloured wools, 267cm x 230cm border designed with carnations, roses and strawberries, 6.5cm x 115cm, (3) £2,000 - 3,000 £400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 15 48

47 A GOOD AND LARGE SYCAMORE DAIRY BOWL With decorative turned lines to the rim and the exterior, low turned foot, 44.5cm diameter x 14cm high

£600 - 800

48 A RARE ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK DISPLAY/SERVING TABLE, CIRCA 1600 Made to accompany the ‘Great Table’, a large refectory-type table Having a triple-plank fully cleated top, plain shallow frieze rails with bold scroll-profiled spandrels, on robust opposed baluster and ring- turned legs, joined by slender plain stretchers all round, 107cm wide x 82cm deep x 90cm high, (42in wide x 32in deep x 35in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

49 A PARTICULARLY SMALL AND GOOD CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1660 The twin-boarded top with ovolo-moulded edge, the frieze drawer with lower run-moulded decoration, on block and spiral turned legs, joined by matching turned fore and rear mid-rails and an H-form stretcher, 66cm wide x 45.5cm deep x 64cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 25in high)

£1,200 - 1,800 49

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 16 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 50

50 A JOINED OAK BOX-SETTLE, CHESHIRE/LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1700-20 The low back with four fielded panels and pyramidal-finials to both uprights, the downswept open-arms on short turned front supports, the seat with a hinged single board, above a double panelled front, 51 135cm wide x 59.5cm deep x 93cm high, (53in wide x 23in deep x 36 1/2in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

Provenance: Purchased from H. W. Keil Ltd., Broadway, Worcestershire.

51 A SMALL CHARLES I BOARDED OAK CHEST, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 The single-piece top and front with chip-carved ends, the extended sides with pointed-arch shaped cut-away ends, 64cm wide x 33cm deep x 42.5cm high, (25in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 16 1/2in high)

£500 - 800

52 * A JAMES I/CHARLES I JOINED OAK PANEL BACK ARMCHAIR, DEVON, CIRCA 1620-30 The back panel carved with addorsed frilly-scrolls within a leafy arcade, below a lunette and stylized flower-carved top rail, set between round-end and stiff-leaf carved uprights, the robust downswept arms with a concentric ring-turned roundel to each outer- face, the single seat board with applied reeded edge, bicuspid-shaped seat rails, on parallel-baluster turned front legs joined all round by plain stretchers, 60cm wide x 52cm deep x 105cm high, (23 1/2in wide x 20in deep x 41in high)

£1,200 - 1,800 52 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 17 53

53 55 * AN 18TH CENTURY ARMORIAL WALL HANGING, FRENCH, A JOINED OAK AND INLAID PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1730-50 SOUTH WEST YORKSHIRE Designed with a large wicker basket of tulips, narcissus, irises, In the circa 1670 manner, incorporating period timbers snowdrops and anemones, embroidered in blue, green and red wools, The tall back with a single flowering-stem carved panel below a along with swags, filled cornucopia, birds, dragonflies and bouquets slender panel carved with the initials ‘E’ ‘B’ within linear-inlay, the of similar flowers, the whole surmounted by the monogram ‘BCAE’ back uprights gauge-carved and chequer-inlaid, all surmounted and a coronet, all re-applied to a linen ground, the deep border with by a double-scroll cresting carved with leafy-buds and vine-leaves, displays of flowerheads, leaves and ribbons, 274cm x 244cm serpent-carved ‘ears’, and slender downswept open arms on egg- turned front supports, boarded seat with chip-carved ends, the £700 - 1,000 seat rail also chequer-inlaid, on baluster-turned legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 55.5cm wide x 50cm deep x 118.5cm high, (21 Provenance: 1/2in wide x 19 1/2in deep x 46 1/2in high) The Ronald A. Lee Collection Thence by family descent £400 - 600

54 56 * A GEORGE II OAK CLOSE STOOL, CIRCA 1730-40 A GEORGE III FRUITWOOD TURNER’S TWO-TIER TRIPOD Of heptagonal form, with a hinged lid, boarded sides and ogee- TABLE, CIRCA 1800 shaped plinth base, later metal liner, 47.5cm wide x 43.5cm deep x having a one-piece dished top with six blade-knop pendants, an 42cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 17in deep x 16 1/2in high) ornately turned pillar centred on a matching (but smaller) undertier with three acorn-turned pendants, on a turned tripod base, 33.5cm wide x £300 - 400 33.5cm deep x 65.5cm high, (13in wide x 13in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£700 - 1,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 18 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 57

57 58 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK THREE-TIER BUFFET, WITH BOX- A JOINED OAK FULLY-ENCLOSED DRESSER, ENGLISH, CIRCA TOP, CIRCA 1640 1700-20 Having a hinged thin single-piece top with ovolo-moulded edge, The end-cleated top of two deep boards, above a central bank of four enclosing a shallow well, with leafy S-scroll carving to three sides, paired mitre-moulded drawers, flanked by a panelled cupboard door, raised on columnar-turned front supports, each headed by pyramidal on bracket feet, 163cm wide x 50cm deep x 91cm high, (64in wide x boss, the middle tier with a matching carved frieze drawer, and 19 1/2in deep x 35 1/2in high) matching front supports, the undertier on channel run-moulded rails, 105.5cm wide x 38.5cm deep x 108cm high, (41 1/2in wide x 15in £800 - 1,200 deep x 42 1/2in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

58

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 19 59 A RARE GEORGE II OAK AND INLAID CHEST OF DRAWERS, DATED 1731 The impressive single-piece top inlaid with the date ‘1731’, with individual numbers within a line-inlaid roundel positioned to each corner, and centred by the initials ‘E G’ in larger roundel, having two short and three long graduated drawers, all with line inlay, the sides also with arched linear decoration, on bracket feet, 95cm wide x 56cm deep x 92.5cm high, (37in wide x 22in deep x 36in high) 59 £1,500 - 2,000

60 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1680 The top with moulded ovolo edge and cavetto under-edge, above four mitre and cushion-moulded drawers, split ball-turnings applied to front carcase rails, on front bun feet, 96.5cm wide x 56.5cm deep x 92cm high, (37 1/2in wide x 22in deep x 36in high)

£800 - 1,000

61 AN UNUSUAL OAK CLOSE STOOL, POSSIBLY FRENCH, CIRCA 1700 The drum-shaped body formed from one-piece of bentwood, the top 59 (detail) with concentric circles carved with anthemion and guilloche bands and centred by a single rosette, side carry handles, metal liner, 40cm wide x 40cm deep x 39.5cm high, (15 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 15 1/2in high)

£300 - 400

62 A VICTORIAN GREEN-PAINTED ASH CHILD’S DALES-TYPE SPINDLE-BACK ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1850 With a single row of three tapering spindles supported between turned cross rails, the round-turned arms with a hole to each end for former restraining bar, rush seat, the turned front legs joined by plain turned stretchers, 35cm wide x 25.5cm deep x 48.5cm high, (13 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 19in high)

£100 - 150

60

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 20 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 63 * AN EARLY 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK ROOF CORBEL, OR BEAM END Carved as a woman wearing a hat and holding a banner, furled at the end, 15cm wide x 23cm deep x 22.5cm high, together with another 16th century carved oak roof corbel, or beam end, the male figure wearing a cap and holding a banner, 12.5cm wide x 20.5cm deep x 21.5cm high, (2)

£1,200 - 1,800 63 Provenance: Reputedly from Bury St. Edmunds, Suffolk. Reputedly formerly in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York.

64 * TWO LATE 15TH/EARLY 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK CORBELS, OR BEAM ENDS The first of a kneeling woman, her hands clasped in prayer, 13cm wide x 29cm deep x 21cm high, the second a male figure, possibly holding a saw, or a musical instrument, and in clog-like shoes, 12cm wide x 35cm deep x 20cm high, (2)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: See Lot 63. 64

65 * TWO LATE 15TH/EARLY 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK CORBELS, OR BEAM ENDS The first of a bearded man, holding a banner, 15cm wide x 11cm deep x 31cm high, the second a man holding a book and a staff with pelt (or skin?), 13cm wide x 15cm deep x 23cm high, (2)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: See Lot 63.

66 A HENRY VII/HENRY VIII CARVED AND PAINTED PINE ROOF OR CEILING BOSS, PROBABLY LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1500 Of lozenge form, and carved with a Christogram within a cusped tracery border, mounted on a later oak board, the boss 25cm wide x 65 3cm deep x 25cm high; overall 30cm wide x 4cm deep x 31.5cm high

£500 - 800

Provenance: The bookplate of James Dearden now attached to the reverse of this boss’ later mount was reputedly originally attached to the back of the boss. James Dearden (d. 1829) purchased Rochdale Manor from Lord Byron (1788-1824) in 1823. It is said that the boss was originally from Trinity Chapel, St. Chad’s, Rochdale, which was founded in 1487. It was purchased in 1847 by Dearden at which time he removed parts of an original oak screen and pieces of the roof. See H. Fishwick, The History of the Parish of Rochdale in the County of Lancaster (1889), p. 163, where an identical (probably this) boss is illustrated and described as being removed from the ceiling of Trinity Chapel.

66

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 21 Lot 67 illustrated in H. Cescinsky & E. R. Gribble, Early English Furniture & Woodwork (1922), Vol. II, p. 40, Fig. 44 67

67 * A RARE AND DOCUMENTED BOARDED OAK BOX, PROBABLY NORTHERN GERMAN, CIRCA 1600 The lid carved to its centre with a gentleman wearing a wig, a doublet and cape, encircled by a laurel-carved wreath, against a scroll-edged cartouche, the front board with a pair of half-length portraits of a man and his wife, with high collars, both within a strapwork, scroll- edged frame, a bunch of pendant fruits beneath the shield-shaped iron lockplate, the ends carved with further bunches of fruit between foliated scrolls, articulated iron bale handle to lid, 42cm wide x 31cm deep x 17.5cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 12in deep x 6 1/2in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

Provenance: William Smedley-Aston Collection, The Yew Trees, Henley-in-Arden, Warwickshire. The Hella Bunch Collection. The William Stokes Collection.

Illustrated: H. Cescinsky & E. R. Gribble, Early English Furniture & Woodwork 68 (1922) Vol. II, p. 40, Fig. 44, and in the text p. 31, where it is described as ‘a fine ruffle or -box’ and dated to the mid-16th century. The metalwork, in particular the iron lockplate nailed to an uncarved piece of the front board of the same shape and incorporated into the board’s design, as well as the handle mounted to the lid, suggest that this box is from Continental Europe.

68 A SMALL AND GOOD JAMES I BOARDED OAK DESK BOX, CIRCA 1620 The lid with applied moulded edge, and carved with the initials ‘E B’, the front carved and punch-decorated with leafy S-scrolls, the sides carved with floral sprays, fitted with a rear open tray above four small drawers, 33.7cm wide x 28cm deep x 21.5cm high, (13in wide x 11in deep x 8in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

69 A SMALL GEORGE I OAK TABLE-TOP CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1720 With two pairs of short drawers over two long drawers, on small bracket feet, 48.5cm wide x 27cm deep x 31.5cm high, (19in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 12in high) 69 £400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 22 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 70 A SMALL JAMES I PEWTER FLAGON, CIRCA 1610 Of typical form, with plain tapering drum, ovolo-moulded footrim, knopped bun-lid, and erect thumbpiece, stamped ownership initials ‘W C’ to curved handle, with a flat-base rather than a later ‘bullet’- base, 25.3cm high

£2,000 - 3,000

71 A WILLIAM & MARY PEWTER NARROW-RIM WRIGGLEWORK PLATE, CIRCA 1690 The rim with cast reeding, the well designed with a stylized bird resting 70 in scrolling flora, beneath the initials ‘ER’, 22cm diameter

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: Sold Sotheby’s, 21 July 1978, Lot 333. The Dr Ron Homer Collection.

72 AN INTERESTING ROMANESQUE CAST PEWTER CANDLESTICK, SANDBANKS, NR. BRUGE Having three standing Knights or Crusaders, back-to-back, wearing chain-mail, two with drawn swords, the third holding an axe, each supporting a figure, one a female, holding a ‘falcon’, her other hand clasping the end of a rope around a male slave, the third a male sounding his horn, all with mainly hatched-decoration, and carrying a drip pan with raised beaded edge and short central pricket, weight 251g 13cm high x 8cm wide 71

£3,000 - 5,000

Literature: Discussed and illustrated in an article by Henk van Wijk, ‘Horseman Candlesticks’, Journal of the Pewter Society (2018), Vol. 48, pp. 8-20, fig. 17. B. Dubbe, Tin en Tinnegieters in Nederland (1978), p. 175. H.J.E. van Beuningen, Lost and Found: Essays on Medieval Archaeology (2000)

73 A RARE WILLIAM & MARY PEWTER TWO-BAND TAVERN POT, QUART CAPACITY, CIRCA 1690 Touchmark in base of Adam Banck(e)s IV, Wigan,(fl.1671-1716), (OP222a, PS66), the truncated cone body with two broad fillets, S-curve handle with pointed boot-heel terminal, and wriggle-work 72 ownership initials TDM to spade-terminal handle,

£1,500 - 2,000

Provenance: The Michael Boorer Collection.

Illustrated: Carl Ricketts, Early English Pewter Drinking Mugs (2018), p.28, pl. 56.

73 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 23 74

74 76 A RARE LATE 16TH LARGE TAPESTRY CUSHION COVER, A PIGSKIN-COVERED DOMED CASKET, CIRCA 1830, BY ENGLISH OR NORTH EUROPEAN, CIRCA 1580 GEORGE HEWITT OF LORD STREET, LIVERPOOL Finely woven in coloured wools and silks, depicting a scene from the Tooled and fixed with bands of decorative brass studs, the interior Sacrifice of Isaac, Abraham about to strike his son as the heavens lined with pages from the Covent Garden Journal, with domed cover, open to reveal an angel, a town in the distance, within a border of 25.5cm wide x 17cm deep x 13.5cm high, together with a tooled foliage, fruit, flowers and a colourful bird, framed and glazed, 52cm x leather-lined domed casket, circa 1830, bearing a label for John 54.5cm Phillipps, ‘Importer of Foreign Toys’, of South Street, Worthing, lined to the interior with white and blue paper, with some traces of gilt £1,500 - 2,000 to the tooling to the exterior, 30.5cm wide x 15cm deep x 11cm high, and a 19th century pigskin-covered domed casket, with bands Provenance: of leather fixed with metal studs, 27.5cm wide x 15cm deep x 13cm James Ivory Collection. high, (3)

For a comparable example, designed with King Soloman and the £150 - 200 Queen of Sheba, see The Victoria and Albert Museum collection, London (museum no. 1429-1871) suggested as North German and George Hewitt, portmanteau and trunk maker, is recorded as working illustrated G. Thomson, Tapestry Weaving in England (1914), p. 116, at 54 Leeds St., Liverpool in the History, Directory, and Gazetteer of fig. 36. the County Palatine of Lancaster of 1824.

See Lot 512. 77 * A WILLIAM & MARY BOARDED OAK BOX, NORTH COUNTRY, 75 * DATED 1691 A CHIP-CARVED OPEN BOX, MADE FROM 17TH CENTURY The hinged lid with punch-decorated ends and moulded front edge BOARDS, SWISS/FRENCH, IRON CARRY HANDLE above a front board carved with a pair of stalked and leaved tulip-like Made from four boards, carved with chip-edged roundels enclosing flowers, amidst leaves, the proper left end carved ‘CF’ and ‘1691’, geometric and foliate motifs, one roundel carved ‘PIERRE ANTOINE both end boards with lower run moulding, 61cm wide x 33.5cm deep bERARb’ around the Christogram ‘IHS’, with fixed iron carry handle, x 19cm high, (24in wide x 13in deep x 7in high) 34cm wide x 34cm deep x 18 cm high, (13in wide x 13in deep x 7in high) excluding handle £300 - 500

£300 - 400

The inscription on this box possibly refers to Pierre Antoine Bérard ‘le prieur’, or prior, of Levron, Switzerland.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 24 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 78

78 80 * AN EXTREMELY LARGE AND IMPRESSIVE GEORGE III JOINED AN EARLY VICTORIAN JOINED OAK CHILD’S CHAIR, CIRCA OAK AND INLAID DRESSER, MIDLANDS, CIRCA 1790 1840 The upper-section formed from two racks with paired stepped With adjustable seat height mechanism, the back having a vase- shelves, centred by a cupboard enclosed by a pair of astragal glazed shaped splat with five circular apertures, allowing for a dowel to the doors above three small spice drawers, the fully-enclosed base with rear of the solid seat to be positioned at various heights, the relatively three arched fielded panelled cupboard doors, each centred by flat arms on multiple-turned front supports attached to the seat edge stellar-inlay and enclosing small base-drawers, surrounded by nine lip- and free to move up and down within a narrow slot to each back moulded drawers, 275cm wide x 59.5cm deep x 202cm high, (108in upright, and held in position by an iron strap, on square-section front wide x 23in deep x 79 1/2in high) legs joined by plain stretchers, 91.5cm wide x 35cm deep x 29cm high, (36in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 11in high) £4,000 - 6,000 £300 - 500 79 AN EARLY 17TH CENTURY JOINED OAK CENTRE TABLE, 81 GERMAN, CIRCA 1620 A JOINED OAK LONG BENCH OR FORM, ENGLISH The rounded rectangular top (originally sliding) having end-locators Circa 1640 and later pegged through the side frieze rails, on square-section baluster- Having an ovolo-moulded single-piece top, and deep lower edge shaped legs, with high end blocks, joined all round by slender moulded rails, on columnar-turned legs, joined by an H-form stretcher, stretchers, 151cm wide x 73cm deep x 69cm high, (59in wide x 28 135cm wide x 23.6cm deep x 52.5cm high, (53in wide x 9in deep x 1/2in deep x 27in high) 20 1/2in high)

£600 - 800 £800 - 1,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 25 Lots 82 - 245: The Mrs & Mrs I. Phillips Collection

82

82 83 A RARE AND GOOD WILLIAM & MARY OAK BOARDED MURAL TWO WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK SLAT-BACK CHAIRS, CUPBOARD, WELSH BORDERS, CIRCA 1690 CIRCA 1690 Of arched bentwood form, the front formed from three narrow linear Each high back with multiple slats, below a carved and pierced chip-carved boards, around a large central single-board door, the top angular double S-scroll cresting, one with columnar-turned back board carved with three multiple concentric roundels or ‘draughts’, uprights, both with a panelled seat, on block and columnar-turned and incise-carved the initials ‘T E’, the door again centred by a front legs, joined by an S-scroll carved fore-rail, one with an H-form matching ‘draught’, the side constructed from a single riven board turned stretcher, the other with plain side and rear stretchers, 45cm secured with nails, single interior shelf, 62cm wide x 26cm deep x wide x 36cm deep x 126cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 14in deep x 49 65cm high, (24in wide x 10in deep x 25 1/2in high) 1/2in high) (2)

£5,000 - 8,000 £600 - 800

Provenance: 84 Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, A GEORGE I JOINED OAK LOWBOY, CIRCA 1725 Oxfordshire, August 1994. Having a triple-boarded top with ovolo-moulded edge, an arched and scroll-profiled apron enclosing two deep and one central narrow Literature: drawer, all within double-reeded mouldings, similar-shaped side See Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. friezes, on four square-section cabriole legs and square pad feet, 284, fig. 3:292, for a comparable cupboard, formerly in the celebrated 81.5cm wide x 48.5cm deep x 70.5cm high, (32in wide x 19in deep x John Fardon Collection and sold Bonhams, New Bond Street, 27 1/2in high) London, 15 March 2017, Lot 84 (£15,000). Two further bentwood cupboards are illustrated, ibid., p. 284, figs. 3:290 & 291. A fourth £600 - 800 example, dated 1716, from Kennixton Farmhouse, LLangenydd, Gower, West Wales, displayed within a room setting at St. Fagans, National History Museum, Cardiff, is illustrated p. 344, fig. 3:449, and again in more detail by Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250 - 1950 (2007), Vol. I, p.18, pl.31. Victor Chinnery also notes a further example at a National Trust property, Cwmmau Farm, Brilley, Herefordshire.

Similar examples sold ‘Syd Levethan: The Longridge Collection’, Christie’s, King Street, London, 10-11 June 2010, Lot 1244 [£17,500]; and Bonhams, Oxford, 1 October 2014, Lot 631, [£12,500].

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 26 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 85

85 87 A RARE ELIZABETH I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1590 AN 18TH CENTURY OAK AND GLAZED MURAL CUPBOARD, Having a double-reeded edge top, and bicuspid-shaped rails with DUTCH broad flat run-mouldings, on baluster and ball-turned and fluted- Of canted form, having a broken-arch moulded cornice, above an carved legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 45.5cm wide x astragal-glazed cupboard door, and slender glazed sides, enclosing a 26.5cm deep x 52.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 20 1/2in pair of serpentine-shaped shelves, 83cm wide x 18.5cm deep x 73cm high) high, (32 1/2in wide x 7in deep x 28 1/2in high)

£6,000 - 8,000 £500 - 800

Provenance: Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Oxfordshire, October 1999. Northamptonshire, November 1997.

86 88 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK GATELEG TABLE, CIRCA A PAIR OF LATE 19TH/EARLY 20TH CENTURY BRASS 1690 JARDINIÈRES, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1900 The oval drop-leaf top formed from good thick boards, above a single One marked ‘ENGLAND’ to the underside end-drawer, on paired baluster-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers, Both of oval form, with flared rim and a band of swirling gadrooning, turned feet, 138cm wide x 100cm deep x 75cm high, (54in wide x and each with a ring handle in the mouth of a lion mask at either end, 39in deep x 29 1/2in high) on four paw-cast feet, 33.5cm wide x 28.5cm deep x 19.5cm high, (13in wide x 11in deep x 7 1/2in high) (2) £300 - 400 £300 - 400 Provenance: Purchased from Key Antiques, Danny Robinson, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, November 1990.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 27 89 A CHARLES I OAK AND ELM JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 The elm double-reeded edge top with an unusually large overhang at each end, the run-moulded rails with punch-decorated navette- shaped motifs, on baluster over ball-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 51cm wide x 28cm deep x 53cm high, (20in wide x 11in deep x 20 1/2in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: 89 Purchased from William H. Stokes, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, April 1999.

90 A GEORGE I OAK CLOSE STOOL, CIRCA 1720 Having a hinged boarded lid, plain panelled sides and elongated ball- turned feet, 44cm wide x 42.5cm deep x 52cm high, (17in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 20in high)

£500 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, May 1987.

91 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK CLOSE STOOL, CIRCA 1680 Having an ovolo-moulded boarded hinged top, and multiple run- moulded front and side panels, on block and ball-turned legs, joined all round by spiral-turned stretchers, turned feet, 49.5cm wide x 41.5cm deep x 51cm high, (19in wide x 16in deep x 20in high)

91 £800 - 1,200 Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1994.

92 TWO SIMILAR 19TH CENTURY SMALL SHEET AND CAST BRASS JARDINIÈRES Each with gadrooned body, lion mask backplates and ring handles, cast paw feet, the larger 23cm diameter x 15cm high, (2)

£200 - 300

93 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, HISTORICALLY ADAPTED USING AN 18TH CENTURY OAK TABLE-TOP The oval twin-boarded top with chamfered under-edge, the stool with leafy S-scroll carved rails, on columnar turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 62cm wide x 55cm deep x 53.5cm high, (24in wide x 21 1/2in deep x 21in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

93

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 28 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 94 94 97 A GOOD CHARLES II JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN FOUR ITEMS OF DOMESTIC BRASS ARMCHAIR, YORKSHIRE, LEEDS AREA, CIRCA 1670 To include a swirl-gadrooned oval dish, marked to the underside with Having a double-panelled back, with a narrow foliate carved panel, Neptune (a male figure holding a trident), 26.5cm wide x 22cm deep atop a large lozenge-carved panel, beneath a bold double-scroll x 4cm high, a brass tazza, or footed bowl, with band of decorative and leafy-carved cresting with buds, the downswept scroll-ended piercing, 24.5cm diameter x 13cm high, an 18th century sheet brass open arms on baluster-turned front supports, single seat board with basket-form jardiniere, Dutch, 19cm diameter x 29cm high, and an chip-carved ends, on columnar-turned legs, joined all round by plain early 20th century oblong jardiniere, English, with ball and claw feet stretchers, 58cm wide x 54cm deep x 115.5cm high, (22 1/2in wide x and tin liner, 51cm wide x 12cm deep x 11cm high, (4) 21in deep x 45in high) £200 - 300 £4,000 - 6,000 Provenance: Provenance: The first object in this lot was purchased Danny Robinson Key Purchased from Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, July Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, April 1986. The tazza was 2004. also purchased in April 1986.

95 The basket form jardiniere purchased Paul Hopwell Antiques, West A GEORGE III FRUITWOOD TRIPOD OCCASIONAL TABLE, Haddon, Northamptonshire, 1995. CIRCA 1770 Having a circular fixed top, a baluster and vase-turned pillar, and three 98 hipped downswept legs with pad feet, 44cm wide x 43cm deep x A WROUGHT IRON BRAZIER STAND 70cm high, (17in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high) The upper ring issuing three scroll supports, and on three curving legs, decorated with stalked leaves, the feet with decorative coils, 79.5cm £300 - 400 high

96 £200 - 300 A 19TH CENTURY BURR-WALNUT MIRROR The bevelled-plate within a well-figured cushion-moulded frame, 61.5cm x 53.5cm

£400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 29 99

99 101 A SMALL CHARLES I BOARDED OAK CHEST, WEST COUNTRY, A GEORGE III OAK TRIPOD WINE TABLE, CIRCA 1790 CIRCA 1630 Having a near-circular one-piece top, and single-fillet and baluster- The one-piece top with double-reeded edge, the front carved with turned pillar, on three hipped and downswept legs, 41cm wide x paired leafy S-scrolls, the sides with a projected moulded front edge 40cm deep x 65cm high, (16in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 25 1/2in high) below the base board, and with curved V-shaped cut-away end, 82cm wide x 37cm deep x 51cm high, (32in wide x 14 1/2in deep x £500 - 800 20in high) 102 £1,000 - 1,500 A GEORGE II JOINED OAK OPEN DRESSER BASE, MONTGOMERYSHIRE, CIRCA 1740 100 Having a boarded top, and three lip-moulded frieze drawers, each A SMALL GEORGE II JOINED OAK MURAL CORNER above an ogee-arched apron, on four baluster-turned front legs, joined CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1740 by a ‘pot-board’, 153.5cm wide x 47cm deep x 72cm high, (60in wide Of slender proportions, having a panelled cupboard door enclosing x 18 1/2in deep x 28in high) three stepped and well-shaped shelves, all within an applied edge moulding, 50.5cm wide x 32cm deep x 85.5cm high, (19 1/2in wide x £3,000 - 4,000 12 1/2in deep x 33 1/2in high) Provenance: £300 - 400 Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, December 1999. Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, September 1995.

102

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 30 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 103

103 105 A CHARLES II OAK BOARDED CHEST, DATED 1684 A GEORGE III OAK DELFT RACK, CIRCA 1780 The hinged lid with chip-carved ends, the front carved with a pair of Having three open-shelves, each with a retaining bar, below a bold leafy-S-scrolls, each enclosing a hatch-carved lobe and with flattened-arch and scroll-profiled frieze, and flanked by ornate fretwork punch-decorated motifs, centred by the initials ‘WR’ and date ‘1684’ ‘pilasters’, 105.5cm wide x 15cm deep x 99cm high, (41 1/2in wide x below the iron lock-plate, scroll-profiled spandrels, the sides with 5 1/2in deep x 38 1/2in high) V-shaped ends, 97.5cm wide x 35cm deep x 47cm high, (38in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 18 1/2in high) £400 - 600

£600 - 800 Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Provenance: Oxfordshire, October 1992. Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 2000. 106 A SLENDER CHARLES II JOINED OAK COFFER, YORKSHIRE, 104 CIRCA 1660 A GEORGE IV OAK CORNER CHAIR, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1830 Having a twin-panelled hinged lid, the front with a deep top rail carved Having a three-part ‘horse-shaped’ arm-rest, on turned lotus-leaf with half-flower lunettes, a pair of panels below, each lozenge-carved carved supports and tulip-shaped splats, drop-in seat, the front with bold pennants, on run-moulded extended stile supports, interior cabriole leg with cloven foot, turned tapering rear legs, 76cm wide x lidded till, 100cm wide x 41.5cm deep x 60cm high, (39in wide x 16in 62cm deep x 81.5cm high, (29 1/2in wide x 24in deep x 32in high) deep x 23 1/2in high)

£200 - 300 £1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Purchased from Timothy Wilson, October 1983. Oxfordshire, February 1987.

106

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 31 107

107 109 A RARE AND REMARKABLE CHARLES I JOINED OAK AND A COLLECTION OF NINE BRASS JARDINIERES, DUTCH AND BOARDED SPINDLE-FILLED MURAL LIVERY CUPBOARD, ENGLISH, LATE 19TH/EARLY 20TH CENTURY DEVON, CIRCA 1640 To include a large example, embossed with fleur-de-lys type motifs, Having a frieze with applied corbels and split turned mouldings, a and with three handles and three lion’s paw feet, four examples pair of doors fitted with four-spindles above a narrow panel, all within embossed with fruit, flowers and foliage, three gadrooned examples, meandering stylized leaf-carved rails, and flanked by columnar-turned one of these with embossed decoration to the rim, and a small pilasters, a small cupboard below accessed by a central door with jardiniere, Dutch, embossed with a coat of arms, the largest 26cm pyramidal boss, flanked by fixed panels and turned split mouldings, high, (9) 90cm wide x 24cm deep x 77cm high, (35in wide x 9in deep x 30in high) £400 - 600

£7,000 - 10,000 110 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK AND UPHOLSTERED STOOL, Provenance: CIRCA 1680 Purchased from Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, May The square stuff-over seat upholstered in ivory and wine-coloured 2003. floral woven cotton-ground fabric, with boarded underside, on ring- turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, on pear-shaped 108 turned feet, 44cm wide x 43cm deep x 44cm high, (17in wide x 16 TWO LATE 19TH CENTURY BRASS JARDINIERES, DUTCH 1/2in deep x 17in high) Both circular, and with a band of swirling gadroons, one with a fluted collar, the second with an embossed collar, the larger 24.5cm £600 - 800 diameter x 21cm high, (2)

£200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 32 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 111 A CHARLES II OAK CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1680 Having an octagonal one-piece top with incised and moulded edge, an ornate spiral, acorn and baluster-turned pillar, on a small hexagonal base and three downswept and scroll-ended legs, 34cm wide x 32cm deep x 71cm high, (13in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

112 A SMALL EARLY 19TH CENTURY GILTWOOD PIER MIRROR, CIRCA 1820 Having a reverse-painted reserve designed with a ‘phoenix’ above a rectangular mirror-plate, flanked by cluster-columns, 36cm wide x 7cm deep x 58cm high, (14in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 22 1/2in high)

£300 - 500 111

113 A WILLIAM & MARY WALNUT AND UPHOLSTERED STOOL, CIRCA 1695 In the manner of Daniel Morot Having a square stuff-over deep seat upholstered in salmon-pink cotton-velvet, on four ball and faceted-baluster turned legs, joined by a wavy X-form stretcher centred by a turned finial, on squat turned feet, 43cm wide x 42cm deep x 48cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 18 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, December 1983.

114 TWO 18TH CENTURY POLYCHROME-DECORATED DELFT CHARGERS The first painted in red, yellow, blue and green, with peonies and 113 leaves, a stylised fence to a section of the rim, 33.5cm diameter, the second painted in blue, green and red, a stylised building in a garden, regular sprays of leaves to the rim, 34cm diameter, (2)

£200 - 300

115 A WILLIAM & MARY OAK AND ELM CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1690 Having a circular one-piece top with cockbeaded edge, and a baluster-turned pillar, on a cruciform base, 31cm wide x 30.5cm deep x 69.5cm high, (12in wide x 12in deep x 27in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Ernest Hopwell, Northamptonshire, October 1994.

115

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 33 116

116 A RARE ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK LOW CENTRE TABLE, CIRCA 1600 The boarded top having a square and linear incised edge, on addorsed baluster-turned legs centred by a prominent ring-turning, joined all round by narrow edge-moulded stretchers, with tall lower leg blocks, 72cm wide x 41.5cm deep x 60cm high, (28in wide x 16in deep x 23 1/2in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

Provenance: Purchased from William H. Stokes, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, April 1997.

117 117 A SMALL CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1670 Having an ovolo-moulded top, and slender frieze drawer, on block, ball and fillet-turned legs, joined by matching fore and rear mid-rails and an H-form stretcher, on turned feet, 69.5cm wide x 42.5cm deep x 65.5cm high, (27in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

118 A PARTICULARLY SMALL GEORGE I OAK SIDE TABLE, POSSIBLY FOR A CHILD, CIRCA 1720 Having a cleated boarded top and flattened-arched rails, a single frieze drawer, on baluster-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, turned feet, 63cm wide x 40cm deep x 55cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 21 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, April 1997.

118

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 34 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 119

119 121 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, THREE EARLY 20TH CENTURY COPPER JARDINIERES YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 To include a circular gadrooned example, with flared rim, 28cm Having a plain and mitre-moulded framed back panel, a double-scroll diameter x 21cm high, a rectangular, gadrooned example, 47cm wide carved cresting and integral run-moulded top rail set over plain back x 16cm deep x 12.5cm high, and a circular example, embossed with uprights, the broad and trapezoid-shaped seat formed principally from foliated scrolls encircling a heart, 29cm diameter x 27.5cm high, (3) one board and with ovolo-moulded edge, the shaped but relatively flat and particularly long arms on ‘egg’-turned front uprights, the matching £300 - 400 turned front legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 63cm wide x 54cm deep x 103cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 21in deep x 40 1/2in high) 122 A CHARLES I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK COFFER, WEST £3,000 - 4,000 COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 The hinged lid principally formed from one board with double-reeded Provenance: edge, the front with two panels, each carved with a filled-lozenge and Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, leafy spandrels, the broad muntin rail carved with paired stiff-leaves, Northamptonshire, March 1985. nulled-carved top rail and chain-carved stiles, the side boards with V-shaped ends, 111cm wide x 39cm deep x 58cm high, (43 1/2in 120 wide x 15in deep x 22 1/2in high) FOUR LATE 19TH/EARLY 20TH CENTURY BRASS AND COPPER JARDINIERES, DUTCH AND ENGLISH £1,200 - 1,800 The largest embossed with the coat of arms of a Dutch city or town, and with a pastoral scene, 30.5cm diameter x 16.5cm high, (4) Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, £400 - 600 Northamptonshire, March 1999.

122

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 35 123

123 (detail) 123 A RARE AND DOCUMENTED NEAR-PAIR OF GEORGE III JOINED OAK COFFOR BACHS, CARMARTHENSHIRE, CIRCA 1770 One maker stamped Each with typical detachable ovolo edge-moulded lid, the front with paired pointed-ogee arched raised and fielded panels, the scroll- profiled plinth base enclosing two short lip-moulded drawers, with reeded front feet, one stamped twice ‘W. Lewis’ to side, 61cm wide x 35cm deep x 51cm high, (24in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 20in high)

£5,000 - 8,000

Provenance: Purchased Country Antiques, Richard Bebb, Dyfed, July 1995.

Illustrated: Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250-1950 (2007), Vol. II, p. 75, pl. 775 & 776.

124 A GEORGE II JOINED OAK VENTILATED MURAL CUPBOARD, DENBIGHSHIRE, CIRCA 1750 Possibly originally built-in, the single door having a panel filled with five wavy-shaped slats atop a plain panel, enclosing two fruitwood shelves, 53cm wide x 18cm deep x 68cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 7in deep x 26 1/2in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire.

124

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 36 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 125

125 AN INTERESTING JAMES I BOARDED OAK CHEST, CIRCA 1610 The one-piece top with chip-carved ends, the front carved with a broad band of flower-filled guilloche, above the carved ownership initials ‘S’ (reversed) and H’, the extended sides with ‘M’-shaped ends and profiled below the base board, 96cm wide x 34cm deep x 54.5cm high, (37 1/2in wide x 13in deep x 21in high) 125 (detail) £1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Richard Bebb, Country Antiques, Kidwelly, Dyfed, May 1997.

126 A GEORGE III OAK WINE TABLE OR CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1760 Of slender proportions, the circular fixed-top on a vase and baluster- turned pillar and three tall downswept legs, 33cm wide x 32cm deep x 64.5cm high, (12 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 25in high)

£600 - 800

127 A SMALL JOINED OAK, FRUITWOOD, PARQUETRY-INLAID AND SPINDLE-FILLED MURAL CUPBOARD Early 17th century and later The single door having two rows of six baluster-turned spindles within inlaid rails, enclosing a single-shelf, all framed by a deep-moulding headed by dentils, 53cm wide x 20cm deep x 57.5cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 22 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

Provenance: Purchased from D. J. Baggott, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, 1997. Noted as ‘from a Farmhouse in North Derbyshire’.

127

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 37 129 130

128

132

131

134 133 135

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 38 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 136

128 132 AN 18TH CENTURY SHEET BRASS WALL SCONCE, DUTCH A SMALL BRASS ALMS DISH The arched backplate with a gadrooned border, and fitted with a The dish embossed with four stalked pomegranates around a central rectangular tray of two candle sockets secured with copper rivets, pomegranate fruit, with a swirling booge and a punch-decorated rim 20cm wide x 11cm deep x 35cm high, (7 1/2in wide x 4in deep x 13 with rolled edge, 27.5cm diameter 1/2in high) £700 - 1,000 £200 - 300 133 Provenance: A PAIR OF BRASS WALL SCONCES Purchased Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Each topped by eight bosses arranged to form a flowerhead, and Gloucestershire, January 2000, £380. above a ‘Tudor Rose’-type stalked flower, 10cm wide x 8cm deep x 29.5cm high, (3 1/2in wide x 3in deep x 11 1/2in high) (2) Literature: Two similar single socket examples are illustrated R. Gentle & R. Feild, £200 - 300 Domestic Metalwork 1640-1820 (1998), p. 202, Fig. 14. 134 129 A BRASS WALL SCONCE, DUTCH AN UNUSUAL BRASS ALMS DISH, GERMAN The backplate with guilloche edge framing a fleur-de-lys type motif, Possibly late 17th/early 18th century the pan with folded edge and fitted with three candle sockets, 22cm Decorated with a spray of fruit, including a pear, and apple and wide x 12cm deep x 31.5cm high, (8 1/2in wide x 4 1/2in deep x 12in grapes, the rim with two bands of punched decoration, 28.5cm high) diameter £300 - 500 £400 - 600 135 Provenance: A SCOTTISH ARTS & CRAFTS BRASS WALL SCONCE, BY J. & The Paul Hopwell Collection. CO., CIRCA 1905 The backplate with Celtic interlaced strapwork and a large central 130 flower, 30m high, together with a 19th century sheet brass spill A BRASS WALL SCONCE holder, with rounded backplate with a circlet of bosses and pierced The arched backplate embossed with The Grape Carriers, the pan for hanging, 21cm high, (2) with pinched front corners and fitted with a decorated candle socket fixed to the pan with a pair of folded tabs, 21cm wide x 10cm deep x £200 - 300 27cm high, (8in wide x 3 1/2in deep x 10 1/2in high) Provenance: £150 - 200 The spill holder purchased Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, June 2000. 131 A FIRST HALF OF THE 16TH CENTURY BRASS ALMS DISH, 136 NUREMBERG, CIRCA 1500 - 1550 A PAIR OF EARLY 18TH CENTURY BRASS WALL SCONCES, Decorated with the ‘fischblasenmotive’ pattern of sixteen swirling DUTCH, CIRCA 1720 gadroons, within two circlets of Gothic script, and a gadrooned Each having an arched backplate decorated with a heart above ‘C’- booge, the rolled rim decorated with a band of punched decoration, scrolls and a shield, and a pan with rolled edge and candle socket, 40.5cm diameter 16cm wide x 6.5cm deep x 25.5cm high, (6in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 10in high) (2) £600 - 800 £400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 39 137

137 139 AN UNUSUAL CHARLES II JOINED OAK OPEN ARMCHAIR, A SMALL WILLIAM & MARY OAK AND ELM CENTRE TABLE, CHESHIRE/LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1670 CIRCA 1700 Having a pointed-scroll profiled cresting carved with flora, and a The boarded top with gently rounded edge, above shallow rails with well-carved floral back panel, integral pyramidal-finials to the uprights, narrow moulded lower edge, on baluster-turned legs, joined by plain the open scroll-over arms on ball-turned supports, panelled seat, stretchers, on turned feet, 55cm wide x 46.5cm deep x 58.5cm high, the matching turned front legs joined by a fore-rail and low side and (21 1/2in wide x 18in deep x 23in high) rear stretchers all unusually ball-turned, 55cm wide x 58cm deep x 104.5cm high, (21 1/2in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 41in high) £700 - 1,000

£4,000 - 6,000 Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Provenance: Gloucestershire, April 1986. Purchased from Beedham Antiques Ltd., Hungerford, Berkshire, June 2005. 140 A SET OF SMALL GEORGE III BOARDED ELM AND OAK OPEN 138 MURAL SHELVES, CIRCA 1810 A SMALL GEORGE III OAK TRIPOD OCCASIONAL TABLE, Having three shelves, with lip-moulded applied edge mouldings, 53cm CIRCA 1780 wide x 17cm deep x 67cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 6 1/2in deep x 26in With a fixed triple-boarded near-circular top, vase-turned pillar and high) three hipped and downswept legs with pad feet, 49cm wide x 48cm deep x 64’cm high, (19in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 25in high) £300 - 500

£400 - 600 Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Provenance: Oxfordshire, September 1989. Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, January 1996.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 40 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 141 141 143 A RARE AND IMPRESSIVE GEORGE II SOLID YEW-WOOD A LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY SYCAMORE DAIRY HIGH DRESSER, DENBIGHSHIRE, CIRCA 1750 BOWL The multiple boarded rack with two shelves flanked by ogee-profiled Turned with faint line decoration to the exterior, 40cm diameter sides, the fully-enclosed base with a single shelf superstructure, above three fielded drawers, atop a pair of fielded panelled cupboards £200 - 300 centred by a fixed arched fielded panel, single-panelled sides, on bracket feet, 181cm wide x 49cm deep x 206.5cm high, (71in wide x 144 19in deep x 81in high) A 19TH CENTURY ELM BOWL Turned with a faint line around the rim, 26cm diameter, together with £8,000 - 12,000 another smaller bowl, 21.5cm diameter, (2)

Provenance: £200 - 300 Purchased from Richard Bebb, County Antiques, Kidwelly, Dyfed, October 1993.

142 A PAIR OF 19TH CENTURY BRASS JARDINIÈRES, DUTCH Both having a rope-twist rolled rim above a frieze embossed with foliated scrolls and ring handles held by lion mask backplates, above a band of swirling gadroons and on three paw-cast feet, 18cm diameter x 18cm high, (2)

£300 - 400

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 41 145 A SMALL CHARLES II JOINED OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1680 The boarded top with applied cyma-reversa edge moulding, above four drawers, each with applied and paired mitre-mouldings, on front bun feet, typically in two-parts, 84cm wide x 53.5cm deep x 84cm high, (33in wide x 21in deep x 33in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: 145 Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1993.

146 A JAMES I JOINED OAK CREDENCE-TYPE TABLE, SALISBURY AND THE SURROUNDING AREA, CIRCA 1620 Having a deep one-piece fixed top of canted form, a central nulled- carved frieze drawer, and leafy-scroll carved arcaded aprons with acorn-pendants, on columnar and ring-turned legs, joined by a boarded undertier, with cable-carved base rails, lacking fold-over top and rear gate, 84cm wide x 49cm deep x 78cm high, (33in wide x 19in deep x 30 1/2in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Purchased from Peter Norden Antiques, Burford, Oxfordshire, December 1985.

147 A GEORGE II JOINED WALNUT MURAL CORNER CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1730 Having an integral shaped superstructure with open shelf, and an 146 elegant fielded ogee-arched panelled door, enclosing a pair of round and serpentine-shaped shelves, 55cm wide x 108cm deep x 31cm high, (21 1/2in wide x 42 1/2in deep x 12in high)

£500 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, 1983.

148 A GEORGE I WALNUT-VENEERED, CROSSBANDED AND FEATHERBAND-INLAID CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1720 Having a quarter-veneered top, above a very slender cushion-moulded ‘map’ drawer, atop two short and three long drawers, within double- bead mouldings, 96cm wide x 50cm deep x 102cm high, (38in wide x 20in deep x 40.5in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

148

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 42 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 149

149 151 AN IMPRESSIVE CHARLES II JOINED OAK AND INLAID PANEL- A GEORGE II OAK, PINE AND CROSSBANDED MURAL BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 CORNER CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1740 The back of two panels, having a narrow panel inlaid with tulip Having an integral shaped open-shelf superstructure, and an arched flowers, above a large panel centred by a carved roundel within a fielded cupboard door enclosing a pair of shelves, 67.5cm wide x stylized foliate surround, the uprights carved with meandering flora, 35cm deep x 107.5cm high, (26 1/2in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 42in the bold cresting of double-scroll-outline, centred by a small mask high) and carved with stylized-vine motifs, scroll-carved elongated ‘ears’, the downswept arms with scroll-carved ends and punch-decoration, £300 - 400 single seat board, bicupsid shaped and chevron-inlaid front seat rail, on squat ball-turned front legs, joined all round by narrow run- 152 moulded stretchers, 62.5cm wide x 59cm deep x 122.5cm high, (24 A WILLIAM & MARY OAK TRIPOD OCCASIONAL TABLE, CIRCA 1/2in wide x 23in deep x 48in high) 1700 Having a circular twin-boarded tilt-top, a bold baluster-turned pillar £8,000 - 10,000 with dome-end, and three hipped and scroll-profiled legs, 62.5cm wide x 62,5cm deep x 64.5cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 24in deep x 25in Provenance: high) Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, June 1996. £800 - 1,200

Literature: Provenance: For a comparable armchair from the J. Thursby Pelham collection see Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, R. Symonds Present State of Old English Furniture (1927), fig. 11. Northamptonshire, April 1997.

150 A SMALL VICTORIAN MAHOGANY PEDESTAL DESK, CIRCA 1850 Having a green-leather skiver, above two cockbeaded frieze drawers, each pedestal with three further drawers, on a plinth base, 122cm wide x 75cm deep x 77cm high, (48in wide x 29 1/2in deep x 30in high)

£500 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 43 153 A CHARLES II JOINED AND BOARDED OAK MURAL CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1670 Having a single fielded panelled cupboard door centred by a relief- carved lozenge, enclosing a single shelf, 58.5cm wide x 19.5cm deep x 50cm high, (23in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 19 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, July 1996.

154 A QUEEN ANNE/GEORGE I BRASS SOCKET CANDLETSICK, 153 CIRCA 1710-25 With facetted socket and double-knopped stem, hexagonal base, and bearing a collection label reading ‘G.B. Golding Barrett Collection’, 16.5cm high together with a late 17th/early 18th century candlestick, English, circa 1700, with double-knopped stem and octagonal base, 17cm high, three mid-18th century push-ejector candlesticks, all with petal bases, the tallest 14cm high, and three further candlesticks, and three chambersticks, one, circa 1760, with snuffer nozzle, (11)

£250 - 350

Provenance: The first candlestick in this lot ex-Golding Barrett Collection. One (20cm high) of the petal-based candlesticks with petal-edged rim to the candlesocket purchased Maurice Goldstone & Son, Bakewell, Derbyshire, November 1983.

155 A GEORGE I JOINED OAK MURAL SPICE CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1730 Of unusual dome-formed, having a cavetto-moulded cornice, and arched fielded panelled cupboard door enclosing a fitted interior of six small drawers, base moulding, 51cm wide x 21.5cm deep x 70cm high, (20in wide x 8in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£1,500 - 2,000 155 Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, January 1997.

156 A GEORGE III JOINED OAK MURAL CORNER CUPBOARD, LLANWRST, NORTH WALES, CIRCA 1770 The single door having an applied flattened-ogee arched panel, enclosing a single shelf and drawer, 52cm wide x 28cm deep x 63cm high, (20in wide x 11in deep x 24 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, July 1999.

156

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 44 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 157 A WILLIAM & MARY OAK CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1700 The hexagonal top with chamfered under-edge, on three curved brackets and a ball-finial and baluster-turned pillar, with hexagonal- shaped base and three relatively flat scroll-shaped legs with roll-over feet, 38cm wide x 33cm deep x 65cm high, (14 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£700 - 1,000

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, October 1992.

158 AN INTERESTING WILLIAM & MARY OAK PANEL-BACK CHAIR, 1690 Having a scroll-carved cresting centred by a pierced and carved 157 crown, atop a plain and fielded back-panel and a scroll-carved base rail, the uprights with integral scallop-shell finials, panelled-seat, on block and ball-turned legs, joined by a turned fore-rail and multiple plain and side stretchers, 46.5cm wide x 43cm deep x 117cm high, (18in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 46in high)

£500 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, October 1998.

159 A GEORGE III JOINED OAK AND FRUITWOOD INLAID MURAL CORNER CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1790 Having a shallow dentil-moulded frieze, and single fielded panelled cupboard door centred by a small inlaid-lozenge, enclosing a pair of shelves, 62cm wide x 34cm deep x 77cm high, (24in wide x 13in deep x 30in high)

£300 - 500

160 A CHARLES II OAK CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1680 Having an octagonal-shaped ovolo-moulded top, and a spiral over baluster-turned pillar, on a deep hexagonal-shaped base and three 158 downswept relatively flat legs, 34cm wide x 32.5cm deep x 69.5cm high, (13in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 27in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, December 1995.

160

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 45 161

161 163 AN INTERESTING HARLEQUIN SET OF SIX JOINED OAK A CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOL, DERBYSHIRE/ BACKSTOOLS, INCLUDING A PAIR, YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Each having a pair of arched splats carved with tight-scrolls, with Having two arched splats, each gauge-carved with a smooth top cusp-profiled upper edge and ‘horse-shoe’-shaped lower edge and cusped lower edge, centred by a stylized tulip and embellished with drop-pendants, the back uprights mainly inward-facing scroll with small acorn finials and pendants, the uprights with inward- terminals, panelled seat, on block and ball-turned front legs, joined by facing scroll-carved ends, panelled seat, on block and ball-turned a turned fore-rail, multiple plain stretchers, approximately: 46cm wide legs, joined by a ball-turned fore-rail and multiple plain side and rear x 40cm deep x 103cm high, (18in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 40 1/2in stretchers, 45.5cm wide x 42cm deep x 100cm high, (17 1/2in wide x high) (6) 16 1/2in deep x 39in high)

£2,000 - 3,000 £400 - 600

162 Provenance: A CHARLES II JOINED OAK SPINDLE-BACK CHAIR, NORTH Purchased from William H. Stokes, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, COUNTRY, CIRCA 1680 September 2000. The back of four robust flattened-ball turned spindles, supported between leafy-scroll carved horizontal rails, with integral ball-finials Similar backstools are in the collections at Aston Hall, Birmingham and to the block and ball-turned back uprights, panelled seat, on block the Chapel, Hardwick Hall, Derbyshire. and ball-turned front legs, joined by a matching turned fore-rail and stretchers, 45cm wide x 42cm deep x 104.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 164 16 1/2in deep x 41in high) AN OAK DRAW-LEAF TABLE In the late 16th century manner £400 - 600 The end-cleated boarded top with two draw-leaves, nulled-carved long frieze rails, on bulbous cup-and-cover gadrooned and palmette- Provenance: carved end-supports, with sledge-type feet, joined by a foot-stretcher, Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, open: 243.5cm wide x 90.5cm deep x 76cm high, (95 1/2in wide x 35 Gloucestershire, December 2002. 1/2in deep x 29 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 46 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 165

165 167 A RARE CHARLES I BOARDED OAK AND ELM GLASS CASE, A 19TH CENTURY CARVED FRUITWOOD ROLLING PIN, FOR CIRCA 1640 BUTTER OR PASTE, WELSH Having a diagonal dentil-moulded cornice, and a bold tulip and Centred by a vine of leaves and berries between further bands of scrolling-leaf carved double-arcaded frieze, above two open shelves, various foliate and geometric motifs, 41cm wide with applied floral-carved front rails and sides, 88.5cm wide x 18cm deep x 68cm high, (34 1/2in wide x 7in deep x 26 1/2in high) £200 - 300

£4,000 - 6,000 Provenance: Purchased Avon Antiques, Bradford on Avon, Wiltshire, March 1997. Provenance: Purchased from Avon Antiques Ltd., Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, 168 August 1997. Noted on the receipt from ‘Glamorgan’. AN EARLY TO MID-18TH CENTURY COPPER CHAFING DISH, FRENCH, CIRCA 1720-60 166 The charcoal pan with decorative pierced cover, and pierced to its A CHARLES II JOINED WALNUT AND CANED ARMCHAIR, sides with hearts and triangles, 18cm pan diameter x 16cm high, CIRCA 1680 together with a mid- to late 18th century brass and copper Having a pierced and carved acanthus-leaf cresting centred by a chafing dish, probably Dutch, with brass pan and charcoal cover, cherub mask, above a caned back framed by foliate carved and and three copper legs, turned wooden handle, 22.5cm pan diameter pierced rails, with compact spiral-turned uprights, bud-carved finials, x 13cm high, (2) leafy-carved scroll-ended arms, a broad caned seat, and pad and claw-carved front feet, 61cm wide x 58cm deep x 116cm high, (24in £200 - 300 wide x 22 1/2in deep x 45 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, April 1995.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 47 169 A GEORGE I WALNUT-VENEERED TOILET MIRROR, CIRCA 1725 Having a rare two-tier serpentine shaped base, fitted with four drawers, the mirror-plate within a flattened ogee-arched frame, on swivel-action screws connected to final topped uprights, bun feet, 38cm wide x 19cm deep x 63cm high, (14 1/2in wide x 7in deep x 24 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: Purchased from Lucy Johnson, Belgravia, London, February 1988.

170 169 A WALNUT AND OYSTER-VENEERED ‘LACE’ BOX Early 18th century, English The hinged cover decorated with a design of oyster veneers and holly or sycamore lines, the interior lined with salmon-pink fabric and fitted to the underside of the lid with a mirror, 43cm wide x 32.5cm deep x 10cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 3 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, November 1992, dated to circa 1740. 170 171 A PAIR OF 19TH CENTURY SHEET BRASS MIRRORS, DUTCH, CIRCA 1870 Having a bevelled plate and four canted marginal plates, set between embossed Rococo-motif bands, with mask and fruit embellished cresting, 32.5cm wide x 4cm deep x 55cm high, (12 1/2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 21 1/2in high) (2)

£400 - 600

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, January 1995.

172 A CARVED GILTWOOD MIRROR Mid-18th century, Italian The cartouche-shaped frame designed with rockwork, C-scrolls and floral ribbons, 52.5cm wide x 7cm deep x 90cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 35in high)

£600 - 800

172

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 48 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 173 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1690 Having a twin-boarded top with ovolo-moulded edge, a single frieze drawer, on block and peg-baluster turned legs, joined by matching fore and rear mid-rails and H-form stretcher, on high turned feet, 72cm wide x 51cm deep x 70cm high, (28in wide x 20in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

174 173 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK SIDE CHAIR, CIRCA 1690 With open and slender arched panelled-back, a scroll-carved and pierced cresting, ball-turned and faceted back-uprights, panelled-seat, and block and baluster-turned front legs, joined by a peg-baluster turned fore-rail and conforming H-shaped stretcher, 44cm wide x 39cm deep x 116cm high, (17in wide x 15in deep x 45 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

Provenance Remains of a handwritten paper label to the underside of the seat reading: ‘English (Suffolk) Col./Woodbridge Suffolk, Gordon Roe F.S.A’.

Frederick Gordon Roe (1894-1895), author and art critic, was the son of Fred Roe (1864-1947), the author and illustrator of A History of Oak Furniture (1920).

175 A GEORGE III OAK WINE TABLE, CIRCA 1760 Having a thin one-piece circular top, and a columnar-turned and tapering pillar, on three downswept legs, pad feet, 39cm wide x 39.5cm deep x 69.5cm high, (15in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 27in high)

£400 - 600

176 174 AN ELEGANT WILLIAM & MARY OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1695 Having a thin one-piece top, a frieze drawer and slender double ogee- arched cockbeaded apron centred by an acorn-turned pendant, on ornate baluster-turned legs, joined by a wavy X-form stretcher with central turned finial, on elm bun feet, 80cm wide x 49.5cm deep x 71cm high, (31in wide x 19in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

176

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 49 177

177 180 A RARE AND GOOD CHARLES I FRUITWOOD AND OAK ELEVEN ITEMS OF DOMESTIC BRASS AND COPPER MURAL CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1640 The brass items comprising, a 1/2 gallon brass measuring jug, Having a thin one-piece top board, and a shallow cupboard enclosed 24.5cm high, a mid-19th century student’s lamp, by Miller and Sons, by a small panelled door centred by a pyramidal boss, flanked by with shade and marked ‘Miller’s London’, some original green paint, similar proportioned plain panels, a long and compartmentalized 38.5cm high, an early 18th century brass mug, English, 11.5cm drawer below with eight matching bosses, 85cm wide x 21.5cm deep high, an 18th century brass jug, English, 16.5cm high, a George III x 42.5cm high, (33in wide x 8in deep x 16 1/2in high) brass muffineer, 10cm high and an early 19th century brass hanging candlebox, 14cm high; the copper items comprising, a Victorian £6,000 - 8,000 copper gallon haystack measure, 27cm high, an Irish copper haystack measure, with marks to the rim, 17.5cm high, a mid-19th century Provenance small copper tankard, with lignum vitae base, 10cm high, an early The Clive Sherwood Collection. Inventory No.103 to the rear of the 19th century lidded copper jug, with hinged spout cover, 16cm high, door. and an early 19th century small copper lidded saucepan, with fine Sold Sotheby’s Olympia, London, 22 May 2003, Lot 181. lignum vitae handle, 16cm high, (11)

178 £200 - 300 A GEORGE III OAK LONGCASE CLOCK, CIRCA 1770 AND LATER Provenance: The hood with caddy top, the long trunk door with double-arched top The half gallon jug purchased Paul Hopwell Antique, West Haddon, and crossbanding, the associated ten inch face with Roman numeral Northamptonshire, March 1985. dial and cherub mask spandrels, associated movement, 48.5cm wide The 18th century brass jug purchased Peter Norden Antiques, x 26cm deep x 200cm high, (19in wide x 10in deep x 78 1/2in high) Burford, Oxfordshire, December 1985. The muffineer purchased Ernest Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, £800 - 1,000 Northamptonshire, 1984. The candlebox purchased Jack Casimir, Notting Hill Gate, London, 179 1985. A GEORGE III WALNUT AND FRUITWOOD TRIPOD WINE The copper haystack jugs both purchased Paul Hopwell Antiques, TABLE, CIRCA 1790 West Haddon, Northamptonshire, 1995, as was the small copper Having a one-piece shallow-dished top with moulded edge, the pillar saucepan (in 1992). with reeded collar and spiral-reeded vase-turned base, on three The small copper tankard purchased Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, downswept legs terminating in pad feet, 41.5cm wide x 41.5cm deep Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, 1985, as was the lidded copper jug x 67cm high, (16in wide x 16in deep x 26in high) with hinged spout cover (in 1997).

£600 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 50 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 181

181 183 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK AND FRUITWOOD CHEST- A GROUP OF 18TH-20TH CENTURY BRASS AND IRON ON-STAND, CIRCA 1690 KITCHEN UTENSILS The chest with typically thin top boards, above two short over three To include an 18th century brass and iron spoon, with ram’s horn long mitre and cushion-moulded drawers, the stand with a further long terminal, 46cm high, an 18th century brass and iron straining ladle, drawer, on five ball over peg-baluster turned legs, joined by peripheral the bowl with pierced projection and loop handle terminal, 51cm high, concave -shaped platform stretchers, 97cm wide x 54cm deep x and an 18th century brass slice, with rounded terminal, 46cm high, 127cm high, (38in wide x 21in deep x 50in high) together with a pair of brass and iron tongs, a spoon, a small fire shovel, and two large skimmers, (8) £3,000 - 4,000 £300 - 500 Provenance: Purchased from Beedham Antiques Ltd., Bakewell, Derbyshire, Provenance: November 1996. The ‘U’-shaped skimmer purchased Ernest Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, June 1985. 182 A GEORGE III LONDON (LAMBETH) DELFT SMALL PLATE, 184 CIRCA 1765 A GEORGE II JOINED OAK STANDING CORNER CUPBOARD, Probably from the Abigail Griffiths factory, painted in red, yellow, blue CIRCA 1740 and green, depicting a Chinese man seated in a garden, flowering Having a cavetto-moulded cornice, a pair of arched fielded cupboard plants and stylised trees nearby, the borders with symmetrical floral doors, and waist-moulding above two rectangular fielded doors, a sprays, 22cm diameter, together with a polychrome delft plate, bracket-shaped plinth, and four interior shelves, 103.5cm wide x painted with an urn or table issuing flowers, and a polychrome delft 58cm deep x 202.5cm high, (40 1/2in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 79 1/2in dish, Dutch, painted with flowers, and a French faience plate, painted high) with a cockerel, (4) £800 - 1,200 £200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 51 185 A SMALL GEORGE III ELM CRICKET TABLE, CIRCA 1800 With an oval one-piece and well-figured top, plain rails, and triangular- shaped legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 53.5cm wide x 47.5cm deep x 48.5cm high, (21in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 19in high) 185 £400 - 600

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, October 1991.

186 A RARE GEORGE III ASH, OAK, ELM AND FRUITWOOD-INLAID TRIPOD OCCASIONAL TABLE, WELSH, CIRCA 1780 The near-circular tilt-top inlaid with arrow-heads to the four cardinal points, hearts to the ordinal directions and a large broken-stellar motif formed of lozenges to the centre, on an elm baluster-turned pillar and three downswept legs with shaped pad terminals, 64cm wide x 61.5cm deep x 64cm high, (25in wide x 24in deep x 25in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Key Antiques, Danny Robinson, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, September 1997.

187 A GEORGE III OAK DISH-TOP TRIPOD OCCASIONAL TABLE, CIRCA 1780 Having a single-piece fixed top, on a baluster-turned pillar and three 186 hipped and downswept legs, pad feet, 46cm wide x 46cm deep x 66cm high, (18in wide x 18in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£500 - 800

188 A SMALL GEORGE III JOINED ELM AND OAK CRICKET TABLE, CIRCA 1790 Having a near-circular one-piece elm top, on three triangular-shaped slender and tapering legs, joined by a moulded galleried undertier, 43cm wide x 42cm deep x 66cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, May 1997.

188

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 52 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 189

189 A SMALL CHARLES I BOARDED OAK BOX, CIRCA 1640 The hinged lid with moulded edge, the front board carved with a run of interlaced floral roundels, the sides each with a foliate lunette, 37cm wide x 22cm deep x 15cm high, (14 1/2in wide x 8 1/2in deep x 5 1/2in high)

£500 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, Jiuly 1986.

190 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having an ovolo-moulded top, chain-motif carved and punch- decorated rails, and slender parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, of good height, 45cm wide x 27cm deep x 58cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22 1/2in high) 190

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, June 1984.

191 A GEORGE III OAK TRAVELLING DESK BOX, CIRCA 1760 The hinged lid with cleated ends enclosing an interior fitted with divisions forming compartments for pens and inkpots, all above a long drawer with line-carved edge, a brass carry handle at either end, 53cm wide x 26.5cm deep x 19cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 191 7in high)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, May 1987.

192 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having an ovolo-moulded and six-pegged top, bicuspid-shaped rails, on rising-baluster turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 45.5cm wide x 28cm deep x 54.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 21in high)

£800 - 1,200

192

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 53 193

193 196 A GEORGE II JOINED OAK AND INLAID OPEN LOW DRESSER, AN UNUSUAL GEORGE III ELM DELFT RACK, WITH BRECONSHIRE, CIRCA 1740 CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1760 Having a boarded top with ovolo-moulded edge, three frieze drawers Having a cyma-recta cornice, a frieze with paired profiled-scrolls, and with incised edge, above two very small chequer-inlaid drawers, centred by a small cupboard enclosed by an arched boarded door, spaced by three arched and cusp-profiled aprons, on four baluster- with three shelves, 129cm wide x 17.5cm deep x 100cm high, (50 turned front legs, joined by a ‘pot-board’, 173cm wide x 48cm deep x 1/2in wide x 6 1/2in deep x 39in high) 82cm high, (68in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 32in high) £700 - 1,000 £3,000 - 4,000 Provenance: Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Purchased from Paul Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Oxfordshire, December 1995. Northamptonshire, January 2000. 197 194 TWO WILLIAM & MARY SLAT-BACK OAK AND ELM CHAIRS, A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK SLAT-BACK CHAIR, CIRCA YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1690 1690 One back with four dished-splats, the other with a single similar splat The back with a wavy-profiled central splat, flanked by double-scroll flanked by leafy scroll-carved splats, both with a double C-scroll and tulip-head carved splats, morticed between a similar carved carved cresting, each back upright centred by an incised lozenge- cresting rail and lower back rail, the faceted and paired baluster- shape and with inward-facing scroll finials, elm panelled seat, on block turned uprights with flattened-ball finials, panelled seat, on block and and baluster-turned front legs, joined by a baluster-turned fore-rail ball-turned front legs, joined by a matching turned H-form stretcher and multiple plain side and rear stretchers, 44cm wide x 38cm deep x and a fore-rail mirroring the cresting rail, 46cm wide x 42cm deep x 116cm high, (17in wide x 14 1/2in deep x 45 1/2in high) (2) 118.5cm high, (18in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 46 1/2in high) £700 - 1,000 £400 - 600 Provenance: 195 Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, A CHARLES II OAK BACKSTOOL, DERBYSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Oxfordshire, August 1989 & March 1991. Having a slender triple-arched top-rail, on baluster-turned spindles, the lower back-rail with linear gauge-carving, and further decoration in the form of acorn pendants, the scroll-finial uprights with split-baluster and button mouldings, panelled seat on block and baluster-turned front legs joined by plain low level stretchers, 50cm wide x 46cm deep x 98cm high, (19 1/2in wide x 18in deep x 38 1/2in high)

£300 - 400

Provenance: Collection of Mr and Mrs H. Beedham, Hungerford, Berkshire.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 54 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 198 (side) 198

198 200 AN UNUSUAL CHARLES II OAK, ELM AND INLAID CHEST OF A HARLEQUIN SET OF SIX BEECH, ASH, FRUITWOOD AND DRAWERS, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1680 ELM WINDSOR ARMCHAIRS The boarded top with cyma-recta under-edge moulding, atop three Each having a hoop back with wheel-motif fretted splat flanked by graduated mitre-moulded drawers, the sides with two panels, each three spindles, the outsplayed arms on crooked front arm supports, with a large linear-inlaid lozenge enclosing a single flowerhead, on a couple with maker’s initials to the rear of the elm saddle seat, on front bun feet and rear extended stiles, 98.5cm wide x 56.5cm deep x baluster-turned legs joined by an elliptical-turned H-form stretcher, 83cm high, (38 1/2in wide x 22in deep x 32 1/2in high) general dimensions: 57cm wide x 49cm deep x 93cm high, (22in wide x 19in deep x 36 1/2in high) (6) £1,000 - 1,500 £1,500 - 2,000 Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Provenance: Oxfordshire, July 1991. Two armchairs purchased from Dr Bernard D. Cotton, author of The English Regional Chair (1990), March 1985 & December 1987. 199 A CHARLES II OAK BACKSTOOL, SOUTH LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 201 1680 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK TRIPOD OCCASIONAL The back-panel and tall arched cresting each floral-carved, the back TABLE, CIRCA 1700 uprights with pyramidal finials, panelled seat, on block and ball-turned Having a circular tilt-top and bird-cage movement, the slender legs joined by a baluster-turned fore-rail and multiple plain side and baluster-turned pillar with hexagonal base and turned pendant, on rear stretchers, 45cm wide x 43cm deep x 114cm high, (17 1/2in wide scroll-profiled hipped legs with upturned feet, 66.5cm wide x 67cm x 16 1/2in deep x 44 1/2in high) deep x 66cm high, (26in wide x 26in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£400 - 600 £700 - 1,000

Provenance: Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Gloucestershire, September 1996. Oxfordshire, June 1992.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 55 202 A GEORGE I JOINED OAK SIDE/DRESSING TABLE, CIRCA 1720 The twin-boarded top with ovolo-moulded side and front edge, above an arched and ogee-shaped cockbeaded apron, enclosing two deep drawers centred by a shallow drawer, all framed by reeded-mouldings, and with two tear-drop turned pendants, on slender baluster-turned legs, joined all round by upper edge moulded stretchers, on thistle- shaped feet, 75.5cm wide x 48.5cm deep x 73cm high, (29 1/2in wide x 19in deep x 28 1/2in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, August 1996.

202 203 A SMALL CHARLES I OAK COFFER, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having a one-piece top board, the front of two panels, each freely- carved with a ‘quatrefoil’ with incised and punched-decoration, the top carved with addorsed leafy S-scrolls, the design extending to the stiff-leaf carved front stiles, the base-rail navette-carved, impressive one-piece base board, 70cm wide x 32cm deep x 40cm high, (27 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 15 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1998.

204 A SMALL WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK CENTRE TABLE, CIRCA 1690 Having a boarded end-cleated top, and shallow frieze rails with moulded lower edge, on rising baluster and reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, pear-shaped turned feet, 64cm wide x 72cm deep x 65cm high, (25in wide x 28in deep x 25 1/2in high) 203 £700 - 1,000

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, November 1989.

205 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK CENTRE TABLE, CIRCA 1700 Having a boarded top with ‘torus’ moulded edge, ogee-shaped rails, and elongated baluster-turned legs, joined by a curved X-form platform stretcher, bun feet, 64cm wide x 48cm deep x 66cm high, (25in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, February 1992.

205

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 56 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 206

206 207 A RARE JAMES I/CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, WEST TWO LATE 19TH CENTURY BRASS OVAL JARDINIÈRES, COUNTRY, POSSIBLY TAUNTON, SOMERSET, CIRCA 1620-30 DUTCH Having a six-pegged top with narrow double-reeded and ovolo- Each with repoussé decoration and on paw feet, one with embossed moulded edge, well-defined bicuspid-shaped rails, on baluster- shells and foliage to its neck 36.5cm wide x 27cm deep x 21.5cm turned legs, the rare H-form stretcher formed by a central flat rail and high, the second with fluted neck, 34cm wide x 26cm deep x 15.5cm rectangular-section edge-moulded end-rails, 46.5cm wide x 28.5cm high, together with four further oval jardinières, (6) deep x 58.5cm high, (18in wide x 11in deep x 23in high) £400 - 600 £5,000 - 8,000 208 Provenance: A PAIR OF GEORGE III LONDON (LAMBETH) DELFT Olympia Fine Art Fair, London, 1990. CHARGERS, WITH SEVEN SIMILAR PLATES, CIRCA 1775 All painted in colours with flowers and flowering plants, mountains Literature beyond, the border with sprays of blue and yellow, and purple, Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), flowers, the chargers 34cm diameter; the plates 22.5cm diameter, (9) illustrates a similar stool, p. 229, pl. 295, sold in these rooms 19 February 2020 (£13,812). A further example, illustrated, p. 228, pl. £500 - 800 294, is probably from the same workshop, or at the very least the same geographic region. Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British 209 Tradition (2016), illustrates a third example from the F. E. Anderson THREE 20TH CENTURY BRASS STANDARD LAMPS Collection, p. 226, fig. 3:98. A fourth stool, dated as early as circa Including two Art Nouveau-style telescopic examples, the tallest 1600, from the S. W. Wolsey Collection, is illustrated Helena Hayward, 143.5cm high, (3) World Furniture (1970), p. 58, pl. 180. Another sold Bonhams, Chester, 19 July 2012, Lot 448, (£15,625). £500 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 57 210 A RARE AND DOCUMENTED COMMONWEALTH JOINED OAK CANTED LIVERY CUPBOARD, CUMBRIA, DATED 1658 The paired top boards and undertier boards all with narrow reeded edge unusually to all sides, the lunette and leafy-carved frieze centred by the carved initials ‘T F’ & ‘E F’, and dated ‘1658’, presumably to commemorate a marriage, raised on Ionic capital carved and cup-and-cover turned end-columns, the recessed canted cupboard accessed by Celtic knot-pattern carved panelled door, each side carved with a leafy-filled lozenge, the open undertier with matching front supports, 124.5cm wide x 49cm deep x 117.5cm high, (49in wide x 19in deep x 46in high)

£7,000 - 10,000

Provenance: The Fry Family. Sir Theodore Fry, M.P., Bart., (1836-1912), Beechanger Court, Caterham, Surrey Sir John Pease Fry (1864-1957), Air Wilfred Fry, Cleveland Lodge, Great Ayton, North Yorkshire. Purchased Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, September 2002.

illustrated: Percy Macquoid, The Age of Oak (1925), Vol. I, p. 156 &159, pl. 129. The author notes - ‘The piece bears the initials T.F., E.F., 1658. It is in perfect condition, and has remained in the owner’s family since that date’. Edwin Foley, The Book of Decorative Furniture (1910), p. 209-210, pl. XXVII, watercolour. William Bliss Sanders., Examples of Carved Oak Woodwork of the Lot 210 illustrated Percy Macquoid, The Age of Oak (1922) 16th & 17th Centuries (1883), Pl. VI, fine line drawing.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 58 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 211 216 AN IRON AND BRASS CANDLEHOLDER, FRENCH AN EARLY TO MID-19TH CENTURY IRON RUSHLIGHT The socket flange with hook for carrying atop a stem with long HOLDER, IRISH, CIRCA 1800-50 notched slot fitted with a carrier with spiral thumbpiece, on a short The rectangular jaws terminating a part-wrythen stem, the end of the brass stem and an iron base of three right-angled rectangular-section arm flattened and rolled to form the wrapped candle socket, on a legs, 27cm high broadening square-section pine base, the underside inscribed ‘MR E.G’ and ‘185’ (possibly a date), 22.5cm high £200 - 300 £150 - 250 212 AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY BRASS CHAMBERSTICK, ENGLISH, 217 CIRCA 1700-20 A 19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON SPIRAL CANDLESTICK ON The pan with rolled rim and candle socket fixed to the underside A PAINTED BEECH BASE, FRENCH with a copper washer and rivet, the cast brass handle attached with The spiral terminating in a hook, and fitted with a candleholder with copper rivets and engraved with the initial triad ‘ICD’, 21.5cm wide, snake thumbpiece, all set into a fluted sheet metal drip-pan, and on a together with an 18th century sheet brass chamberstick, the pan turned and painted beech base, 30cm high with rolled rim, the wrapped candle socket fitted to the underside with a brass washer and copper rivet, the handle with pierced end fixed £80 - 120 with copper rivets, 29cm wide, (2) 218 £300 - 500 A PAIR OF 19TH CENTURY TURNED BEECH CANDLESTICKS Turned with a series of spreading knops, and on turned circular bases, 213 21cm high, (2) A 17TH CENTURY BRASS PRICKET CANDLESTICK, NORTH- WEST EUROPEAN, POSSIBLY FRENCH £150 - 200 Topped by a 9cm pricket in a dished drip-pan, on an acorn- and blade-knopped stem, on a spreading circular base, 12.5cm base 219 diameter x 17cm high AN EARLY TO MID-19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON RUSHLIGHT AND CANDLEHOLDER, WELSH, PROBABLY £400 - 600 CARDIGANSHIRE/RADNORSHIRE, CIRCA 1800-50 With short jaws and a right-angled arm terminating in a rolled candle 214 socket, on a base of three strap legs and penny feet, 22cm high, FIVE PAIRS OF LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY COPPER together with a wrought iron socket candlestick, with rolled, ALLOY OR BRASS SOCKET CANDLESTICKS, ENGLISH AND open-seamed socket in a dished drip-pan, set onto a rushnip-type DUTCH base of three downswept legs terminating in pointed pad feet, 10cm To include a Dutch pair, circa 1700, with octagonal bases, 17.5cm high, together with a wrought iron pricket candlestick, topped by high, an English or French pair, circa 1715, with hexagonal bases a 6.5cm pricket, on a part-wrythen square-section stem, on a base of and facetted candle sockets, 19cm high, another similar, smaller pair, three rectangular-section legs terminating in pointed lozenge-shaped 15cm high, a pair of ejector candlesticks, English, circa 1750, with feet, 66cm high, (3) petal bases, 19.5cm high, and a pair of candlesticks, English, circa 1750, with petal bases, 20cm high, (10) £150 - 200

£300 - 500 220 A GEORGE II IRON MEAT FORK, DATED 1754 215 Of two curving tines, the handle flattening into a lozenge, struck with AN EARLY TO MID-19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON AND the date ‘1754’ and the initials ‘M.P’, and terminating in a voided PAINTED BEECH RUSHLIGHT HOLDER, PROBABLY IRISH, heart, 52.5cm high CIRCA 1800-50 With short jaws and a ‘U’-shaped arm terminating in a flattened ball £200 - 300 counterweight, on a spreading rectangular black-painted beech base, 24cm high

£150 - 250

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 59 221 A CHARLES II OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1660 AND LATER Of wide proportions, having an ovolo-moulded top, flat run-moulded and bicuspid-shaped rails, on inverted-baluster turned legs joined all round by stretchers with moulded lower outer-edge, 50cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 54cm high, (19 1/2in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 21in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Mark Seabrook Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, August 1997.

222 A WALNUT-VENEERED PIER MIRROR Early 18th century, English Having a two-part later mirror plate, in a shaped cushion moulded 221 frame, 46.5cm wide x 107cm deep x 3.5cm high, (18in wide x 42in deep x 1in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, April 2002.

223 A WROUGHT-IRON MURAL UTENSIL RACK Decorated with birds and a fleur-de-lys, and fitted with five hooks, 36cm wide x 5cm deep x 23.5cm high, (14in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 9in high)

£200 - 300

Provenance: Purchased from Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire.

224 AN ARTS & CRAFTS BRASS AND COPPER HANGING RACK, SCOTTISH/ENGLISH, CIRCA 1910 The backplate shaped, and with three ‘finials, applied with five leaves fixed with copper rivets and each issuing a hook, 52cm wide, together with a pine hanging rack, elaborately shaped and fitted with nine iron hooks, 96cm wide, (2)

222 £100 - 150

Provenance: The timber hanging rack purchased Ernest Hopwell Antiques, West Haddon, Northamptonshire, June 1985.

225 A JAMES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1610 With ovolo-moulded top, the cushion-moulded rails carved with extremely stylized ‘pomegranate’ motifs above a linear gauge-carved edge, on parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 47.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 51cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 20in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from D. J. Baggott, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1997.

225

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 60 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 226 226 226 228 ENGLISH SCHOOL A SECTION OF EARLY 17TH CENTURY TAPESTRY, FLEMISH Mid-18th century Worked in wool, mainly in shades of blue, green and ochre, designed A pair of three-quarter length portraits, a gentleman, reputedly with two female figures, each with ruff and full-length gown, 98.5cm x identified as William Fynmore, with hound, and a lady wearing an 83.5cm open-necked silk dress, reputedly identified as Martha Patten, ornate gilt-gesso frame, oil on canvas, 75cm x 66cm (2) £800 - 1,200

£1,500 - 2,000 229 A PAIR OF 17TH CENTURY VERDURE TAPESTRY CUSHIONS, 227 FLEMISH A GEORGE III NEEDLEWORK SAMPLER, FRAMED, DATED Each tapestry front designed with fruit, scrolls and ribbons, worked 1764 in wools, mainly in shades of greenish-blue and umber, with green Worked by Mary Mash, aged ten, in pastel-coloured silk threads on cotton velvet edge and back, tassel fringe to each end, 42cm x 38cm a linen ground, designed with a band of verse, atop three standing (2) figures and two houses, within a vine border, 36.5cm x 37.8cm £300 - 500 £200 - 300

Provenance: Purchased, Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, December 1989.

228

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 61 230 A PAIR OF JAMES I CARVED OAK FIGURAL TERMS, CIRCA 1620 Both topped by a spray of tobacco leaves, and above a male and female figure, both with a hand across their chest, 9cm wide x 4cm deep x 40.5cm high, (3 1/2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 15 1/2in high) (2)

£200 - 300

Provenance: Purchased Maurice Goldstone & Son, Bakewell, Derbyshire, November 1983.

231 AN EARLY 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK PANEL, CIRCA 1500- 20 Mounted on a later oak backing, and topped by an ogee arch above delicate tracery lights, foliate quatrefoils and a large central shield carved with a four-petalled flower, arcaded bottom edge, 24cm wide x 1cm deep x 48.5cm high, (9in wide x 0in deep x 19in high)

231 £300 - 400

Provenance: Purchased Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 2000.

232 THREE JAMES I/CHARLES I CARVED OAK FIGURAL TERMS, CIRCA 1625 To include two male terms, topped by sprays of tobacco leaves, one figure holding a flower to his breast, the other a cup(?), the third a female figure wearing a necklace and holding an object, her capital centred by a mask, all three on scroll-topped pedestals, 11cm wide x 3cm deep x 51.5cm high, (4in wide x 1in deep x 20in high) (3)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Purchased Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, September 1997.

233 AN EARLY 17TH CENTURY CARVED OAK PANEL, DUTCH/ GERMAN, PRUDENCE 232 Originally part of a door, the figure of Prudence, wearing a ruff and holding a mirror and a two-headed snake, beneath an egg and dart- carved arch supported on strap-work, boss-mounted pilasters, titled ‘VORSITICHEIT’ beneath her feet, 25cm wide x 3cm deep x 37cm high, (9 1/2in wide x 1in deep x 14 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

Provenance: Purchased Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, May 2000.

234 A SMALL HENRY VIII CARVED OAK PANEL, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1530 Carved with a mythical beast, with dragon’s head and bird’s feet, alighting on a spray of flowers and leaves, 22cm wide x 2.5cm deep x 18cm high, (8 1/2in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 7in high)

£100 - 150

233 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 62 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 235 A RARE AND FINE JAMES I OAK JOINT STOOL, SALISBURY, CIRCA 1620 In the manner of the Beckham family workshop The top with ovolo-moulded edge, the rails all carved with chain- motifs, on slender parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 45cm wide x 28cm deep x 54.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 21in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1997.

Literature: See Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. 407, fig. 4:62, for a very similar joint stool attributed to the Beckham 235 Workshop.

See Lot 394.

236 AN 18TH CENTURY FRUITWOOD AND UPHOLSTERED STOOL, FRENCH The rectangular stuff-over seat upholstered in -style fabric with fringe edge, on block, ball and peg-baluster-turned legs, joined by conforming mid-rails and H-form stretcher, 48cm wide x 38cm deep x 47cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 14 1/2in deep x 18 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

237 A PAIR OF WILLIAM & MARY OAK SLAT-BACK CHAIRS, CIRCA 1690 Each with three slats mortised between an arched scroll-ended cresting rail and an ogee-shaped lower back rail, the columnar and baluster-turned uprights with integral ball-turned finials, panelled seat, the block and baluster-turned legs joined by a fore-rail mirroring the cresting and a baluster-turned rear and H-form stretcher, stamped ownership initials ‘GH’ to the rear of each cresting, 46cm wide x 41cm 236 deep x 112cm high, (18in wide x 16in deep x 44in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

238 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1640 Having an ovolo-moulded top, and flat run-moulded rails, on columnar-turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 45.5cm wide x 28cm deep x 57cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 22in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1998.

238

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 63 239 A GEORGE I OAK TABLE-TOP SPICE CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1715 Having a one-piece top with shallow chamfered-edge, a single flush- panelled and fruitwood line-inlaid cupboard door, enclosing eight small drawers, on bracket feet, 41cm wide x 24cm deep x 43cm high, (16in wide x 9in deep x 16 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

240 239 A SMALL GEORGE II OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1740 Having a one-piece top with ovolo-moulded edge and rounded- corners, a frieze drawer framed by narrow half-round mouldings, and a doubled-arcaded apron centred by a turned pendant, on turned tapering legs with robust pad feet, 68cm wide x 41.5cm deep x 65cm high, (26 1/2in wide x 16in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, May 1995.

241 AN 18TH CENTURY BRASS FISH KETTLE, ENGLISH Of typical oblong form, and with articulated iron handle, the exterior decorated with bands of herringbone, one end with the initials ‘JG’, 50cm wide x 20cm wide x 16cm high, together with an 18th century copper fish kettle, English, of similar form, with rolled rim and brazed seams and handle backplates, articulated iron handle, 56.5cm wide x 18cm deep x 11.5cm high, (2)

£200 - 400

Provenance: The brass fish kettle purchased Danny Robinson, Key Antiques, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire, November 1985. The copper fish kettle purchased in 2001.

240 242 AN UNUSUAL CHARLES II JOINED OAK AND ELM CLOSE STOOL, WITH DRAWERS, CIRCA 1680 Having an ovolo-moulded top, the panelled sides carved with two leafy S-scrolls above a pair of cusp-outlined lunettes, a shallow base- drawer to each side, on elongated turned feet, 46.5cm wide x 39.5cm deep x 48cm high, (18in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 18 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1999.

242

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 64 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 243

245

243 A SMALL CHARLES I OAK COFFER, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having a triple-panelled lid and front, each front panel carved with a roundel-filled lozenge, below a guilloche-carved rail, the run-moulded muntin rails with dog-tooth punch-decoration, and repeated on the side top-rails, the front stiles gauge-carved, the panelled back also with fine run-moulded rails, 93cm wide x 46.5cm deep x 54cm high, (36 1/2in wide x 18in deep x 21in high)

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: Purchased from Keith Hockin Antiques, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire, October 1999.

244 A DOCUMENTED GEORGE III OAK AND INLAID MURAL CANDLEBOX, MONTGOMERYSHIRE, CIRCA 1800 244 The backplate with two raised arches pierced with hearts for hanging, inlaid to the front and lid with parti-coloured chequer stringing, lozenges and spandrels, 36cm wide x 11.5cm deep x 23cm high, (14in wide x 4 1/2in deep x 9in high)

£500 - 800

Illustrated: Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250-1950 (2007), Vol. II, p. 23, pl. 628. Purchased directly from the author, September 2002.

245 A WILLIAM & MARY OAK CANDLESTAND, CIRCA 1690 Of slender upright proportions, having a one-piece octagonal and ovolo-moulded top, on a multiple turned pillar and cruciform base, 28.5cm wide x 25.5cm deep x 77.5cm high, (11in wide x 10in deep x 30 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

Provenance: Purchased from Michael Goldstone, Bakewell, Derbyshire, November 1983. Lot 244 illustrated Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250-1950, Vol. II, pl. 628

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 65 246

246 * A CHARLES I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK MURAL LIVERY CUPBOARD, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having a recessed open superstructure, reminiscent of a glass case, enclosed by a flattened-arch with lower pierced cusped-edge, on baluster and fluted-carved end-pillars, atop a cupboard enclosed by a panelled central door, carved with a large flowerhead roundel, flanked by lozenge-carved panels, 90cm wide x 36.5cm deep x 86cm high, (35in wide x 14in deep x 33 1/2in high)

£5,000 - 8,000

The impressive backboards with two inventory labels. One handwritten, in white-pen, ‘00.4.6773’, the other a tin label impressed ‘SQH 39’. The collections to which these labels refer have not been identified.

247 * A CHARLES II JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Having a tall double-scroll cresting carved with paired leafy-buds and a central tulip flower, the floral design elegantly repeated on the back panel, downswept arms on short ball-turned supports, and a boarded seat with chip-carved ends, on columnar-turned front legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 61cm wide x 60cm deep x 110cm high, (24in wide x 23 1/2in deep x 43in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: The Leslie Rankine Taylor Collection, Cirencester, Gloucestershire.

247

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 66 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 248

248 * A RARE PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIRS, CHESHIRE, CIRCA 1680 Each having a relief-carved back panel, designed with a large flowerhead within a leaf-quatrefoil and framed by frilly-leaves, the run-moulded top rail with integral scroll-profiled cresting, round- ended back uprights, and downswept scroll-ended arms on ball and fillet-turned supports, with matching turned front legs, the boarded seat with ovolo-moulded edge, on thick seat rails with central run- 249 (detail) moulding, plain stretchers, 56.5cm wide x 58cm deep x 98.5cm high, (22in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 38 1/2in high) (2)

£4,000 - 6,000

Provenance: Genevieve Garvan Brady, Inisfada, Manhasset, Long Island, New York, circa 1937. Arthur S. Vernay, New York.

249 * A RARE AND INTERESTING ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK ‘CAQUETEUSE’ OPEN ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1580 The broad back-panel with a nulled-carved arch enclosed within a shallow crenelated and crescent-carved arcade, with leaf-and-berry spandrels, the top rail’s scrolling upper edge carved with slender serpents, the back uprights with carved stop-fluting, over flat-arms crooked in the middle and carved with lozenge-shaped motifs, on well-carved fluted-baluster supports, the seats rails with a scroll profiled lower edge, and to the front centred by a cross, the front legs matching the arm supports but with an additional finely carved lower reel, historically lacking stretchers and reduced in height, 66.5cm wide x 52cm deep x 96.5cm high, (26in wide x 20in deep x 37 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

An old swing-tag nailed to the underside of the rear seat rail with handwritten name, possibly ‘S. BUCKLER’, together with a metallic inventory label ‘G1987-18’ to one back upright. 249 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 67 250 A PAINTED PINE CHEST OF DRAWERS, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1820- 40 With two short over three long graduated drawers, on ‘onion’-shaped feet, painted in buff with linear dove-grey and Spanish-blue detail, 250 92.5cm wide x 47.5cm deep x 106.5cm high, (36in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 41 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

251 * A RARE WILLIAM & MARY JOINED FRUITWOOD ‘BIRD-CAGE’ TRIPOD TABLE, CIRCA 1690 Having a dodecagonal ovolo-moulded top, and a large arcaded birdcage movement allowing the top to move freely around the bulbous pillar, on a triform base, the horizontal scroll-form legs with rounded ends, on bun feet, 58.5cm wide x 60cm deep x 70cm high, (23in wide x 23 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£6,000 - 8,000

Provenance: H. W. Keil Ltd., Broadway, Worcestershire. The Irwin Untermyer Collection. The Metropolitan Museum, New York, accession no. 1970.252.

Literature: See Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), for a tripod table with matching bird-cage and triform base, in the collection of the Victoria & Albert Museum, (item W.21-1960), on loan to 251 Woolsthorpe Manor, Lincolnshire.

252 * A JAMES I/CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1620-40 AND LATER The top with an egg-and-tongue carved and moulded edge, the slightly cushioned rails with crescent-shaped motifs and gauge-carved lower edge, the stop-fluted parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs with carved upper and lower blocks, joined by stylized guilloche-carved stretchers all round, on ball-turned feet, 45cm wide x 29.5cm deep x 53.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 21in high)

£300 - 400

Similar tripod table to Lot 251 illustrated Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition, ACC (2016)

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 68 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 253

253 * 254 A SMALL EARLY 16TH CENTURY JOINED OAK COFFER, A CHARLES I JOINED OAK COFFER, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA FRENCH, CIRCA 1530 1640 Having a twin-panelled hinged lid, the front with two carved Romayne- Having a triple-panelled lid, the front with two panels, each carved type male profile portrait panels, each shown wearing a helmet in a with an interlaced flowerheads and palmettes, below a leafy-lunette circular surround, and with floral and mythical beast-headed scrolls, carved top rail, centred by a guilloche-carved muntin rail, the front broad front stiles and muntin rail, ornate scroll-profiled spandrels, two stiles S-scroll carved, 116.5cm wide x 56cm deep x 61.5cm high, (45 parchemin-carved panels to each side, 79.5cm wide x 46cm deep x 1/2in wide x 22in deep x 24in high) 60cm high, (31in wide x 18in deep x 23 1/2in high) £800 - 1,200 £2,000 - 3,000

Provenance: Purchased from Key Antiques, North Cotswold, 2004.

254

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 69 255

255 * AN ELIZABETH I OAK PEW, OR BENCH, CIRCA 1560 Each thick slab-end surmounted by a well-carved downswept leafy- scroll, the open back with a deep run-moulded horizontal rail, single seat board, 144cm wide x 30cm deep x 84.5cm high, (56 1/2in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 33in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Collection of William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951)

256 * A RARE CHARLES I JOINED OAK CHILD’S CHAIR, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, CIRCA 1640 Having a tall and narrow back panel boldly carved with a single leafy-stem, the trapezoid-shaped seat with triple-moulded edge, on columnar-turned front legs joined by plain stretchers, all front rails with crescent-shaped punch-decorated narrow run-mouldings, on turned front feet, 52.5cm wide x 36cm deep x 87cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 14in deep x 34in high)

256 £3,000 - 4,000

See Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. 151, pl. 171, for an extremely similar child’s chair, almost certainly from the same workshop, and sold in these rooms, 19 February 2020, Lot 36 (£4,625).

257 * AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY JOINED ELM AND BEECH UPHOLSERED STOOL, CIRCA 1700-40 The rectangular stuff-over seat with velvet and natural dyed wool upholstery worked in cross stitch, on ‘barrel’-turned legs, joined by a matching H-form stretcher with small central finial, on thistle-shaped turned feet, 61cm wide x 41cm deep x 37cm high, (24in wide x 16in deep x 14 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

With painted letters ‘M E’ to the underside of the seat, which possibly refer to ownership. Very similar chair to Lot 256 illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700, ACC (2009), pl.171

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 70 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 258 AN UNUSUAL AND LARGE CHARLES I CARVED OAK PANEL, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Carved to the centre with a crest of a bird standing atop a torse and pecking a garb (wheatsheaf), against a spray of leaves, all within a border of floral guilloche, 58cm wide x 4cm deep x 69cm high, (22 258 1/2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 27in high)

£800 - 1,200

The crest on this panel has not been identified. The crest of Leak or Leake is similar, but comprises two birds - one on either side of the garb - rather than a single bird. The bird may be a popinjay or possibly a Cornish chough.

259 A 16TH CENTURY CARVED AND GESSOED PINE OR LIMEWOOD MALE HEAD His hair rendered as large swirling curls, the head tilted to one side, and with narrow nose and small mouth, on a later iron mount and socle, 47cm high overall

£1,000 - 1,500

260 A LARGE IRON MORTAR Of tapering form, with spreading circular footrim, 32cm diameter x 28.5cm high

£400 - 600

261 259 (detail) A MID-17TH CARVED OAK ARMORIAL PANEL, PROBABLY NETHERLANDISH, CIRCA 1660 Carved with an unidentified quartered coat of arms, within an auricular surround, 33cm wide x 3.5cm deep x 55cm high, (12 1/2in wide x 1in deep x 21 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

261 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 71 262

262 ENGLISH NAIVE SCHOOL Early 18th century A hunting scene, depicting horsemen and hounds pursuing a stag, oil on board, ebonized moulded frame, 105cm x 127cm

£800 - 1,200

263 A LATE 17TH CENTURY PINE GREEN-PAINTED DELFT RACK, DUTCH With three shelves, each with leafy floral-carved applied front rail, flanked by scroll-carved sides with female head finials, historic dark- green paint, 86cm wide x 13cm deep x 75cm high, (33 1/2in wide x 5in deep x 29 1/2in high)

263 £400 - 600

Literature: Peter Thornton, Seventeenth Century Interior Decoration in England, France and Holland (1981). p. 290, fig 283, illustrates a comparable delft rack in a Dutch interior, circa 1660.

264 CIRCLE OF THEODORE RUSSELL (LONDON 1614-1689) A portrait of a lady, head and shoulders, with dark lace collar oil on panel 30 x 25cm (11 13/16 x 9 13/16in).

£1,000 - 1,500

264 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 72 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 265 A PAINT-DECORATED SOFTWOOD WALL BRACKET, IN THE FRENCH REGENCE MANNER The bow-breakfront shelf hung with lambrequins above a trophy- shaped support edged with the leafy necks of ho-ho birds, with a 265 central scroll-topped buttress, 35cm wide x 17cm deep x 33cm high, (13 1/2in wide x 6 1/2in deep x 12 1/2in high)

£700 - 1,000

266 A RARE GEORGE III COPPER DOG COLLAR, DATED 1776 Engraved ‘BEN.N. COOPER HILLASH at DYMOCK / 1776’ and ‘(Stop, Me Not, but lett, Me go, home / Lest, Transporttation [sic], be your, doom’, with three position slots, and an iron loop, 15cm diameter x 5cm high

£1,000 - 1,500 266 A daughter, Elizabeth, was born to Benjamin & Elizabeth Cooper Hillash at Dymock, Gloucestershire on 8 January 1781. Benjamin was buried on 6 July 1781, aged 40.

267 A BRONZE SUNDIAL PLATE, SIGNED ‘I COGGS LONDON FECIT’ Of typical form with gnomon, and Roman chapter ring, 21cm wide x 21cm deep x 13cm high, (8in wide x 8in deep x 5in high)

£800 - 1,200

John Coggs is recorded as working from the ‘Globe & Sun against St. Dunstan’s Church and Chancery Lane, in Fleet Street’ between 1718 and 1733. He is known to have sold universal equinoctial ring dials and advertised a full range of instruments. He was succeeded by his son, also John Coggs (fl.1730-1759) at the same address.

268 A RARE FRUITWOOD TEETOTUM, PROBABLY CIRCA 1800 A twenty-sided polygon, each side with a number marked in ink, 4cm high 267

£1,200 - 1,800

Literature: See E. H. Pinto, Treen & Other Wooden Bygones, (1985), p. 229 and Plate 142, where a similar mahogany teetotum is illustrated.

268

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 73 269 Lot 269 illustrated Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition, ACC (2016)

269 * 270 * A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK A WALNUT JOINT STOOL, FRENCH, CIRCA 1700 STANDING VENTILATED LIVERY CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1680 The ovolo-moulded top centred by a small S-shaped carry-aperture, Having a ‘cage’ superstructure, with a boarded top, and baluster over on columnar and baluster-turned legs, joined by plain end-stretchers columnar-turned corner supports, spindle-filled front and sides, with and a baluster-turned cross-stretcher, 47cm wide x 31cm deep x six of the front spindles railed and pivotal-hinged to form a door, on 49cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 12in deep x 19in high) long matching turned legs, joined by a fully-open boarded undertier, 54cm wide x 39cm deep x 101.5cm high, (21in wide x 15in deep x 39 £300 - 500 1/2in high) See an English stool in the Burrell Collection Glasgow (accession no. £8,000 - 12,000 14.26) with a similar cut-out to the seat.

Provenance: 271 * The Thomas George Burn Collection, Rous Lench Court, Abbots A CHARLES II JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, Morton, Worcestershire. NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA 1670 AND LATER Sold Sotheby’s, ‘The Rous Lench Collection’, Vol. II, 4 July 1986, Lot The back with a narrow lunette-carved panel atop a large lozenge- 734. carved panel, the top rail guilloche-carved, the relatively flat scroll- ended arms on columnar-turned supports, the boarded seat with Illustrated: ovolo-moulded edge, on matching turned front legs, joined all round Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. 288, fig, by plain stretchers, restorations, 59.5cm wide x 56cm deep x 96cm 3:310. high, (23in wide x 22in deep x 37 1/2in high)

£500 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 74 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 272

272 A GEORGE II UPHOLSTERED AND OAK-FRAMED WING ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1735 The tall arched padded back, wing-sides, scroll-splayed arms, squab- cushion and seat well-upholstered in crimson and gold floral fabric, on cabriole front legs with faceted pad feet, joined by a baluster-turned H-form stretcher, 85cm wide x 73cm deep x 125cm high, (33in wide x 28 1/2in deep x 49in high)

£3,000 - 4,000

273 AM IMPRESSIVE 19TH CENTURY DUG-OUT CHAIR, WITH CUPBOARD BASE Stained beech and pine Formed from a trunk, with adzed-surface, pegged boarded seat, 58.5cm wide x 50cm deep x 99cm high, (23in wide x 19 1/2in deep x 38 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 4,000 273

274 * A 17TH CENTURY SMALL JOINED CHESTNUT OCCASIONAL TABLE, SPANISH Having a boarded and three-quarter galleried top, a single drawer relief-carved with a large central lozenge, on ball-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 46.5cm wide x 45.5cm deep x 52cm high, (18in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 20in high)

£400 - 600

273 (detail)

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 75 275 Lot 275 illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), ACC

275 277 A RARE AND DOCUMENTED JAMES I/CHARLES I OAK JOINT TWO SIMILAR BRASS ALLOY PRICKET CANDLESTICKS, STOOL, CIRCA 1620-30 FLEMISH OR GERMAN Having a double-reeded top, and shallow rails boldly nulled-carved, 18th/19th century on elongated inverted-baluster turned legs, with unusual crescent- Both lacking iron pricket, each with drip-tray, a baluster and ball-knop shaped punched-decoration to the upper leg blocks, and chamfered stem and domed base, 8.3cm base diameter x 17cm high, (2) lower leg blocks, plain stretchers, evidence of former label to the underside of the top, 44.6cm wide x 28cm deep x 53.5cm high, (17 £100 - 150 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 21in high) Provenance: £4,000 - 6,000 Clive Sherwood Collection

Illustrated: 278 * Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. A PAIR OF CARVED OAK PANELS, PROBABLY 17TH CENTURY 228, pl. 293. One of a Jester, with mirror, motley and a cap and bells, the second probably of an Actor, wearing a close cap, loose robes and gesturing 276 with his right arm, both in later frames with later titles, 39.5cm wide x A 19TH CENTURY OAK LION-CARVED CORBEL 4.5cm deep x 69cm high, (15 1/2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 27in high) Fronted by a grotesque mask, with open mouth, leafy plants to the (2) sides, 15cm wide x 35cm deep x 30cm high, (5 1/2in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 11 1/2in high) £800 - 1,200

£100 - 150 The actor depicted is possibly Thomas Killigrew (1612-83).

Provenance: Clive Sherwood Collection

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 76 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 279

279 281 A GEORGE III JOINED OAK HIGH DRESSER, CIRCA 1760 A 19TH CENTURY SCUMBLED BEECH AND POSSIBLY BIRCH The open rack with three stepped shelves, above a shallow box-base LINEN-PRESS of five faux spice drawers, the fully-enclosed lower-section with three With a combed grain-effect finish throughout, the single helix screw lip-moulded drawers, atop a pair of twin cupboard doors, each with with acorn-finial and detachable turning handle, above a pair of a twin fielded panel designed as a pair of drawers, centred by a pair drawers, on square-section legs, 66cm wide x 36.5cm deep x of matching faux drawer fronts, 176cm wide x 45cm deep x 211.5cm 135.,5cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 14in deep x 53in high) high, (69in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 83in high) £200 - 300 £800 - 1,200 282 * 280 A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK BOX-TOP CENTRE TABLE, A LATE 17TH CENTURY PIG-SKIN COVERED CHEST, WITH CIRCA 1690 DRAWER, DATED 1697 Having a hinged top mainly of one large board with ovolo-edge, The gently domed-lid decorated with six-reserves, formed using enclosing a shallow well, the drawer below with a mitre-moulded brass-studs, one dated ‘1697’, another with the initials ‘R S’, having edge, the simple design repeated to each side and rear frieze, on a similar banded and spandrel designed front, with base drawer, iron spiral-turned legs, joined by a wavy X-form platform stretcher, on bun bail-handle to each side, 99cm wide x 51cm deep x 51cm high, (38 feet, 86.5cm wide x 54cm deep x 80cm high, (34in wide x 21in deep 1/2in wide x 20in deep x 20in high) x 31in high)

£300 - 500 £800 - 1,200

The interior with a block printed lining paper similar to wallpaper used at Strawberry Hill House, Twickenham.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 77 283

283 * A PAIR OF GEORGE III YEW-WOOD HIGH-BACK WINDSOR ARMCHAIRS, THAMES VALLEY, CIRCA 1780 Each having a hooped back with four long spindles either side of a central splat, the single-piece splat fretted and carved with scrolls, simple leaves, rosette-flowerheads and anthemion, the outsplayed arm bow on crook-shaped front supports, the bell-shaped ‘mahogany’ seat raised on cabriole front legs with pad feet, the rear legs with low baluster-turning, and joined by a crinoline stretcher, 66cm wide x 49cm deep x 107cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 19in deep x 42in high) (2)

£3,000 - 4,000

Literature: For a cabriole leg Windsor armchair with a comparable carved 284 splat and mahogany seat see Michael Harding Hill, Windsor Chairs (2003), p. 66. See also the Frederick Parker Chair Collection, London Metropolitan University [no. 142], for a Windsor chair almost certainly from the same workshop at this Lot.

284 A CHARLES I OAK LOW STOOL, CIRCA 1630 With ovolo-moulded top, lower edge moulded rails, and rising baluster-turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 39.5cm wide x 29.5cm deep x 39.5cm high, (15 1/2in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 15 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

285 * AN ELIZABETH I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1580 Having an historically associated triple-reeded top, and leaf-filled lunette-carved rails, the fluted-carved parallel-baluster over ball-turned legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 45.5cm wide x 28.5cm deep x 52cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 20in high)

£1,200 - 1,800 285

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 78 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 286

286 * 287 AN IMPRESSIVE ELIZABETH I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK TWO JOINED OAK HIGH-BACK SIDE CHAIRS, ENGLISH, AND MARQUETRY-INLAID CABINET SUPERSTRUCTURE, CIRCA 1700-20 SOUTHWARK, CIRCA 1570 One having a slender back panel below an ornate scroll-carved and Having a boarded and cleated hinged top, the front with three pierced cresting, ball-finial baluster-turned uprights, and a boarded Nonsuch-style inlaid panels, the central panel designed with a seat, on baluster-turned front legs, joined by a C-scroll carved fore-rail, soldier standing within an arched Watergate, a matchlock gun over the other with a narrow fielded back panel, morticed between ogee- his shoulder, and typically with swans to the foreground, flanked by shaped horizontal rails, largest chair: 45.5cm wide x 40cm deep x flower-filled vases, the chevron-inlaid upright rails with split-baluster 116cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 45 1/2in high) (2) mouldings, all beneath chequer-inlaid reserves with root-work, on turned feet, German lock and hinges, originally on a stand or chest, £200 - 300 113.5cm wide x 63cm deep x 57cm high, (44 1/2in wide x 24 1/2in deep x 22in high) 288 * A CHARLES I JOINED OAK STOOL-TABLE, CIRCA 1640 AND £5,000 - 8,000 LATER The drop-leaf top constructed from single-piece boards, and probably Although the decoration on this chest is characteristic of 16th century added in the 18th century, each leaf held open by a central loper German inlay it is now thought possible that this type of work was sliding out from a shallow-groove to the underside of the fixed top, executed in London, particularly in the environs of Southwark, from with run-moulded rails, the rising-baluster over ball-turned legs joined the second half of the 16th century onwards, almost certainly by by plain stretchers all round, 65cm wide x 55.5cm deep x 56cm high, immigrant German joiners and inlayers. The architectural decoration (25 1/2in wide x 21 1/2in deep x 22in high) is popularly assumed to represent Henry VIII’s celebrated Nonsuch Palace, Surrey, particularly with reference to the fanciful towers. £1,200 - 1,800 However, it is more likely to have been derived from 16th-century printed designs, for instance, those published by Hans Vredeman de Literature: Vries (1527-1604). See R. W. Symonds, Furniture Making in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century England (1955), p. 70, fig. 109, for a comparable joined stool fitted with an oval drop-leaf top.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 79 289 289

289 * 291 A PAIR OF CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOLS, WEST COUNTRY, A CHARLES I JOINED OAK BOX-SEAT TABLE-CHAIR, CIRCA CIRCA 1640 1640 Each with triple-reeded top, centred by large carved ownership initials Having a pivotal end-cleated boarded top/back, round-ended flat ‘W T’, cable-carved rails, and columnar-turned legs, joined all round open-arms on ring-turned supports, a hinged boarded seat flanked by plain stretchers, 42cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 50.5cm high, (16 by chip-carved narrow boards, matching turned legs, joined by plain 1/2in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 19 1/2in high) (2) stretchers all round, 67cm wide x 98.5cm deep x 70cm high, (26in wide x 38 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high) £2,000 - 3,000 £800 - 1,000 290 A SET OF EIGHT MID-19TH CENTURY ASH AND FRUITWOOD Provenance: LADDER-BACK DINING CHAIRS, ORMSKIRK, CIRCA 1840 Purchased from John Caspall, Stow-on-the-Wold, Gloucestershire. Each with five graduated arched splats, scroll-ended back uprights, and rush-seat, on turned front legs, joined by a baluster-turned fore- 292 rail, 48.5cm wide x 46cm deep x 96cm high, (19in wide x 18in deep x A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK CORNER CUPBOARD, 37 1/2in high) (8) CIRCA 1690 Originally built-in, having a small panelled cupboard door above a £500 - 800 double-panelled door, flanked by narrow fixed panels, all framed by an intricate edge moulding, 90cm wide x 49cm deep x 147cm high, (35in Provenance: wide x 19in deep x 57 1/2in high) Purchased from Derek Green, Cedar Antiques, Hartley Witney, Hampshire. £500 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 80 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 293

293 AN UNUSUAL SET OF FOUR WILLIAM & MARY OAK HIGH- BACK CHAIRS, CIRCA 1690 Each with narrow fretwork-scroll back panel, flanked by paired S-scrolls centred by a stylized tulip flower, an addorsed C-scroll carved and pierced cresting, and columnar and ball-turned back uprights with vase-turned finials, fielded panelled seat, on block and turned front legs, joined by an arched scroll-carved fore-rail and a well-turned H-form stretcher and matching rear-stretcher, 50cm wide x 44cm deep x 126cm high, (19 1/2in wide x 17in deep x 49 1/2in high) (4)

£2,000 - 3,000

294 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 The top with double-reeded edge, the rails with a central flat run- 294 moulding, on parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined all the way round by stretchers with a moulded outer face, 46cm wide x 27cm deep x 52cm high, (18in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 20in high)

£600 - 800

295 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 The top with ovolo-moulded edge, the rails with bicuspid-shaped lower edge, on parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, with turned feet, 45.5cm wide x 28cm deep x 55cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 21 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: Clive Sherwood Collection. Inventory label [no.103] to the underside of the top.

295 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 81 296 296 298 A RARE AND GOOD ELIZABETH I/JAMES I BOARDED OAK A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 CHEST, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1600-20 Having a chamfered-edge top, run-moulded and punched-decorated The one-piece top with chip-carved ends, the front with a nulled rails, and parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined all round by and linear gauge-carved narrow band and chip-carved and punch- plain stretchers, 45.7cm wide x 27.3cm deep x 52cm high, (17 1/2in decorated ends, the inset sides extending to V-shaped cut-away wide x 10 1/2in deep x 20in high) ends, and with an unusual cusp-profiled front edge, 126.5cm wide x 35cm deep x 61cm high, (49 1/2in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 24in high) £400 - 600

£4,000 - 6,000 299 A CHARLES I BOARDED OAK CHEST, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 297 1640 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK AND UPHOLSTERED STOOL, Of slender proportions, the hinged lid with chip-carved ends, the front CIRCA 1680 boldly carved with large demi-flower lunettes, the sides descending Having a squab-cushion and stuff-over seat upholstered in floral to V-shaped cut-away supports, 115cm wide x 35.5cm deep x 59cm tapestry-style fabric, on baluster-turned legs, joined by narrow run- high, (45in wide x 13 1/2in deep x 23in high) moulded stretchers, turned feet, 36cm wide x 36cm deep x 52cm high, (14in wide x 14in deep x 20in high) £800 - 1,200

£400 - 600

299

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 82 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 300

300 302 AN UNUSUAL AND GOOD JAMES I/CHARLES I JOINED OAK A GEORGE III JOINED AND BOARDED ELM FULLY-ENCLOSED PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA DRESSER BASE, CIRCA 1800 1620-40 Having a single-piece well-figured top with applied moulded edge, The gently raked back having a single panel carved with a leafy-stem a central bank of four graduated drawers, flanked by an applied enclosed within a chain arcade, the top rail carved with a ‘Green Man’ panel cupboard door, boarded sides, on ogee-cutaway plinth base, mask, a pair of floral splays clenched in his exaggerated mouth, the 166.5cm wide x 45cm deep x 95cm high, (65 1/2in wide x 17 1/2in back uprights carved with flower-filled guilloche, the bold and relatively deep x 37in high) flat scroll-ended open-arms with scribed edge, on elaborately turned front supports, the boarded seat with moulded edge, chain-carved £600 - 800 seat rails, the turned front legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 64.5cm wide x 53.5cm deep x 109cm high, (25in wide x 21in deep x 303 42 1/2in high) A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK GATELEG OCCASIONAL TABLE, CIRCA 1690 £5,000 - 8,000 With an oval drop-leaf top, and frieze drawer to each end, elaborate ball and baluster-turned end-supports, on sledge feet, joined by paired 301 and moulded stretchers, centred by a rare cross-stretcher, with simple A VICTORIAN BLACK-PAINTED ASH, ELM, BEECH AND ALDER gates, 100.5cm wide x 80.5cm deep x 67cm high, (39 1/2in wide x 31 CHILD’S WINDSOR HIGH-CHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1/2in deep x 26in high) 1830-70 The hooped back with seven slender spindles, the arm bow with £800 - 1,200 baluster and triple ring-turned front supports, saddle-seat, the splayed turned legs also with triple ring-turning, foot board, and H-form elliptical-turned stretcher, maker’s stamp ‘A F’ to the rear of the seat, 42.5cm wide x 42cm deep x 86.5cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 34in high)

£200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 83 304 A GEORGE I/II WALNUT AND UPHOLSTERED STOOL, CIRCA 1730 The drop-in seat upholstered in flame-stitch needlework, worked in coloured wools, with plain flattened-arched rails, cabriole legs and pad feet, 46cm wide x 39cm deep x 37cm high, (18in wide x 15in deep x 304 14 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: Collection of Dorothea Viscountess Kelburn, Marwell House, Winchester.

305 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1640 Having a plain back panel between run-moulded and punch- decorated horizontal rails, the downswept scroll-ended open arms on columnar-turned front supports, boarded seat, inverted-baluster turned legs and chamfered rear legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 61cm wide x 56cm deep x 111cm high, (24in wide x 22in deep x 43 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

306 A PAIR OF BRASS AND IRON ANDIRONS Each topped with a large brass ball, on plain pillar stem, and two divergent scrolling legs, billet bar to rear, 32cm wide x 59cm deep x 63cm high, (12 1/2in wide x 23in deep x 24 1/2in high) (2)

£200 - 300

307 A SILVER-PLATED BRASS SOAP AND SPONGE BALL Of typical spherical form, with decoratively pierced hinged cover, and circular foot with scalloped edge, 8cm high

305 £250 - 350

308 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1630 The six-pegged top with reeded long edges and chip-carved ends, multiple run-moulded rails, on parallel-baluster over ball-turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 46.2cm wide x 26.5cm deep x 52cm high, (18in wide x 10in deep x 20in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

308

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 84 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 309 A SMALL QUEEN ANNE WALNUT-VENEERED AND FEATHER- BANDED CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1715 Having a quarter-veneered and crossbanded top, above two short and three long graduated drawers, with half-round applied carcase mouldings, each side with crossbanded edges, on bun-feet, 86.5cm wide x 52cm deep x 87cm high, (34in wide x 20in deep x 34in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

310 * A LARGE BRASS SIXTEEN-BRANCH CHANDELIER With two graduated tiers of eight scrolling candle-branches terminating in leaf-decorated scalloped candle cups, the stem topped 309 by a ring and with an acanthus-decorated and gadrooned baluster and hexagonal lower bulb, 70cm diameter x 125cm high (stem only)

£400 - 600

311 A RARE AND POSSIBLY UNIQUE CHARLES I JOINED OAK TABLE-ON-FRAME, CIRCA 1630 With an unusual deep frieze drawer, a single-piece top, with dog-tooth carved and punch-decorated edge moulding, the plain drawer front with a fixed ‘domino’-carved base moulding, the front upright rails with incised dog-tooth and punched embellishments, on parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by a boarded open undertier, 79cm wide x 44cm deep x 85.5cm high, (31in wide x 17in deep x 33 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

312 * THREE 18TH CENTURY BRASS MUFFINEERS, OR CASTERS, ENGLISH Two large and one small example, all with domed pierced covers, decorative incised lines to the body and flared footrim, 7cm base 311 diameter x 10.5cm high, 7cm base diameter x 10cm high and 4cm base diameter x 8cm high, (3)

£150 - 250

313 A GEORGE III SOLID YEW-WOOD BUREAU, CIRCA 1760 Of narrow proportions, the end-cleated fall enclosing a traditional fitted interior of pigeon-holes, small drawers and book-slides flanking a small cupboard, over four long graduated cockbeaded drawers, on tall bracket feet, 81cm wide x 46cm deep x 106cm high, (31 1/2in wide x 18in deep x 41 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

313

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 85 314

314 316 A GOOD CHARLES I JOINED OAK STANDING LIVERY A CHARLES I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK COFFER, WEST CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1640 COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having a box-top enclosed by two thin boards, with dentil moulded The one-piece top board with ovolo-moulded edge, the front of four and pierced corbel embellished sides, on baluster and reel-turned panels, each carved with a stylized leaf-filled lozenge, below a chip end-columns, enclosing a canted cupboard, accessed by a twin- and cable-motif carved and punch-decorated rail, with similar carved arcaded panelled cupboard door, with matching side panels, the front stiles, the slightly inset boarded sides with M-shaped cut-away lower-section with a long drawer, again with corbels, on bulbous and ends, impressive single-piece back board, interior lidded till, 128cm reel-turned front supports, joined by a boarded open undertier, with wide x 47cm deep x 71cm high, (50in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in biscupid-shaped base rails, 123cm wide x 48cm deep x 120.5cm high) high, (48in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 47in high) £400 - 600 £4,000 - 6,000 317 315 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOL, LANCASHIRE, A PINE PRINCIPALLY BOARDED AND SCUMBLED SMALL CIRCA 1670 HIGH DRESSER, AUSTRIAN/GERMAN, CIRCA 1850 Having a floral and acorn-carved back panel, pyramid-finials, ovolo- The boarded rack with a pair of green-painted shelves, each with a moulded single-piece seat board, on ball-turned legs, unusually joined retainer bar, the lower-section with a long drawer over a cupboard by matching low front and side stretchers, a plain rear stretcher, door enclosing a single shelf interior, with base moulding, 91.5cm 48.5cm wide x 42.5cm deep x 91cm high, (19in wide x 16 1/2in deep wide x 42.4cm deep x 178cm high, (36in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 70in x 35 1/2in high) high) £300 - 400 £600 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 86 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 318 * A PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOLS, LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Each with a characteristic tall arched foliate-carved cresting, the botanical-carving to the back panel unusually enclosed within a cusped arcade, the back uprights unusually carved with a stiff-leaf single stem below typical pyramidal finial, panelled seat, the block and paired baluster-turned legs with conforming turned fore-rail and plain side and rear stretchers, 45cm wide x 39cm deep x 113cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 15in deep x 44in high) (2)

£1,000 - 1,500

319 A CHARLES I SMALL JOINED OAK COFFER, WORCESTERSHIRE AND THE SURROUNDING AREA, CIRCA 1640 Having a twin-panelled lid, the front again with two panels, each 318 carved with a flowerhead-filled lozenge, below a lunette-carved rail centred by the carved initials ‘T S’, the front and side base rails with castellated lower edge, the front stiles with integral turned feet, triple- panelled back, 95cm wide x 47.5cm deep x 60cm high, (37in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 23 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

320 A 19TH CENTURY OAK PRIMITIVE CHAIR, PROBABLY IRISH OR POSSIBLY WELSH Of comb-back form, with round-ended geometric shaped stay-rail, the rear of each flat scroll-ended arm socketed through an outer back spindle, with the hand-shaped spindle purposely left wider below the arm, the gently splayed legs mortised-and-wedged through the rectangular single-piece seat and joined by an H-form stretcher, 66cm wide x 42cm deep x 94.5cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 37in high)

£500 - 800 319

Literature: Claudia Kinmouth, Irish Country Furniture 1700 - 1950 (1993), pp. 34 - 39, illustrates several examples of comparable ‘hedge chairs’, all dated to the end of the 19th century. The author explains how this type of chair, made without glue and limited tools, employed the ‘clever and essential device of interlocking the rear of the armrest with the outer back spindle’. Further essential strength was provided by a broad seat, which could be 5cm thick, as found here. However, the use of oak, rather than ash and elm, together with the presence of stretchers, may instead suggest a Welsh attribution, and suggest an earlier date, pre-19th century. See for example Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250 - 1950 (2007), Vol. II. p. 50, pl. 691, for a comparable primitive armchair, made in ash and attributed to Montgomeryshire, dated circa 1750 - 90.

320

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 87 The Great Hall, Stationers’ Company, London Arms of The Stationers’ Company Company collection label 323 Lots 321 - 326: Property of the A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK FORM Stationers’ Company, London OR BENCH, CIRCA 1674 Having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and applied 321 under edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge A RARE AND DOCUMENTED PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED moulding, on eight elegant baluster-turned legs, joined by capped OAK FORMS OR BENCHES, CIRCA 1674 stretchers all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x Each having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and 56cm high, (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) applied under-edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge moulding, on eight elegant baluster-turned legs, joined by capped £6,000 - 8,000 stretchers all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 56cm high, (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) (2) Provenance: See Lot 321. £12,000 - 18,000 324 Provenance: A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK FORM The Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, OR BENCH, CIRCA 1674 usually known as the Stationers’ Company, London. Formed in 1403 Having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and applied and received a royal charter in 1557. under edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge moulding, on eight baluster-turned legs, joined by capped stretchers An identical bench, but slightly shorter with six-legs, in the Stationers’ all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 56cm high, Company Collection bears a brass label reading ‘This bench was (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) one of those supplied in 1674 by Mr. Coffen for use with the refectory tables, also still in the hall’. See image. £6,000 - 8,000

The Stationers’ Company has occupied halls on three sites in the Provenance: course of its History. In 1606 it moved to its present location when See Lot 321. it purchased Abergavenny House from the widow of the Earl of Pembroke, and in 1611 it acquired the freehold. It was burnt down 325 in the Great Fire of London of 1666 and replaced by the present hall A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK FORM on the same site between 1670 and 1673. The beautiful wooden OR BENCH, CIRCA 1674 screen on the south side is the work of Henry Ford – who charged Having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and applied the company £732 for woodwork (excluding the panelling) who may under edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge also have made the tables and benches still in use. The wainscoting moulding, on eight elegant baluster-turned legs, joined by capped was finished two years later by Stephen Colledge, known as the stretchers all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x Protestant joiner on account of an anti-royalist pamphlet for which he 56cm high, (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) was hanged at Oxford in 1681. ‘Mr Coffen’ has not been identified. The benches are shown furnishing Stationers’ Hall in a lithograph £6,000 - 8,000 by Thomas Robert Way (1861-1913) printed in Philip Norman’s The Ancient Halls of the City Guilds (1901). One of the tables is illustrated Provenance: in F. Litchfield, Illustrated History of Furniture: From the Earliest to the See Lot 321. Present Time (1893). 326 322 A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK FORM A RARE AND DOCUMENTED PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OR BENCH, CIRCA 1674 OAK FORMS OR BENCHES, CIRCA 1674 Having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and applied Each having a single-board top with square-rounded edge and under edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge applied under edge moulding, the plain rails with applied lower edge moulding, on eight elegant baluster-turned legs, joined by capped moulding, on eight elegant baluster-turned legs, joined by capped stretchers all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x stretchers all round, on turned feet, 315.5cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 56cm high, (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) 56cm high, (124in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high) (2) £6,000 - 8,000 £12,000 - 18,000 Provenance: Provenance: See Lot 321. See Lot 321.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 89 327

327 * 329 * TWO SIMILAR WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK AND ELM A CHARLES I JOINED OAK AND INLAID COURT CUPBOARD, BOXES-ON-STANDS, CIRCA 1690 YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1640 Each dove-tailed box-top with hinged boarded lid, the front with The stylized leaf-carved frieze on inverted-baluster over ball-turned applied half-round mouldings to simulate multiple drawers, and one end-supports, enclosing a pair of recessed boarded floral marquetry- with two true short base drawers, the stand with one drawer and twin- inlaid cupboard doors, framed by gauge-carved and punch-decorated arcaded apron, on baluster-turned legs, joined by peg-baluster turned deep mouldings, and centred by a matching fixed panel, a pair of front stretchers and plain side and rear stretchers, on turned feet, large cupboard doors below, each with three panels within flat run- 80cm wide x 50cm deep x 77cm high, (31in wide x 19 1/2in deep x moulded rails, beneath a half-flower carved top rail, the upright rails 30in high) (2) guilloche-carved, and the base rail carved with cable motifs, 163 cm wide x 54.5cm deep x 150cm high, (64in wide x 21in deep x 59in £2,000 - 3,000 high)

One with a paper label bearing inventory typed number ‘1032’ to rear, £1,800 - 2,200 along with the red-painted accession number 30.1792.5. The other with a large hand-painted red number ‘39’ to the rear of the box. 330 A JOINED OAK REFECTORY-TYPE TABLE, DERBYSHIRE 328 * Circa 1660 and later A WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK PANEL BACK Having a one-piece top board, the front and side rails carved with ADOLESCENT’S OPEN ARMCHAIR, NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA demi-flower filled lunettes, on baluster ring turned legs, the front upper 1690 leg blocks each stiff-leaf carved, plain stretchers, 199cm wide x 76cm Having a well-figured back panel,and double ogee-arched profiled deep x 80cm high, (78in wide x 29 1/2in deep x 31in high) cresting, the back uprights with particularly tall hour-glass-shaped finials, the slender downswept arms on fillet-turned supports, with £1,000 - 1,500 matching front legs, a boarded seat, plain stretchers and pear-shaped turned feet, 54.5cm wide x 56cm deep x 86cm high, (21in wide x 22in deep x 33 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

Inventory number D960.2.79 (?) written in white pen to the outer-face of one back upright

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 90 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 331 A RARE AND GOOD CHARLES I CHILD’S OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having an ovolo-moulded top, run-moulded rails, and parallel-baluster turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, on turned feet, 34.5cm wide x 31cm deep x 40cm high, (13 1/2in wide x 12in deep x 15 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000 331

332 AN 18TH/19TH CENTURY CHIP-CARVED FOOTWARMER, DUTCH The hinged lid and three sides pierced with a geometric roundel, within further chip-carving, 25cm wide x 23.5cm deep x 18.5cm high, (9 1/2in wide x 9in deep x 7in high)

£400 - 600

333 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK AND CARVED SIDE TABLE, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Having a boarded top, a frieze drawer carved with addorsed scrolling- leafy mythical beasts, and broad flat run-moulded side and rear rails, on ball and ring-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers, 105.5cm wide x 60cm deep x 81cm high, (41 1/2in wide x 23 1/2in deep x 31 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

334 TWO TRACERY-CARVED OAK PANELS, FRENCH Carved with lights, rosettes and foils, 16cm wide x 2cm deep x 51.5cm high, (6in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 20in high) (2)

£200 - 300 333

335 A GOOD CHARLES II OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1660 With a well-figured and ovolo-moulded top, the rails gauge-carved and punch-decorated with an undulating design, on columnar over baluster-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers, turned feet, 44.8cm wide x 27.3cm deep x 56cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high)

£1,800 - 2,200

335

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 91 336

336 338 * A JAMES I/CHARLES I JOINED OAK COFFER, EXETER, CIRCA A LATE 15TH CENTURY OAK NEWEL POST, FRENCH, CIRCA 1620-30 1480-1500 Having a twin-boarded top with triple-reeded edge, a foliate-carved With later top and cruciform base to form a torchère, having a central quadruple-panelled front, below a flowerhead and leaf guilloche- column carved with a moulded capital, surrounded by four free- carved top rail, leafy S-scroll carved base rail, the twin-panelled sides standing turned columns, one opposing pair spiral-turned and carved with matching carved rails, the front stiles and muntin rails carved with with small rosettes, another with double spiral-carving, and the fourth stop-fluting, interior lidded till, 147cm wide x 58.5cm deep x 77cm with spiral beading, all on a waisted square-section plinth, carved to high, (57 1/2in wide x 23in deep x 30in high) the centre with a spiral and riband-wrapped collar, and with ribbed acanthus leaves above and below, central circular aperture to top, £800 - 1,200 49.5cm wide x 47cm deep x 112cm high, (19in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 44in high) Provenance: Doughton Manor, Tetbury, Gloucestershire. £800 - 1,000

337 Provenance: A RUN OF ARCHITECTURAL PANELLING, FRAMING TWO 16TH The Collection of Mr & Mrs H. Beedham. CENTURY ROMAYNE-TYPE PANELS Of four panels, two almost square panels carved with strapwork 339 and floral roundels, the top panel rectangular and carved with a AN UNUSUAL 17TH CENTURY JOINED AND BOARDED OAK male profile bust within a laurel wreath, both above and beneath an STANDING-CHEST, ENGLISH OR WELSH all’antica gadrooned urns and foliated ‘S’-scrolls, the fourth panel a Having a single-piece hinged top, spandrels to the front top rail, over a profile bust of a bearded man in a winged helmet, in a circular frame, deep front board, on four baluster-turned legs, losses, 94.5cm wide x with banderol or riband and leafy spandrels, 51cm wide x 12cm deep 29.5cm deep x 58cm high, (37in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 22 1/2in high) x 227cm high, (20in wide x 4 1/2in deep x 89in high) £700 - 1,000 £300 - 500

The helmet carved to the fourth panel is reminiscent of Leonardo Da Vinci’s (1452-1519) drawing, Bust of a Warrior in a Winged Helmet.

339

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 92 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 340 340

341 (detail)

342

343

340 342 CIRCLE OF JOHN DOWNMAN A.R.A (DENBIGHSHIRE 1750- A CHARLES I BOARDED OAK BOX, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, 1824 WREXHAM) CIRCA 1630 A portrait of a gentleman, identified as Mr Downs, head and The lid of twin-boards with triple-reeded edge, the front carved with shoulders, wearing navy jacket with red collar and short, powdered addorsed and scroll-ended leafy-beasts, each side carved with a stiff- wig, and another presumed to be of his wife, wearing a lace shawland leaf filled arcade, 76cm wide x 46cm deep x 23.5cm high, (29 1/2in headpiece, a pair, (2) wide x 18in deep x 9in high) Oil on canvas 30.5 x 25.5cm (12 x 10 1/16in). £600 - 800

£1,000 - 1,500 343 A CHARLES II BOARDED OAK BOX, NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA One with old handwritten label (partly obscured by backing paper) 1660 stating the sitter is Mr Downs, died December 1810, aged 69. The twin-plank hinged lid with decorative pairs of lightly-carved lines to its edge, the front board with chip-carved ends framing naturalistic 341 flowerheads - roses, daisies and marigolds - all on the same leafy A POSSIBLY 17TH/18TH CENTURY BEECH AND CARVED stem and against a matted ground, with small beak-like motifs at each ANTLER CORONET WALKING OR FIGHTING STICK corner, the ends each carved with a pair of foliate lunettes, spaced by The horn terminal with flattened end carved with a stylised crest, of a tulips, 68cm wide x 49cm deep x 18cm high, (26 1/2in wide x 19in profile male bust with raised arm, the other side carved with a face, deep x 7in high) and various stylised motifs, including a crowned rampant lion with a monkey upon its back, a flower and a dog, 72cm high £600 - 800

£600 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 93 344 A GOOD AND SMALL CHARLES II CHIP-CARVED FRUITWOOD AND OAK DESK BOX, DATED 1674 Of fine colour and patina, with hinged slope carved with the initials ‘EE’ and the date ‘1674’, enclosing an interior of three punch- 344 decorated small drawers, the falling front panel enclosing a full-length drawer, 32cm wide x 20.5cm deep x 18.5cm high, (12 1/2in wide x 8in deep x 7in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

345 A WHITE METAL-MOUNTED OAK LIDDED CIRCULAR SNUFF 344 (detail) BOX, DATED 1722 With white metal rims and a circular plaque inscribed ‘Sic transit gloria Mundi, Mai 1722’ and ‘From C.V. to T.B.’, 7.5cm diameter x 1.5cm high

£200 - 300

346 A SMALL CARVED OAK ‘ROMAYNE’-TYPE PANEL, CIRCA 1540 The bust of a woman, wearing a headdress and caul, within a laurel wreath with foliated scrolls to top and bottom, 24cm wide x 1cm deep x 29cm high, (9in wide x 0in deep x 11in high)

£300 - 400

347 A GEORGE III COPPER AND FRUITWOOD COLLECTION PAN, DATED 1815 The circular pan with domed, partial cover, engraved ‘Trinity Church, Preston, 1815’, with turned fruitwood handle, 65cm high 344 (open) £400 - 600

348 A CARVED OAK PANEL, NORTHERN FRENCH, CIRCA 1550, ST. CATHERINE The figure of St. Catherine holding a skull beneath a foliate-carved arcade on fluted pilasters rendered with perspective, 21.5cm wide x 2.5cm deep x 36.5cm high, (8in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 14in high)

£300 - 400

348

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 94 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 349 A GEORGE III BOARDED OAK BOX WITH DRAWER, GOWER PENNISULA, SOUTH WALES, CIRCA 1770 Of dove-tailed construction, the hinged single-piece top with ovolo- moulded edge, the front with precise shallow carving, designed with a pair of ovoid vases filled with radiating tulips, daisies and pointed- leaves, the drawer below carved with two reserves of paired birds, 58cm wide x 33cm deep x 30cm high, (22 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 11 1/2in high) 350 £1,500 - 2,000

Literature: See Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250-1950 (2007), Vol. II. p. 73, pl. 767, for a similar box with drawer also carved with ownership initials.

350 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1640 Having a triple-boarded end-cleated top, a single frieze drawer with central flat run-moulding and multiple-moulded lower edge, all rails with similar mouldings, on ring-turned columnar-turned legs, with tall end-blocks, and joined by plain stretchers all round, 108.5cm wide x 59.5cm deep x 73cm high, (42 1/2in wide x 23in deep x 28 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

351 * A MID- TO LATE 16TH CENTURY BRASS ALMS DISH, 349 NUREMBERG, CIRCA 1500-1550 The central boss of twelve double-contoured gadroons, spaced by sprays of three flowers, within a band of encircling Gothic script and a band of punched leaves, the rim with a single band of fleur-de-lys and tripod punches, rolled rim, 46.5cm diameter

£500 - 800

352 A SMALL 16TH/17TH CENTURY STONEWARE BELLARMINE, GERMAN, PROBABLY COLOGNE With moulded rim, speckled tigerware glaze and strap handle, 14.5cm high

£300 - 500

353 A GEORGE II SOLID YEW-WOOD MURAL CORNER CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1740 Of relatively small size, having a fielded panelled cupboard door, enclosing a green-painted interior of three shallow-concave shelves, 54.5cm wide x 37cm deep x 80cm high, (21in wide x 14 1/2in deep x 31in high)

£800 - 1,200

Provenance: Purchased from Derek Green, Cedar Antiques, Hartley Witney, Hampshire. 353

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 95 356 (top)

356 354 355 A 14TH CENTURY PEWTER PILGRIM’S BELL A 19TH CENTURY CARVED OAK ARMORIAL PANEL, ENGLISH With lozenge-shaped corona and clapper, together with other small With the arms of Trevelyan, Gules, issuant out of water in base pewter items to include - three rings, 13th to 16th century; a toy proper, a demi-horse argent, hoofed and maned or, with a crescent pot-hook, possibly 16th century, English; a large 16th century for difference, with fish supporters and crest above, the motto ‘Tyme ampulla; and a 15th century -top spoon with maker’s mark to Tryeth Troth’ on a banner below, 35cm wide x 3cm deep x 41cm high, fig-shaped bowl, (7) (13 1/2in wide x 1in deep x 16in high)

£400 - 600 £200 - 300

The arms here for Trevelyan include a crescent, denoting that these were the arms borne by a second son.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 96 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 356

356 * For a celebrated pair of cocus wood veneered cabinets see Her A RARE AND HIGHLY IMPRESSIVE CHARLES II COCUS- Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Collection, Windsor Castle, Berkshire WOOD, VENEERED ON OAK, SCRIPTOR, CIRCA 1665 (RCIN 35297). At least one of the cabinets was made for Henrietta Oyster-veneered throughout, the cyma-recta cornice made from the Maria (1609-1669), widow of Charles I and mother of Charles II, and solid, the fall enclosing a sophisticated fitted interior, namely a row of probably formed part of the dowager Queen’s furnishings at Somerset ‘pigeon-holes’, over nine drawers, centred by a cupboard enclosing House, London. Dr Adam Bowett refers to the cabinets as a ‘tours three rear drawers, with a further pigeon hole below, all within half- de force of cabinet-making’ with ‘no compelling reason to doubt round mouldings applied to the carcase rails and drawer dividers, the their English manufacture’, see English Furniture 1660-1714, p. 40. A stand with a long frieze drawer, raised on five spiral-turned legs, joined cocus wood cabinet-on-stand is illustrated Ibid., p.54, pl. 2.35. by concave-shaped platform stretchers, bun feet, 102cm wide x 49cm deep x 149cm high, (40in wide x 19in deep x 58 1/2in high) For a description of cocus wood, or Jamaican ebony, and its use by English cabinet makers from the 1660s onwards see ibid. p. 307. The £20,000 - 30,000 author notes that it is rare to find cocus wood used after 1680. ‘By this time olivewood, walnut and marquetry were more common’, p. For a scriptor of similar date, see the collection at Ham House, Surrey 54. (NT1139736.1). Made for the Duke of Lauderdale’s private closet, using burr-elm veneers, with a comparable fitted interior. The stand also with spiral-turned legs.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 97 Stuart relaxing at home, 1998. Lot 415 illustrated on the top shelf of the three-tier buffet.

Lots 357 - 534: The Stuart Kirby Collection

I first met Stuart Kirby some 40 years ago and I was immediately struck by his energetic and forthright manner, his huge curiosity and his passion for a wide range of early antiques. He soon became a good friend as well as a client, and my wife and I got used to his almost daily telephone calls, not only to find out what items I had discovered but also to discuss pieces that he had seen on-line in upcoming auctions, as well as our mutual personal lives! He was an original man of sharp intelligence, eccentric charm and an unusually wide knowledge, ranging from early English history to modern motor cars, wine labels and Paul Storr silver. His collection even included a framed football cup final shirt signed by both teams! Stuart met his last illness with truly astonishing courage, supported by his devoted wife, Irene and by the love of his children Harrison and Alexandra. He left a remarkable and very personal collection.

Tobias Jellinek.

Stuart, standing in the door way of a fine 15th century building, Much Wenlock, Shropshire. Although noted as a fine example of vernacular architecture, on this occasion it appealed more to Stuart’s sense of humour. For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 98 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 357

358 359

360 357 * 359 * A RARE AND SMALL JAMES I LEADED BRONZE MORTAR, A COMMONWEALTH LEADED BRONZE MORTAR, DATED 1654 PROBABLY BY THOMAS GILES (FL. 1605-14) OF CHICHESTER, Probably William Cuerdon (fl.1652-78) of Doncaster, Yorkshire SUSSEX, DATED 1611 Of flared slightly waisted form with flared rim and a pair of loop With flared rim, the body cast with the date ‘AD 1611’, and with the handles, cast with the date ‘1654’ above two decorative medial initials ‘TG WD’ and ‘P’, 10.5cm rim diameter x 8cm high bands, and cast to the other with a triad of ownership initials ‘WEA’, 18cm rim diameter x 14cm high £600 - 800 £800 - 1,200 Provenance: Sold Sotheby’s, February 2002, Lot 487. Provenance: Sold Sotheby’s, 22 May 2002, Lot 90. Illustrated: M. Finlay, English Decorated Bronze Mortars & their Makers (2010), p. Literature: 142, Figure 286. See Fig. 305, p. 153 of M. Finlay, English Decorated Bronze Mortars and their Makers (2010), which illustrates an almost identical mortar 358 * - bearing the initials ‘TKI’ - of the same date by William Cuerdon. A RARE AND FINELY CAST CHARLES I LEADED BRONZE William Cuerdon is said to have succeeded William Oldfield of MORTAR, BY WILLIAM CLIBURY (FL. 1605-42) OF Doncaster, and to have set up his foundry in 1653 (ibid., pp. 152 - 3). WELLINGTON, SHROPSHIRE, DATED 1637 With three handles, one cast as plaited cord, another a round-section 360 * loop, the third as a square-section loop, a fourth handle - possibly A QUEEN ANNE LEADED BRONZE MORTAR, BY RALPH as the result of a casting flaw - now lacking, and cast with a shield ASHTON (FL. 1703 - 1728) OF WIGAN, LANCASHIRE, DATED bearing the initials ‘W’ and ‘C’ either side of a fletched arrow, the date 1707 ‘1637’, a cross, and the initials ‘IY’ and ‘EY, three decorative cords at Of waisted form, cast to the body with a pair of ‘wires’ beneath the the waist, 22.5cm rim diameter x 17.5cm high flared rim and with three more above the flared foot, with a pair of loop handles with twist-work at their centre, one side of the body cast with £800 - 1,200 the date ‘1707’, the other side cast with the triad ‘RNM’ all around a small heart, and scratch-marked with a saltire foundry mark, 15.5cm Provenance: rim diameter x 12cm high Sold Hartley’s Auction, Ilkley, 11-12 October 2006, Lot 405, part of the Hurst Collection of mortars. £600 - 800

Illustrated: Literature: M. Finlay, English Decorated Bronze Mortars & their Makers (2010), See M. Finlay, English Decorated Bronze Mortars and their Makers p. 111, Figure 211, where it is noted that the Clibury foundry was of (2010), pp. 54-7 for other mortars by Ralph Ashton cast with fine ‘considerable importance’ and cast (mainly) bells from the last decade lettering, wires and hearts. A similar mortar, dated 1711, sold of the sixteenth century. Bonhams, 24 April 2013, Lot 294 (£3,500). For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 99 361

361 * A RARE, FINE AND LARGE CHARLES I LEADED BRONZE Robert Baldocke had been apprenticed in 1628 to Walter Southwell, MORTAR, DATED 1638, MADE FOR MARGARET BALDOCKE, a surgeon, apothecary and Mayor of Canterbury in 1634. A daughter GROCER, BY JOHN PALMAR [OR PALMER] OF CANTERBURY, called Mirian was born to them in January 1636. Robert Baldocke KENT (FL. 1621 IN GLOUCESTERSHIRE, FL. C. 1636 - 1656 IN died in 1638, and was buried in June, the year that this mortar was CANTERBURY) made. It is likely that Margaret, his widow, took over their business, An inscription beneath the rim reading, ‘IOHN PALMAR MADE MEE as many early modern women are known to have done, and FOR MARGRET BALDOCKE 1638’, the words and the date spaced commissioned this mortar for her use. by vacant lozenge stops, the remainder of this band cast with highly stylised flowers and a portcullis, the waist with a broad cast band of Now 26 and having been widowed twice, Margaret married again. The alternating roses and flowers amidst foliage centred by a portcullis, marriage licence for her third marriage in September 1639 reads: with two cord mouldings above the waist, and four below, 32cm rim diameter x 23.5cm high (12 5/8in rim diameter x 9 1/4in high) ‘Edward Pullen, the Younger, of Chadwell in Essex, mercer, bachelor, 21 and upwards, son of Edward Pullen the Elder of the same place, £3,000 - 5,000 innholder who consents, as is testified by John Bruxbie of Boughton Blean, tailor, and Margaret Baldock of Boughton Blean, widow of Provenance: Robert Baldocke, late of Canterbury deceased.’ In 1887, noted by J. C. L. Stahlschmidt, author of The Church Bells of Kent, that this mortar was then in a grocer’s shop in Canterbury, and In 1642, Edward Pullen stood as bondsman for a wedding - thought to be a bell, ‘its crown staple having been chipped or filed of’. Margaret’s father’s wedding, as it happens - and is described in the Ex-Arthur G. Hemming Collection. records as a grocer of Canterbury, so apparently established himself in Sold Christie’s, 12th November 2003, The Collection of Robert business alongside his third wife. Spalding, Lot 467. Sold Bonhams, these rooms, 21 January 2015, Lot 65, The Collection What happens thereafter to Margaret Pullen alias Baldocke, alias of Roger Rosewell FSA, Yelford Manor, Oxfordshire. Turner, née Bruxbie, is as yet undiscovered. Several Pullen children are born in Boughton Blean - where Margaret may have inherited property Illustrated: from her second husband - and her third husband was still alive in - A. G. Hemming, ‘Dated English Bell-Metal Mortars’, Connoisseur 1642. No record of her death, or of a fourth marriage, has been found. (March, 1929), 165, No. VIII. - P. Hornsby, Collecting Antique Copper & Brass (1989), p. 14, Figure Mortars cast with a woman’s full name, and only with a woman’s full 5. name, are rare. Conventionally, a woman’s name appears alongside - M. Finlay, English Decorated Bronze Mortars & their Makers (2010), and following her husband’s. Michael Finlay’s ‘Checklist of English p. 49, Figure 58, where it is noted that only one other mortar by this Dated Mortars 1308- 1979’ (Finlay, Decorated Mortars, pp. 169 - 198) maker is known at present. includes over four-hundred dated mortars known to the author in 2010. Only three of them - including Margaret Baldocke’s mortar - are Margaret Baldocke married at least three times. She was born inscribed with a woman’s name alone. Margaret Bruxbie [or Bruxby, Brookesby, Brouxby] c. 1612, the daughter of John Bruxbie, tailor, of All Saint’s, Canterbury. In 1632, John Palmar probably started his career in Gloucester but was she married William Turner (born c. 1608), grocer, at Chilham, Kent. established in Canterbury by 1638. Whilst a posnet by him is William Turner dying very shortly after their wedding, Margaret Turner recorded, as well as a number of skillets, only one other mortar made née Bruxbie then married again. The marriage licence for this second by him is at present known, and it was made in 1621 during his time marriage in 1633 reads as follows: in Gloucester. This mortar, made for Margaret Baldocke, is the only surviving mortar cast by him at Canterbury. See, ibid., pp. 49 - 50. ‘Baldock, Robert of All Saints’, Canterbury, grocer, widower and Margaret Turner, of the same place, widow of William Turner late of St. Andrew’s, Canterbury, deceased, at All Saint’s’. For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 100 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 362

363

364

365

362 * 364 * A WILLIAM IV BRASS ALLOY IMPERIAL STANDARD MEASURE, THREE LEADED BRONZE IMPERIAL STANDARD BELL OF GALLON CAPACITY, FOR THE COUNTY OF GLOUCESTER, WEIGHTS FOR CORNWALL COUNTY, TWO DATED 1826 BY BATE OF LONDON, DATED 1834 The largest stamped ‘IMP’, ‘WR’ beneath a crown, ‘C’ and ‘B’ either The rim marked with the Exchequer portcullis three times, once with side of a sword, and ‘IMP’, the second stamped twice each with a the date 1885, and with three crowned ciphers, two for William IV, the shield filled with rows of dots and a portcullis and the date ‘1826’, the body with a pair of facetted balustroid handles and marked ‘IMPERIAL smallest stamped once with the same shield and twice with the same GALLON / COUNTY / OF / GLOUCESTER / 1834 / BATE, LONDON’, portcullis and date, the largest 16cm high, (3) the footrim marked ‘1858’, 19.5cm rim diameter x 19cm high £200 - 300 £800 - 1,200 Literature: 363 * See J. Douglas and C. Ricketts, Marks and Markings of Weights and A WILLIAM IV/EARLY VICTORIAN BRASS ALLOY IMPERIAL Measures of the British Isles (1996), p. 240. STANDARD MEASURE, OF GILL CAPACITY, FOR THE COUNTY OF SUFFOLK, BY BATE OF LONDON 365 * The rim marked with the Exchequer portcullis and with crowned A LEADED BRONZE VESSEL OR UTENSIL, POSSIBLY A ciphers for Queen Victoria and possibly for William IV, the body MORTAR marked ‘IMPERIAL GILL / SUFFOLK / BATE, LONDON’, the footrim Of broadening, cylindrical form, with bulbous rim and footrim and marked ‘1164’, 6.2cm diameter x 6.2cm high central cord, pierced near the footrim with an extraction hole, 6.5cm rim diameter x 9cm high £200 - 300 £100 - 150

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 101 366

366 367 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK CENTRE OR SMALL SERVING A RARE AND GOOD CHARLES I JOINED OAK FORM OR TABLE, SALISBURY AND THE SUROUNDING AREA, CIRCA BENCH, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1630 1630 Having a fine one-piece ovolo-moulded top, the front rail with a simple Having a twin-boarded end-cleated top, the front frieze rail with pattern carved and punch-decorated crescents between narrow cushion run-moulding and integral scroll-carved spandrels, the run-mouldings, all remaining rails with narrow moulded lower edge, on remaining plain rails with similar profiled spandrels, on columnar ring- elegant parallel-baluster over ball-turned legs, joined by a rare H-form turned legs, joined by plain stretchers, 107.5cm wide x 59cm deep x stretcher, on squat-ball feet, 220cm wide x 26.5cm deep x 60.5cm 77cm high, (42in wide x 23in deep x 30in high) high, (86 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 23 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000 £6,000 - 8,000

Provenance:

An accompanying handwritten note, dated 1902, states this bench ‘came from Alcester Presbyterian Church’, Bull’s Head Yard, Warwickshire.

367

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 102 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 368 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1680 The thin top boards with a simple chamfered edge, over three long drawers, each with paired and geometric mitre-mouldings, single 368 panelled rear and sides, on particularly tall stile feet, 91cm wide x 53cm deep x 88cm high, (35 1/2in wide x 20 1/2in deep x 34 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

369 A RARE AND SMALL ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK COFFER, CIRCA 1590 Having a triple-panelled hinged lid and front, with asymmetrical dust- chamfered rails, on extended stile supports, interior lidded till, 80cm wide x 52cm deep x 66cm high, (31in wide x 20in deep x 25 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

370 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1680 Typically in two-parts, the boarded top with ovolo and cyma-recta moulded applied edge, above four side-hung, mitre and cushion- moulded long drawers, cavetto base-moulding, on extended stile feet, 101.5cm wide x 60cm deep x 92.5cm high, (39 1/2in wide x 23 1/2in 369 deep x 36in high)

£800 - 1,000

370

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 103 371

371 * A REMARKABLE JAMES I JOINED OAK FOLDING OR ‘GAMES- TABLE’, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1620 Having a boarded octagonal folding-top, the base of canted form, with leafy-lunette carved rails, arched aprons with leafy carved spandrels and particularly rare ball-shaped pendants, on columnar ring-turned legs joined by a boarded undertier, with simple rear gate, 99cm wide x 48.5cm deep x 77cm high, (38 1/2in wide x 19in deep x 30in high)

£7,000 - 10,000

372 * A GOOD CHARLES I JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1630 The back panel carved with a central flowerhead leading to demi- flowers at each cardinal point, with a palmette-leaf to each corner, the top rail carved with a matching flowerhead and paired pointed-leaves, below an integral scrolling-leaf carved cresting, each back upright carved with a stiff-leaf above the relatively flat scroll-ended arms, on tall baluster-turned front supports, with trapezoid-shaped boarded seat, and flower-filled lunette-carved seat rails, on inverted-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 63.5cm wide x 58cm deep x 97.5cm high, (25in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 38in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

372 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 104 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 373

373 374 A CHARLES II BEADWORK PICTURE, CIRCA 1660 A GOOD PAIR OF WILLIAM & MARY/QUEEN ANNE Designed with a central roundel of Abraham raising his sword, which CREWELWORK WALL HANGINGS, CIRCA 1690-1710 is restrained by the Hand of God, as he prepares to sacrifice his son Designed with a prominent ‘tree of life’, having curling branches of Isaac, the surround with floral sprays to each corner and trailing fruit, bold leaves and flowers, atop hillocks, with deer, embroidered mainly flowers and leaves, mounted on a board, framed and glazed, 26cm x in red, blue, green and brown wool, with satin, eye and encroaching 34.5cm stitches, 196cm x 85cm, the other 186cm x 82cm, (2)

£3,000 - 4,000 £3,000 - 5,000

Provenance: An exhibition label to the rear reads: ‘No. 2, Lent by Admiral Sir Robert & Lady Prendergast, Meads House, Meads, Eastbourne, Oct. 1925’.

374

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 105 375 (front) 375 (back)

375 AN IMPRESSIVE PAIR OF GOTHIC-REVIVAL OAK DOORS Of pointed-arch form, the frame of chamfered rails applied with boards held in place by square-head iron ‘studs’, over-sized decorative scroll- work iron hinges, 155cm wide x 6cm deep x 267cm high, (61in wide x 2in deep x 105in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

376 A 16TH OR 17TH CENTURY BOARDED OAK ALMS BOX, ENGLISH The hinged lid with line moulding, wrought iron strap hinges and hasps, the front fitted with two iron locks, the proper right end with another, 23.5cm wide x 20cm deep x 19cm high, (9in wide x 7 1/2in 376 deep x 7in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Hadzor Parish church, Worcestershire. Removed in the 1920s. The William Stokes Collection, Cirencester, Gloucestershire, circa 1954

377 A GOOD CAST IRON FIREBACK, WEALD, SUSSEX Possibly mid-16th century Of rectangular form with canted corners and rope-twist edge, cast with the Royal Arms between two lion rampant supporters and above a crowned Tudor Rose, in each upper angle two small figures, 102cm wide x 3.5cm deep x 59cm high, (40in wide x 1in deep x 23in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Similar examples are in Anne of Cleves House, Lewes, East Sussex, 377 England.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 106 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 378

378 * A GOOD CHARLES I JOINED OAK LIVERY CUPBOARD, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 With twin-plank top and a nulled-carved top rail, the single-shelf cupboard enclosed by two panelled doors, each with slender flower- filled guilloche carved panel atop a floral-quatrefoil carved panel, plain twin-panelled sides, the run-moulded base rail with integral spandrels, key, 121cm wide x 55.5cm deep x 100.5cm high, (47 1/2in wide x 21 1/2in deep x 39 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

379 AN UNUSUAL CHARLES II BOARDED OAK BOX, CIRCA 1660 The lid carved with a central foliate roundel, within a line-carved chevron border, the front with an unusual double register of carved motifs, a pair of leafy lunettes above a pair of floral lunettes, spaced by a run moulding, the ends carved only with a lower matching floral 379 lunette, 47.5cm wide x 32.5cm deep x 25cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 9 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,000

Provenance: The William Stokes Collection, Cirencester, Gloucestershire.

380 * A SMALL CHARLES II BOARDED OAK BOX, CIRCA 1660 The hinged lid with shaped edge, above a front carved with a bold lunette framing a pair of stylised leaves, the ends each with two registers of foliate guilloche 41cm wide x 27.5cm deep x 20.5cm high, (16in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 8in high)

£400 - 600

380

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 107 381 382

383 384

386

385

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 108 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 387

388

* 381 386 * AN UNUSUAL MID-TO LATE 17TH CENTURY BRASS ALLOY A SMALL MID- TO LATE 17TH CENTURY BRASS-ALLOY TRUMPET-BASED SOCKET CANDLESTICK, ENGLISH, CIRCA TRUMPET-BASED SOCKET CANDLESTICK, CIRCA 1650-80 1650-80 The socket with broad flange, two ‘wedding bands’ to the stem and With unusually-truncated upper stem with broad flange, both upper raised on a slightly dished circular base with flared edge and footrim, and lower stem with decorative bands, on a broad circular foot with 9cm base diameter x 12.5cm high narrow rim, 14cm base diameter x 15.5cm high £400 - 600 £1,000 - 1,500 387 * * 382 A RARE PAIR OF CHARLES II STEEL EMBER TONGS, CIRCA A GOOD MID-17TH CENTURY BRASS TRUMPET-BASED 1680 SOCKET CANDLESTICK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1660 With decorative chamfers and notches, and terminating in a pair of With narrow socket flange, faint medial knop to upper stem, mid-drip nips formed as human hands, with punch decoration, a pipe tamper pan and flared circular base, 13cm base diameter x 18cm high to one handle, 42cm high

£1,000 - 1,500 £400 - 600 * 383 Literature: A MID- TO LATE 17TH CENTURY BRASS ALLOY TRUMPET- See J. Seymour Lindsay, Iron & Brass Implements of the English BASED SOCKET CANDLESTICK, CIRCA 1650-80 House (1970), Figure 366. With flange, the upper and lower stems ribbed, and with mid drip-pan, spreading circular base, 12.5cm base diameter x 16.5cm high 388 * A PAIR OF GEORGE I WROUGHT IRON EMBER TONGS, CIRCA £1,000 - 1,500 1720 With filed decoration, one handle a whistle, the nips curved, a small * 384 rectangle of inlaid brass probably once with initials or a date, 35cm A MID- TO LATE 17TH CENTURY BRASS ALLOY TRUMPET- high BASED SOCKET CANDLESTICK, CIRCA 1650-80 With flange, the upper and lower stems ribbed, and with mid drip-pan, £300 - 500 spreading circular base, 13cm base diameter x 16.5cm high Literature: £1,000 - 1,500 Illustrated ‘The Expert’, 6 July 1907.

* 385 A similar pair - dated 1726 - with curving jaws and whistle handle sold A RARE MID-17TH CENTURY BRASS TRUMPET-BASED Bonhams, 18 September 2018, Lot 409. SOCKET CANDLESTICK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1650-70 The broad socket flange stamped with the initials ‘GE’, the ribbed upper stem slightly tapering to the broad mid-drip pan, with ribbed lower stem and broad, flared trumpet base with footrim, 15cm base diameter x 17.5cm high

£1,000 - 1,500

The (probably ownership) initials to the socket flange are a rare feature. For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 109 389

389 * 390 A RARE AND FINE JOINED OAK COFFER, CIRCA 1520 A GOOD CHARLES II JOINED OAK GATELEG TABLE, CIRCA With an impressive single-panelled lid, the front with four linenfold 1670 carved panels, the broad stiles (reminiscent of a clamp chest) and the The oval drop-leaf top formed from impressive single-piece boards, muntin rail occuli and lancet tracery carved, the interior lidded till with on ball and ring-turned legs, with rare pivotal-hinged matching turned a ‘secret’ false base compartment, twin-panelled sides, the panelled gates, pear-shaped feet, particularly fine surface and colour, 129cm back with dust-chamfers, 114cm wide x 44cm deep x 55.5cm high, wide x 105.5cm deep x 70cm high, (50 1/2in wide x 41 1/2in deep x (44 1/2in wide x 17in deep x 21 1/2in high) 27 1/2in high)

£5,000 - 8,000 £2,000 - 3,000

Red-painted inventory number 19.1960.2 to one side top rail.

390

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 110 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 391 * In A System of Heraldry by Alexander Nisbet, published in 1722, AN EXTREMELY RARE JAMES I/CHARLES I JOINED OAK the arms of Sir George Drummond of Edinburgh (1688-1766) were CAQUETEUSE ARMCHAIR, ABERDEENSHIRE, CIRCA 1620-40 recorded as ‘Or, three bars wavy and in chief a martlet between two Having a resplendent cresting with leaf-carved broken pediment crescents all Gules’. Here, the martlet is lacking and the tinctures centred by a shield carved with the coat of arms three bars wavy... are not hatched, but it is very likely that this chair was made for a in chief two crescents, flanked by the inlaid initials ‘G’ & ‘D’, atop a Drummond ancestor (many Drummond families in Scotland bore three tall back panel, carved with a large central flowerhead roundel, four wavy lines on their coats of arms) which fits with the initials ‘GD’ either matching small roundels and a demi-flower to each end, the back side of the coat of arms. uprights and lower back rail all stiff-leaf carved, the outsplayed round- ended arms on baluster-turned front supports, trapezoid-shaped Sir George Drummond, Lord Provost of Edinburgh, was a junior boarded pine seat, the seat rails having rectangular reserves carved member of the family of Drummond of Milnab. out of the solid, on inverted-baluster turned front legs with stiff-leaf carved upper blocks, joined by run-moulded stretchers, 61.5cm wide For similar armchairs see the Trinity Hall Collection, Aberdeen and the x 46cm deep x 126cm high, (24in wide x 18in deep x 49 1/2in high) Burrell Collection Glasgow, accession nos. 14.183 & 14.50.

£10,000 - 15,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 111 394 392

392 * 394 * A RARE AND GOOD ELIZABETH I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA A FINE JAMES I OAK JOINT STOOL, SALISBURY, CIRCA 1620 1580 In the manner of the Humphrey Beckham workshop Having a double-reeded edge top, bicuspid-shaped rails, and Of good height, having a six-pegged triple-reeded edge top, cable- inverted-baluster turned legs with fine fluted carving over reel-turning, carved and lower-edge moulded rails, on parallel-baluster over reel- joined by plain stretchers all round, 46.7cm wide x 27cm deep x turned legs, joined by run-moulded stretchers all round, 46cm wide x 54.5cm high, (18in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 21in high) 27.5cm deep x 59.5cm high, (18in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 23in high)

£6,000 - 8,000 £4,000 - 6,000

393 * Provenance: A CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOL, DERBYSHIRE, Lavington Chapel, Bideford, Devon. CIRCA 1670 Having a pair of arched splats, each profusely chip-carved, with a Literature: smooth top and scalloped inner edge, adorned with turned pendants See Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), and finials, scroll-terminals and applied turned split-mouldings to the Appendix III, for biographical details regarding the joiner Humphrey back uprights, the elm panelled seat on block and ball-turned front Beckham (1588-1671). legs, joined by a ball-turned fore-rail and multiple plain stretchers, 48cm wide x 39cm deep x 100.5cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 15in deep See Lot 235. x 39 1/2in high) 395 * £400 - 600 A SMALL GEORGE III OAK DELFT-RACK, CIRCA 1770 Having a scroll-profiled frieze, and three shelves each with a retaining- bar, flanked by scrolling fretwork pilasters, 105cm wide x 15.5cm deep x 97.5cm high, (41in wide x 6in deep x 38in high)

£400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 112 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 396

396 * 398 * A RARE, EXTREMELY FINE AND SMALL CHARLES I JOINED A PAIR OF GEORGE I BRASS SOCKET CANDLESTICKS, CIRCA OAK STANDING LIVERY CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1630 1720 Profusely carved overall with foliate strapwork, having a boarded top, Each with waisted vase-shaped socket with moulded rim, and the front with a central board door, carved with a large circular motif, seamed stem cast with a square-knopped rising baluster raised on an a fleur-de-lys to each cardinal point and leafy-spandrels, flanked by a octagonal base, 17cm high, (2) daisy and tulip stylized plant carved panel, atop a cushion-moulded drawer, with internal locking pegs, on matching carved stile front £200 - 300 supports, joined by an open boarded undertier, 91cm wide x 40cm deep x 93.5cm high, (35 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 36 1/2in high) 399 * A BRASS ALLOY SOCKET CANDLESTICK £8,000 - 12,000 The socket with moulded rims, circular extraction piercings and ball- and blade-knopped stem with threaded end, the dished drip-pan Provenance: fashioned as an eight-pointed star, on an in-curved base with narrow Ludstone Hall, Claverley, Wolverhampton. footrim, 11cm base diameter x 17cm high

Literature: £200 - 300 Illustrated in situ, The Antique Collector, December 1965 - January 1666, p. 242. Provenance: Bearing a paper label reading ‘Ex-Collection Rupert Gentle England’. 397 * AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY BRASS EJECTOR SOCKET This unusual candlestick may - since the stem and the base are made CANDLESTICK, ENGLISH/FRENCH, CIRCA 1720 from metals of two slightly different colours - be a marriage between With broad flange, the stem with central bulbous knop and two two separate parts. sections of linear decoration, the ejector with brass knob handle, on a stepped octagonal base, 26.5cm high

£200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 113 400

400 A GOOD AND SMALL CHARLES II JOINED OAK COURT CUPBOARD, NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA 1660 Having an interlaced-lunette and fleur-de-lys carved and ball end- pendant frieze, above a pair of panelled, geometric-carved and punched-decorated cupboard doors centred by a highly stylized flowering plant, the cupboard below accessed by a central twin- panelled cupboard door, flanked by plain fixed panels, on tall extended stile supports, 114.5cm wide x 52cm deep x 145cm high, (45in wide x 20in deep x 57in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

401 A SMALL MID-17TH CENTURY JOINED AND BOARDED OAK CHEST, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1650 The one-piece lid board with chip-carved ends, the front with two panels framed within run-moulded rails, the slightly inset sides with crossed saw-marks to the apex of their V-shaped cut-away ends, 82cm wide x 33cm deep x 58cm high, (32in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 401 22 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 114 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 402

402 * A RARE AND FINE CHARLES II JOINED OAK FOOD CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1660 With a thin boarded top and dentil-moulded cornice, and a pair of twin-panelled cupboard doors, each panel having small pierced ventilation holes arranged in a framed lozenge design, enclosing two pairs of shelves with central division, twin-panelled sides, on extended narrow run-moulded stiles, 105.5cm wide x 49cm deep x 109cm high, (41 1/2in wide x 19in deep x 42 1/2in high)

£5,000 - 8,000

403 * A RARE AND SMALL CHARLES I JOINED OAK GATELEG OCCASSIONAL TABLE, CIRCA 1640 Having an oval drop-leaf top, on rare single-board trestle-ends with rounded edges, joined by a slender platform stretcher, on sledge-type feet, simple gates, open: 73.5cm wide x 60.5cm deep x 72cm high, (28 1/2in wide x 23 1/2in deep x 28in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

403

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 115 405 404

406 407

408 409

410 410

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 116 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 404 * A GEORGE III BRASS DOG COLLAR, DATED 1771 Covered with dome-topped brass studs and engraved with the date ‘1771’ and ‘T. HURDSMAN / YORK ST / OSWESTRY.’, also fitted with a brass ring and pierced with four slots, 3.8cm high

£500 - 800

There is still a Hurdsman Street off York Street in Oswestry, Shropshire.

405 * A GEORGE III BRASS DOG COLLAR, DATED 1786 With foliate engraved rim and inscribed ‘Tho.s Cook, Baker, Redcliff Street, Bristol’, and with three slots for the swivelling iron catch, 2.8cm high

£600 - 800

406 * A GEORGE III BRASS AND LEATHER DOG COLLAR, CIRCA 1800 With leather lining and rolled rims, iron ring attachment and adjusting to four positions, later padlock, engraved ‘Henry Murray Esq. / XXTH REGT’, 13.5cm diameter

£300 - 500

407 * A GEORGE III BRASS AND LEATHER DOG COLLAR, CIRCA 1800 With leather lining and rolled rims, engraved ‘W. SLEE’, brass ring attachment and adjusting to five positions, later padlock marked ‘GUEST & CHRIMES’, 13.5cm maximum diameter

£300 - 500

408 * A SMALL MID-19TH CENTURY BRASS DOG COLLAR With notched edge forming spikes, and engraved ‘1 Russell Terrace . Bedminster / I am Mrs Graham’s dog & whose dog art thou!’, adjusting in two pierced slots and with iron padlock loop, 9.5cm 411 maximum diameter

£300 - 500 411 * A Mary A. Graham, born in 1815, was recorded as keeping a boarding A MID-18TH CENTURY LANTERN CLOCK house at 1 Russell Terrace, Bedminster in the census returns of 1861. George Borrett, Stowmarket Surmounted by a strapped bell and five urn finials between three * 409 engraved arcaded frets over four tapering columns with side doors on AN IRON MANACLE OR COLLAR ball feet, the 6.5 inch wide silvered Roman chapter ring with lozenge Hinged, and with notched edges forming spikes, with attached iron half hour markers and inner quarter hour track, the centre signed and ring, 14cm maximum diameter, together with a Victorian iron and with foliated scrolls, ball feet, with weight and pendulum, 37.5cm high brass dog collar, circa 1850, of links and with a brass plaque reading ‘Jas. Wm. Lambert / 11 Morden Place / Lewisham Rd. / £2,000 - 3,000 Greenwich Kent’, (2) Literature: £200 - 300 B. Loomes, Watchmakers & Clockmakers of the World (2006), p. 87, records two clockmakers with the name George Borrett. The first, A James William Lambert married Charlotte Everest in Greenwich, George Borrett I worked in Stowmarket ‘next door to the Black Swan’ Kent in 1838. He was still living in Greenwich in 1865. until 1780. His son, George Borrett II, also worked in Stowmarket, dying in 1773. 410 * AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY ENGRAVED BRASS AND STEEL RIM LOCK, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700-30 The brass box engraved with foliated scrolls, the steel mechanism also finely engraved and filed, 22cm wide x 3cm deep x 12cm high, (8 1/2in wide x 1in deep x 4 1/2in high)

£200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 117 412

412 * A RARE SET OF FOUR MID-16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK PORTRAIT PANELS, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1550 Of two men and two women, all elaborately dressed and each carved with an emblematic flower, including a rose, a marigold, a thistle etc., all beneath a cusped or ogee arch with crenellated top, carved pilasters, and a spray of leaves below, 25cm wide x 2.5cm deep x 37cm high, (9 1/2in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 14 1/2in high) (4)

£4,000 - 6,000

413 * AN EARLY 17TH CENTURY CARVED OAK STRAPWORK PANEL, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1620 Centred by a large rosette with straps at the cardinal points, and in a surround carved as a scroll-edged cartouche, with triad of initials 413 ‘RRC’ (or ‘RRG’), 36cm wide x 2cm deep x 32.5cm high, (14in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 12 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

414 * A JAMES I/CHARLES I CARVED OAK ARMORIAL PANEL, DATED 1625 Carved with a shield bearing three escutcheons beneath a yoke or collar, the date ‘1625’ carved to the top, the pairs of initials ‘TH’ and ‘IK’ below, with whorls and roundels, and integral, carved edge moulding, 32cm wide x 39.5cm high

£300 - 500

The coat of arms has not been identified but may refer to Thomas Hitchin who married Joane Kempton on 8 July 1625 in Knebworth, Hertfordshire.

414 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 118 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 415 * A JAMES I OAK FINIAL, DATED 1618 Of stylised poppy-head shape, and carved ‘WM Church / W / 1618’, 19.5cm wide x 4cm deep x 40.5cm high, (7 1/2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 15 1/2in high)

£200 - 300

The inscription to this finial probably commemorates a person with the initials ‘WM’; ‘Church / W’ probably stands for churchwarden. 415 416 * A 19TH CENTURY STAINED AND PAINTED BEER COASTER, ENGLISH With a circular depression at one end for a jug or flagon, and with six depressions for glasses or tankards at the other, lobed end, painted ‘WASTE NOT / WANT NOT’ to the edge, with one fixed and one swivelling axle, iron wheels, 48cm wide x 25cm deep x 11cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 9 1/2in deep x 4in high)

£800 - 1,200

417 * A PAIR OF EARLY 16TH CENTURY CARVED OAK TRACERY PANELS, CIRCA 1500-30 Each with two registers of tracery, one with its uppermost carved with quatrefoils between a pair of twin-light lancet arches, the other with 416 a rose ‘window’, both with a lower register of five twin-light lancet arches, 29cm wide x 39cm high, (2)

£400 - 600

418 * A LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY OAK BEER COASTER, ENGLISH Of elongated octagonal form, and with low gallery, carved at one end with a circular depression, and elsewhere with draining grooves, fitted with four swivelling iron castors, 51cm wide x 24cm deep x 8.5cm high, (20in wide x 9in deep x 3in high)

£500 - 800

419 * A WROUGHT IRON WINDOW FRAME Topped by a trefoil, above a pair of lancet-arched tracery lights, 43cm wide x 2.5cm deep x 84cm high, (16 1/2in wide x 0 1/2in deep x 33in high) 417

£200 - 300

418 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 119 420 420 A RARE ELIZABETH I JOINED OAK AND INLAID PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, CIRCA 1600 The back panel with applied moulded frame, centred by a part lozenge-shaped boss, the straight cresting rail with prominent overhang and geometric inlay, the inlay repeated to the back uprights, the lower back rail inlaid in a dog-tooth design, and again to the bicuspid-profiled seat rails, the boarded seat with ovolo-moulded edge, the stepped downswept and scroll-ended arms on slender parallel-baluster over reel-turned supports, with matching turned front legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 62.5cm wide x 58cm deep x 110.5cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 43 1/2in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

The front right-hand upper leg block with a rare full-name branded inventory mark ‘C. (or G?) CATCHPOL’. Several Gabriel Catchpol’s are recorded as living and dying in Suffolk in the 17th century.

Literature See Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700, p. 93, pl. 87 & 89 for comparable armchairs.

421 A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having an ovolo-moulded top, and nulled-carved rails with lower moulded edge, on inverted-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 47cm wide x 26.5cm deep x 55.5cm high, 421 (18 1/2in wide x 10in deep x 21 1/2in high)

£1,000 - 1,500 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 120 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 422 422 * 423 * A RARE, GOOD AND SMALL CHARLES II JOINED OAK A PAIR OF WROUGHT IRON WALL SCONCES ENCLOSED CHEST OF DRAWERS, WITH BOX-TOP, CIRCA Each with a slightly curved and pierced backplate, and fitted with a 1660 handle-like projection and socket, 10cm wide x 12cm deep x 30cm The hinged boarded top with scribed-edge, and enclosing a shallow high, (3 1/2in wide x 4 1/2in deep x 11 1/2in high) (2) well, carved interlaced lunettes and fleur-de-lys to three sides, atop a pair of elaborate geometric-moulded panelled cupboard doors, £150 - 200 with pyramidal boss and original butterfly-hinges, enclosing four long drawers, 80cm wide x 44.7cm deep x 93cm high, (31in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 36 1/2in high)

£5,000 - 8,000

Unusually the door mouldings are not applied but instead are an integral part of the construction.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 121 424 * 429 A CHARLES II CARVED SANDSTONE MORTAR, DATED 1675 A GEORGE I LEADED BRONZE 7LB WOOL WEIGHT, CIRCA Square, with concave corners, and carved to each face with a 1715 different reserve, including ‘THOM / AS / RAPER’, ‘TR 1675’, and Cast with the Royal Arms beneath the cypher ‘GR’, the margins with various motifs, 17cm wide x 17cm deep x 20cm high, (6 1/2in wide x a set of unusual marks, struck twice with warden’s Avoirdupois ‘A’, 6 1/2in deep x 7 1/2in high) and with the Founders’ Company ewer mark, and also with the weight ‘7lb’ and an untraced mark of the initials ‘LL’ and ‘No. 1’ beneath £600 - 800 a foliate motif, pierced for suspension and with a cavity to reserve, 10.5cm wide x 4cm deep x 16.5cm high, (4in wide x 1 1/2in deep x This mortar probably belonged to Thomas Raper, Grocer (a trade 6in high) which would have required a mortar) of London, whose will was proved on 14 January 1692/3 (National Archives PROB 11/414/2). £700 - 1,000 Originally, from Yorkshire, several Raper brothers, including Thomas Raper, settled in London. They were involved in the early ventures of 430 * the East India Company. AN 18TH CENTURY WHITE-METAL MOUNTED LEATHER MUG OR TANKARD, ENGLISH Another similar mortar, dated 1668, and inscribed with a variety of The mount to the rim with lambrequin handle, with stitched seams and letters including ‘L’, ‘WM’, ‘PERME’ and ‘RL’, sold Christie’s, 12 angular handle, 6cm rim diameter x 14.5cm high November 2003, Lot 489 (£2,350). £300 - 500 425 * A 16TH CENTURY ROSSO VERONA MARBLE FONT, ITALIAN 431 * The rim with relief-carved cross, 42.5cm diameter x 19.5cm high A GEORGE III WHITE METAL-MOUNTED ENGRAVED HORN BEAKER, CIRCA 1800 £300 - 500 With white metal-mounted rim and footrim, engraved with huntsmen and hounds in a landscape with houses, 6.5cm rim diameter x 10cm Provenance: high The Clive Sherwood Collection. Sold Sotheby’s, 22 May 2002, Lot 198. £80 - 120

426 * 432 * AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY CLEAR GLASS CRUCIFORM A LARGE LIGNUM VITAE PESTLE DECANTER, OR SERVING BOTTLE, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1700-30 With bulbous head and terminal knop, 35.5cm high Moulded in a cross shape, the tall tapering neck applied with multiple rings, 21cm high £150 - 200

£300 - 500 Provenance: Sold Bonhams, 29 March 2017, Lot 25 (part), the property of Lord 427 * Harlech from Glyn Cywarch. FIVE MEDIEVAL ENCAUSTIC FLOOR TILES, 14TH AND 15TH CENTURY All probably heraldic, one with the initials ‘AR’ (the R reversed) and a label to the reverse reading ‘TILE FROM MONASTERY OF AUSTIN FRIARS - LUDLOW SHROPSHIRE MID-14TH CENT’, another showing a rider upon a horse and with a label reading ‘Muchelney Abbey, Somerset’ to reverse, (5)

£1,000 - 1,500

428 * A 17TH CENTURY STONEWARE BELLARMINE, RHENISH Of ovoid shape in mottled brown saltglaze, applied with a typical grimacing mask and a formal wheel medallion, 22cm high

£200 - 300

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 122 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 425

424

427 428 426

430 429

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 123 433

433 A GOOD ELIZABETH I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK ARK OR MEAL CHEST, CIRCA 1570 The typical ‘dome’-lid constructed using three overlapping boards tenon-jointed into extended shaped-ends, each end resting in a rear slot, the side rails tenoned-pegged through broad stiles, the front with two small panels, 83cm wide x 55cm deep x 68cm high, (32 1/2in wide x 21 1/2in deep x 26 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

Literature: See Cescinsky and Gribble, Early English Furniture and Woodwork (1922), Vol. II, pp. 11-12, figs. 9-11, for two comparable arks, both dated to the 15th century. See also Ralph Edwards, Dictionary of 434 English Furniture (1986), Vol. II, p. 29, fig. 3.

An ark was typically used for the storage of grain, such as meal, corn and flour. It is traditionally thought that the lid was not fixed in place and once removed the dished underside would have been used as a trough for kneading dough.

434 A GOOD AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES I JOINED AND BOARDED OAK AND ELM MURAL CUPBOARD, GLOUCESTERSHIRE, CIRCA 1630 The single panelled cupboard door carved with a large whorl-filled double-heart motif, below a leafy-lunette carved top rail and flanked by stiff-leaf tulip-stems, with simple base moulding, and single elm interior shelf, 50cm wide x 21.5cm deep x 56cm high, (19 1/2in wide x 8in deep x 22in high)

£4,000 - 6,000

Provenance: The John Fardon Collection. The Lygo Collection.

Illustrated: Lot 434 illustrated Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. 285, fig. The British Tradition, 2016 (ACC) 3:295.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 124 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 435

435 AN INTERESTING JAMES I JOINED OAK COFFER, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1610 Having a triple-panelled lid, the front again of three panels, each well-carved with an arcade, enclosing a frilly-leaf, a flowering stem and a fleur-de-lys respectively, all within floral guilloche-carved rails, each side carved with a roundel-filled lozenge and arrow-head motifs to the inter-cardinal points, internal till, quadruple-panelled back, the front and side base rails with integral spandrels, 120.5cm wide x 55cm deep x 70cm high, (47in wide x 21 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

436 * A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having a six-pegged top with ovolo-moulded edge, lower edge- 436 moulded rails, and elongated parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs joined by robust plain stretchers all round, ball-turned feet, and two sets of stamped ownership initials, 46.5cm wide x 27.3cm deep x 56.5cm high, (18in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 22in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

437 * A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, NORTH COUNTRY, CIRCA 1640 Having an ovolo-moulded top, broad flat run-moulded centred rails with geometric punch-decoration, on columnar-turned legs, joined by plain narrow run-moulded stretchers all round, 47.5cm wide x 29cm deep x 51cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 20in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

437

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 125 438 * A REMARKABLY RARE AND GOOD JAMES I JOINED OAK SIX- LEG REFECTORY-TYPE TABLE, CIRCA 1620 Having a deep triple-boarded and end-cleated top, the nulled-carved front frieze with scroll-carved spandrels, the central double-spandrel flanking integral strapwork, the right-hand end-frieze also nulled- carved, all remaining rails left plain, and all with plain scroll-profiled spandrels, on robust baluster and ring-turned legs, joined by run- moulded cross and peripheral stretchers, a ‘secret’ under-shelf to one end with evidence of a former lock, 79.5cm wide x 301.5cm deep x 82cm high, (31in wide x 118 1/2in deep x 32in high)

£20,000 - 30,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 126 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 439 * A DOCUMENTED COMMONWEALTH JOINED OAK COURT CUPBOARD, CUMBRIA, DATED 1658 The projecting leafy-lunette carved and end-pendant frieze centred by the carved initials and date ‘MT’ ‘1658’, above a pair of panelled cupboard doors, carved with a leaf-filled lozenge and small trilobes to each cardinal point, centred by a matching carved panel, all below a meandering leafy-carved rail, the large base cupboard accessed by a central double-panelled door surrounded by five panels, panelled sides, on extended stile supports, 143cm wide x 60cm deep x 162cm high, (56in wide x 23 1/2in deep x 63 1/2in high)

£6,000 - 8,000

Provenance: A handwritten label to the rear of one upper door, reads: ‘owned by Lord Tennyson son of the poet’. This presumably refers to either Hallam or Lionel Tennyson, sons of renowned English poet Alfred Tennyson (1809-1882). The Sir Edward Barry Collection, Ockwells Manor, Bray, Berkshire.

Illustrated: Ralph Edwards, The Dictionary of English Furniture (1990), Vol. II, p. 194, fig. 12. Lot 439 illustrated Ralph Edwards, The Dictionary Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. 447, fig. of English Furniture (1990), Vol. II 4:181.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 127 440

440 * A RARE AND FINE SMALL SET OF CHARLES I OAK MURAL SHELVES, CIRCA 1630 With three open shelves, each with bicuspid-shaped front rail with central punch-decorated cross, the elegant and slender parallel- baluster turned front end-supports with integral ball finial and pendant, 63cm wide x 19.2cm deep x 70.5cm high, (24 1/2in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£8,000 - 12,000

A related set of shelves, from the John Fardon Collection, sold in these rooms, 19 February 2020, Lot 212 (£13,812). 441 441 * A GOOD CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 Having a six-pegged top with triple-reeded edge, lower-edge moulded and lunette-carved rails, on elongated peg-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined all round by narrow run-moulded stretchers, 46cm wide x 27cm deep x 59cm high, (18in wide x 10 1/2in deep x 23in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

442 * AN INTERESTING CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 With double-reeded top, the bicuspid-shaped long rails and lower- edge moulded short rails all with an unusual band of upright linear punch-decoration, on inverted-baluster over elongated reel-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 43.5cm wide x 26cm deep x 48.5cm high, (17in wide x 10in deep x 19in high)

£800 - 1,200

442

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 128 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 443 * A RARE AND DOCUMENTED ELIZABETH I OAK SO-CALLED A ‘Glastonbury’ armchair with the back panel finely carved with a GLASTONBURY CHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, POSSIBLY coat of arms attributed to Sir John Arundell III (d.1561) of Trerice, near SOMERSET, CIRCA 1580-1600 Newquay, Cornwall, firmly places this type of chair as being made in Of unusual small size the 16th century. The chair is illustrated and discussed, Adam Bowett, Of pegged construction, the raked back of two boards, typically 100 British Chairs & Seats (2015), p. 15, and dated to circa 1540 - 75. carved with paired guilloche-filled arches, enclosing a demi-flower Further examples are in the collections of The Metropolitan Museum, above a flower-filled lozenge, unusually the tip of a second lozenge New York [12.5], and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London to each lower edge is not present, the scroll-shaped cresting linear- [W.232-1923]. The latter was formerly the property of the Very Rev. Dr carved with pairs of downward-pointing scrolls and a central ‘Gothic’ Cowie, Dean of Exeter. See also articles written for The Journal of the tri-form leaf, the face of each back upright with multiple fine run- Regional Furniture Society by Gabriel Olive, ‘The Glastonbury Chair’ mouldings and integral pyramidal-finials, the arms with an accentuated (1994), pp. 24-41 and by Anthony Wells-Cole, ‘A Last Outpost of the raised ‘elbow-rest’, the seat board grooved into side rails with similar Known World: Vernacular Furniture in Tudor and Stuart Cornwall’, run-moulded top edge, the simple legs forming X-form side supports, (1988), pp. 6-1. Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats with hand-shaped central stretcher, of similar ‘rod-form’ creating the (2009), p. 117, suggests there may be as few as thirteen genuine front and rear seat rails, 54cm wide x 56cm deep x 93.5cm high, (21in ‘Glastonbury’ chairs recorded. All have the same basic form, and a wide x 22in deep x 36 1/2in high) remarkably similar design to the back boards. This strongly suggests the chairs were produced in one workshop and/or region, with many £10,000 - 15,000 of the chairs having links to the West Country. Although a Glastonbury chair has the appearance of a folding-chair, it cannot actually fold. Illustrated: Instead, it is constructed with removable pegs and designed to be Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. taken apart, in the manner of campaign furniture. 120, pl. 129. A related Glastonbury chair sold Bonhams, New Bond Street, The generic name ‘Glastonbury Chair’ is believed to originate from London, 28 March 2018, Lot 438 (£35,000). Another, from ‘The Olive a chair reputedly made for John Arthur Thorne, the last Treasurer Collection’, sold 31 January 2019, Lot 237 (£35,000). A third example of Glastonbury Abbey, executed in 1539, the year the Abbey was sold in these rooms, 19 February 2020, Lot 116 (£37,562) dissolved. A carved Latin inscription to the cresting rails reads - John Arthur, Monk of Glastonbury, may God save him, Praise be to God, Lord give Peace. The inscription would suggest that the chair was most likely made in Thorne’s memory, post 1539. This chair is now in the Bishop’s Palace, Wells, Somerset.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 129 444 * A GOOD CHARLES II PEWTER FLAT-LID WRIGGLEWORK TANKARD, CIRCA 1680 Touchmark inside base of John Felton I, Shrewsbury, (fl. 1670-1708), (OP1649A, PS3363), the straight-sided drum decorated with two 444 birds amongst foliage, the lid with pierced denticulations and tulip decoration, bombé or palm-leaf thumbpiece, ownership triad RVM to the curved-handle with boot-heel terminal, 15.3cm high

£3,000 - 5,000

Provenance: The Rollason Collection. The Danny Robinson Collection. Bought 1975.

445 * A GOOD AND LARGE CHARLES II PEWTER TRIPLE-REEDED CHARGER, CIRCA 1680 With hallmarks to rim and touchmarks to rear of Daniel Barton I, London, (fl.1670-1710), (PS483), 21⅞in, 55.7cm diameter

£800 - 1,000

446 * A LATE 17TH CENTURY PEWTER FLAGON, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1680 - 1700 Attributed to John Emes I, London [fl. 1673-1700] or possibly John Emes II [fl. 1700-?] Having a gently tapering drum, with reeded-fillet below the collar, and ovolo-shaped footrim, the flat base with multiple concentric turned 445 circles to the underside, and similar line turning to the gently domed lid, twin-lobed thumbpiece, and bold S-curve handle with shield terminal, evidence of a former spout, apparently unmarked, 28.5cm high, 18cm base diameter

£400 - 600

Literature: Christopher A Peal, Pewter of Great Britain (1983), p. 89, pl. 60c. Peter Hornsby, Pewter of the Western World, 1600-1850 (1983), p. 198, pl. 649.

A pewter flagon, by John Emes Senior [PS3162] sold in these rooms, ‘The Ian Robinson Collection’, 22 January 2015, Lot 182 [£6,480], and appears identical to this lot in every detail, with the exception of a flat lobe-shaped thumbpiece. The design of this Lot is also very similar to an example attributed to John Emes’ son [PS3163], at West Thorney Church, Sussex.

446

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 130 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 447 AN EXTREMELY RARE JAMES VI OF SCOTLAND JOINED OAK CAQUETEUSE ARMCHAIR, FIFE, CIRCA 1600 Having a rare twin-panelled back, each panel carved with a stylized leaf and demi-flower upright design, the deep cresting rail floral and double-scroll carved, and positioned over stiff-leaf carved uprights, the bold flat and square-ended outsplayed arms on baluster-turned front supports, the boarded seat with moulded edge, and linear gauge- carved seat rails, on baluster ring-turned front legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 70cm wide x 47cm deep x 102.5cm high, (27 1/2in wide x 18 1/2in deep x 40in high)

£15,000 - 20,000

Provenance: Earlshall Castle, Leuchars, St. Andrews, Fife. The ancestral home of the Earls of Fife.

In 1890, after falling into disrepair the castle was purchased by a R.W.R. Mackenzie, an industrialist from Perth. He employed a young Robert Lorimer to carry out the extensive restorations. Lorimer was later considered one of Scotland’s greatest architects, with Earlshall considered his finest work. Robert Mackenzie furnished the 16th century Great Hall with period furniture - see black and white photograph showing this Lot in situ, to the right of the fireplace.

Literature See David Jones, The Vernacular Chair in Fife (1996), for similar ‘small Lot 447 shown in situ, Earlshall Castle, Fife proportioned’ caqueteuse armchairs, with ‘characteristic vocabulary of carved motifs including angled palmettes and fleshy rosettes’.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 131 448 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, WITH A RARE DRAWER ARRANGEMENT, CIRCA 1660 Having a cleated four-board top, over two full-width drawers, each drawer front with narrow run-moulded lower edge, on ball and fillet- turned legs, joined all round by plain stretchers, 91cm wide x 62cm deep x 71.5cm high, (35 1/2in wide x 24in deep x 28in high)

£800 - 1,200

448 449 * A SMALL WILLIAM & MARY JOINED OAK CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1700 Having a boarded top with ovolo-moulded edge, three long graduated drawers with applied moulded edge, on front bun feet, 77cm wide x 54.5cm deep x 75cm high, (30in wide x 21in deep x 29 1/2in high)

£800 - 1,200

450 * A GEORGE II BRASS TANKARD, CIRCA 1740 Of quart capacity, with rolled rim and of baluster form with flared foot, 17.5cm high, together with a mid-18th century brass muffineer, or caster, English, the pierced domed cover with acorn finial, 14cm high, a small 18th century muffineer, or caster, English, with domed cover and flared foot, 10.5cm high, a small brass footed goblet, or chalice, with flared rim and knopped stem, 10.5cm high, and a pair of early 19th century steel sprung candle snuffers, English, marked ‘SUPERFINE’ and ‘IMPROVED LEVER WITHOUT SPRINGS’, 17cm wide, (5)

£300 - 400

* 449 451 A CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1670 With original brass handles and iron escutcheon, having an ovolo- moulded triple-boarded top, and a mitre edge-moulded frieze drawer, on spiral-turned legs joined by plain stretchers all round, turned feet, 78cm wide x 54.5cm deep x 66.5cm high, (30 1/2in wide x 21in deep x 26in high)

£1,000 - 1,500

Provenance: The Old Rectory, Bannington, Norfolk.

451

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 132 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. Lot 452 illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009) ACC

452

452 * A DOCUMENTED AND IMPRESSIVE CHARLES I JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1630 The back panel boldly carved with a flowerhead-filled quatrefoil, the horizontal back rails and seat rails all carved with leafy-lunettes, the slender double-scroll carved cresting integral to the top rail, the back uprights with scroll-carved terminals, the scroll-ended open arms on tall columnar-turned front supports, impressive single-piece and unusually thin seat board, the front legs again columnar-turned and joined all round by plain stretchers, 62cm wide x 65cm deep x 108.5cm high, (24in wide x 25 1/2in deep x 42 1/2in high)

£5,000 - 8,000

Provenance: The Clive Sherwood Collection. Inventory label, to the rear front seat rail. Sold Sotheby’s 22 May 2002, Lot 188.

Illustrated: Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700, p. 61, pl. 34, where it is described by the author as ‘powerful’.

453 * A CHARLES II JOINED OAK SIDE TABLE, CIRCA 1660 Having a twin-boarded square-edged top, a mitre-moulded frieze 453 drawer, atop scroll-profiled spandrels, on baluster over columnar- turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 89cm wide x 64cm deep x 69.5cm high, (35in wide x 25in deep x 27in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 133 454 455

456 458 457

459 459 (open)

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 134 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 454 * A PAIR OF WROUGHT IRON CRESSET SPIT-DOGS Topped by a cresset pan on chamfered square-section uprights fitted with an adjustable carrier of three graduated spit-hooks, the divergent front feet with chevron decoration and lower flat bar, billet bar to reverse, 26.5cm wide x 43cm deep x 72.5cm high, (10in wide x 16 1/2in deep x 28 1/2in high) (2)

£600 - 800

455 * A PAIR OF WROUGHT IRON CRESSET SPIT-DOGS Each topped by a cresset pan on an upright fitted with an adjustable attachment of three scroll-ended spit hooks, on divergent front feet with decorative leaves, billet bar to rear, 26cm wide x 49cm deep x 71.5cm high, (10in wide x 19in deep x 28in high) (2)

£600 - 800

456 * AN 18TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON AND BEECH ‘STABLE’ OR ‘BIRDCAGE’ EJECTOR CANDLESTICK, EUROPEAN With crook handle, and iron sliding ejector, the base of turned beech, 24.5cm high, together with a 19th century wrought iron table rushnip and candleholder, European, with sprung split stem and 460 three twist-work legs on a flat iron ring, 34cm high, (2)

£200 - 300

* 457 460 * A RARE DOUBLE-ENDED WROUGHT IRON FIRE DOG AN UNUSUAL AND FINELY WROUGHT IRON DOWN-HEARTH Each upright terminating in a point and pierced for a ring, and fitted TRIVET, PROBABLY 18TH CENTURY with six scroll hooks, raised on a pair of divergent strap feet, 94cm The circular plate wrought with a double-headed eagle, the rear wide x 19cm deep x 66cm high, (37in wide x 7in deep x 25 1/2in high) upright fitted with a hook adjusting on a ratchet, 13cm wide x 40cm deep x 22.5cm high, (5in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 8 1/2in high) £600 - 800 £200 - 300 Literature: See J. Seymour Lindsay, Iron and Brass Implements of the English 461 * House (1970), where Plate 1 illustrates a double-ended fire-dog of the A COLLECTION OF IRON COOKING IMPLEMENTS Late Celtic period and Plate 2 another of the 16th century. To include a wrought iron game crown, 22cm high, a large * wrought iron down-hearth skillet or pan, the handle with heart 458 terminal, 41.5cm high to tip of handle, another smaller wrought AN UNUSUAL 19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON TABLE iron down-hearth skillet or pan, 25.5cm high, an 18th/19th RUSHNIP AND CANDLE-HOLDER century iron fire blower, 89cm high, a wrought iron kettle tilter, Topped by a cross bar terminating at one end in a wrapped candle or with wooden handle terminal, 39cm wide, a wrought iron pot hook, taper socket, and at the other with a pair of nips, one jaw hooked, and of three hooks, 27cm high, a small wrought iron hook, with wrythen with an unusual brass alloy counterweight, on a curving stem and set stem, 14cm high, and a wrought iron pot hook, with attached into an iron base with integral scroll-tipped feet, 22cm wide x 6.5cm chain, 42cm high, (8) deep x 31.5cm high, (8 1/2in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 12in high) £300 - 400 £200 - 300 462 * Provenance: A MISCELLANEOUS GROUP OF METALWARES Purchased from Victor Mee Auctions Ltd., Ireland, 24 August 2016, Comprising a 19th century copper sauce or milk pan, engraved Lot 901. ‘W.O.G.’ and ‘126’, 11.5cm high, a 19th century copper box ring * mould, with castellated top, 10cm high, a 19th century copper 459 kettle, with brass handle and lid finial, 25.5cm high, a copper ale A SMALL 17TH CENTURY IRON STRONGBOX, GERMAN muller, with iron and timber handle, 22.5cm high, a brass clad Of typical form, covered in iron straps and with carry handles to the wooden box, decorated with swans and a monk, and with ball and sides and false keyhole escutcheon to the front, the underside of the claw feet, 8cm high, a wine bottle pourer, with crank handle and lid fitted with a lock mechanism shooting four bolts, 44cm wide x ebonised base, 24cm high, and a double-ended brass mortar, 29cm deep x 28cm high, (17in wide x 11in deep x 11in high) 25.5cm wide, (7)

£600 - 800 £300 - 400

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 135 463 A GROUP OF DOMESTIC COPPER WARES Including a large vessel, with rivetted seams, 31.5cm high, a 464 sparrow-beak jug, with brazed seams, 31cm high, and a set of four lidded copper pans, by Whitlock of London, all marked for the maker, the largest 28cm high to tip of handle, (6)

£300 - 500

464 A RARE JAMES I/CHARLES I JOINED OAK BOX STOOL, CIRCA 1620-30 Having a hinged lid with ovolo-moulded edge, and carved stop-fluted and punch-decoration unusually to all sides, on short columnar-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 44cm wide x 37cm deep x 38cm high, (17in wide x 14 1/2in deep x 14 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

465 A GOOD CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Having a triple-reeded top, bicuspid-shaped and run-moulded rails, parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined by run-moulded stretchers all round, a significant proportion of each turned foot unusually remains intact, 45.5cm wide x 37.5cm deep x 56.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 14 1/2in deep x 22in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

465 466 A CHARLES I JOINED OAK BOX-STOOL, CIRCA 1640 The hinged lid with scribed and chamfered edge, each side centred by a broad flat run-moulding, with single-piece base board, on columnar ring-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 44cm wide x 36cm deep x 44cm high, (17in wide x 14in deep x 17in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

466

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 136 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 467

467 * A FINE JAMES I JOINED OAK AND INLAID COFFER, DATED 1623 With boarded top, the front of three panels, each with inner-frame mouldings, the end panels also with floral-inlaid infills, and the centre panel carved with the initials ‘R F’ over the date ‘1623’, the top and base rails carved with flowerhead-filled guilloche which unusually extends over the broad stop-fluted carved stiles, with matching carved muntin rails, the end panels also with applied inner-frame mouldings, the interior having a lidded till above a pair of drawers, and with oak lockplate, 127cm wide x 56.5cm deep x 69cm high, (50in wide x 22in deep x 27in high) 467 (detail) £7,000 - 10,000

468 FOUR COPPER ALLOY DOOR HANDLES With backplates in the form of five-pointed stars, and with curved handles, 20cm wide x 7cm deep x 11cm high, (7 1/2in wide x 2 1/2in deep x 4in high) (4)

£100 - 150

469 * AN UNUSUAL WILLIAM & MARY OAK TRIPOD TABLE, CIRCA 1690 Having a fixed boarded circular top, a cruciform support and baluster ring-turned pillar, on three scroll-profile downswept legs, with a triangular collar to the base of the pillar, 53cm wide x 52cm deep x 70cm high, (20 1/2in wide x 20in deep x 27 1/2in high)

£700 - 1,000

469

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 137 470

470 * 471 * A RARE AND FINE JAMES I JOINED OAK CENTRE OR A CHARLES II JOINED FRUITWOOD GATELEG DINING TABLE, COMMUNION-TYPE TABLE, SALISBURY AND THE CIRCA 1670 SURROUNDING AREA, CIRCA 1620 Having an oval drop-leaf top, and end-frieze drawer, on ball and ring- Having a top of three thick square-edged boards, and lunette carving turned legs, joined by plain stretchers, with matching turned gates, to all rails, on columnar ring-turned legs, joined by narrow run- turned feet, 137cm wide x 120cm deep x 72cm high, (53 1/2in wide x moulded stretchers, 124cm wide x 70.5cm deep x 80.5cm high, (48 47in deep x 28in high) 1/2in wide x 27 1/2in deep x 31 1/2in high) £2,000 - 3,000 £4,000 - 6,000

471

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 138 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 472 * A RARE ELIZABETH I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1590 Having a square-edge and six-pegged top with prominent overhang, lower-edge moulded rails above an ‘ogee’-shaped apron, on inverted- baluster turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 49.5cm wide x 29.5cm deep x 58cm high, (19in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 22 1/2in 472 high)

£5,000 - 8,000

473 * A RARE CHARLES I JOINED OAK BOX-STOOL, CIRCA 1640 Having a one-piece ovolo-moulded hinged top, and carved leafy-filled lunettes unusually to all sides, on inverted-baluster turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 48.7cm wide x 36.7cm deep x 47.5cm high, (19in wide x 14in deep x 18 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

474 * A CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1630 Of good height, having a six-pegged top with bold ovolo-moulded edge, lower edge-moulded rails, and slender parallel-baluster over reel-turned legs, joined all round by narrow plain stretchers, turned feet, 44.7cm wide x 28cm deep x 60.5cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 11in deep x 23 1/2in high) 473 £1,200 - 1,800

474

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 139 476

477

475

478 (detail) 479 (detail)

481 482 480

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 140 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 475 * 479 * A RARE EARLY 18TH CENTURY SHEET AND CAST BRASS A CHARLES I BRASS AND IRON BED WARMING PAN, DATED TWIN-LIGHT WALL SCONCE, DUTCH, DATED 1719 1636, AND BEARING THE MOTTO AND CREST OF THE The sheet brass cresting and backplate embossed with flowers, and CLOTHWORKERS’ COMPANY bosses, and punched ‘ANNO 1719’, all between a pair of cast brass The domed brass pan cover engraved with a ram, the date 1636, knopped pillars, the shaped pan with simple flared rim and fitted and the motto ‘MY TRUST IS IN GOD ALONE’, and with iron pan ring with a pair of wrapped candle sockets fixed to the pan with tabs and and tapering handle with socket terminal, 29cm pan lid diameter x copper rivets, 20cm wide x 9.5cm deep x 36cm high, (7 1/2in wide x 101.5cm high 3 1/2in deep x 14in high) £400 - 600 £400 - 600 The Clothworkers’ Company commemorated by this warming pan Literature: bore as their crest A mount vert thereon a ram statant Or and the A similar twin-light wall-sconce, dated 1712, is illustrated R. Gentle & motto ‘My trust is in god alone’. The Company was first founded in R. Feild, Domestic Metalwork 1640-1820 (1994), p. 199, Figure 7 and 1528 when the Fullers’ and Shearman’s companies amalgamated. attributed to England. However, it is now generally agreed that this The company’s coat of arms was granted in 1530. type of wall sconce is Dutch. 480 * 476 * AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY SHEET AND CAST BRASS TWIN- A RARE AND UNUSUALLY SMALL MID-16TH CENTURY BRASS LIGHT WALL SCONCE, DUTCH, CIRCA 1720 ALMS BOWL, NUREMBERG, CIRCA 1550 The sheet brass cresting with decorative gadroons, the backplate The flat flared rim decorated with a repeated punch of a five-petalled embossed with bosses and with punched hearts, all between a pair of flower, and with central boss of twelve swirling gadroons, 19.5cm cast brass knopped balustroid pillars, the rectangular pan with folded diameter x 5cm high edge and fitted with a pair of wrapped candle sockets fixed to the pan with tabs and copper rivets, 20cm wide x 9cm deep x 35cm high, (7 £800 - 1,200 1/2in wide x 3 1/2in deep x 13 1/2in high)

477 * £300 - 400 AN EARLY 18TH CENTURY SHEET AND CAST BRASS TWIN- LIGHT WALL SCONCE, DUTCH, CIRCA 1715 481 * The sheet brass cresting and backplate embossed with stars A MID-16TH CENTURY BRASS ALMS DISH, NUREMBERG, and bosses, all between a pair of cast brass knopped pillars, the CIRCA 1550 rectangular pan fitted with a pair of wrapped candle sockets fixed to Decorated to the centre with a circlet of seven tulip-like flowers, the pan with tabs and copper rivets, 21cm wide x 11cm deep x 34cm within a band of punched leaves, the rim with two bands of punched high, (8in wide x 4in deep x 13in high) decoration, and rolled rim, 36cm diameter

£300 - 400 £600 - 800

478 * 482 * A CHARLES I BRASS AND IRON BED WARMING PAN, DATED A GEORGE II BRASS COFFEE POT, CIRCA 1735 1630 With domed cover, fruitwood handle and finial, and flared footrim, The domed pan cover decorated with a wolf salient, within a border maker’s mark/pseudo hallmarks to rim, 25cm high bearing the date ‘1630’ and the motto ‘THE LORD IS OVR [OUR] DEFENCE’, the last word with spelling correction, with iron pan ring £600 - 800 and decorative (bent) handle, with filed decoration and ball knops, 30cm pan diameter x 93cm high

£400 - 600

Literature: ‘The Chemist and Druggist’ of 28 June 1958, notes that a ‘brass warming-pan lid...exhibited in the church-porch museum at Stanton, Glos...bears the date 163(?) and the inscription THE LORD IS OUR DEFENCE’.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 141 Lot 483 illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), ACC

483

483 * A DOCUMENTED EARLY 17TH CENTURY ASH TURNER’S ARMCHAIR, ENGLISH OR WELSH, CIRCA 1600-30 Of triangular three-post form, with the exception of the seat all parts turned on a lathe, the rear post unusually tapers, the cresting rail top edge with numerous turned finials, and the front with four spindles between the front seat rail and front stretcher, 65cm wide x 51cm deep x 87.5cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 20in deep x 34in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

Illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. 167, pl. 198.

484 * A RARE CHARLES I OAK JOINT STOOL, CIRCA 1640 Having an ovolo-moulded top, and extremely rare arcaded rails, on relatively short inverted-baluster and ball-turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, stamped ownership initials, 49cm wide x 29.5cm deep x 49cm high, (19in wide x 11 1/2in deep x 19in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

484

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 142 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 485 (detail) 485 485 * A FINE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II JOINED OAK BOX- SEAT BACKSTOOL, LANCASHIRE, CIRCA 1670 The back panel carved with a foliate-filled lozenge and incised whorl spandrels, below a double-scroll and pointed-leaf carved cresting, pyramidal-finials to the back uprights, the part hinged boarded seat with a shallow cavity, run-moulded seat rails, on block and inverted- baluster turned front legs, joined by multiple plain stretchers, 55cm wide x 41.5cm deep x 97cm high, (21 1/2in wide x 16in deep x 38in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

Illustrated: Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p. 283, pl. 393.

486 * AN EXTREMLY LARGE 16TH/17TH CENTURY LEADED BRONZE SKILLET, ENGLISH The body with scratch-marked ‘W’, and on three ‘D’-section ribbed legs, the handle - with open brace - with faint decoration remaining, probably the initials ‘RB’ and possibly a date ‘159?’ or ‘1651’, between a pair of lines, 27cm rim diameter; tip of handle 26cm high

£200 - 300

487 A SET OF TEN STAIRCASE OR RAIL BALUSTERS, IN 17TH CENTURY STYLE Of tapering rectangular-section, topped by a stylised Ionic capital and decorated with strapwork and mouldings, 78.5cm high, (10) Lot 485 illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), ACC £600 - 800

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 143 488 * A RARE JAMES I JOINED OAK DRAW-LEAF TABLE, CIRCA 1610 The triple-boarded and end-cleated top with a similar draw-leaf to each end, all frieze rails with alternating beaded and fluted carving, and highlighted with punch-decoration, on fluted cup-and-cover turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, 170.2cm wide x 70cm deep x 80cm high, extended length 319.2cm

£15,000 - 20,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 144 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 489

489 AN INTERESTING AND GOOD JAMES I JOINED OAK COFFER, CIRCA 1610 The top of two panels within broad rails, each rail with a pronounced triangular-shaped run-moulding, the front also with two plain panels, below a deep flowerhead-filled guilloche-carved top rail, with similar decorated stiles, and an extremely wide and strap-work carved muntin rail, scroll-profiled spandrels, each twin-panelled side with a similar carved muntin rail, interior till with fruitwood lid, 91cm wide x 52cm deep x 57cm high, (35 1/2in wide x 20in deep x 22in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

490 * A RARE CHARLES I JOINED OAK STOOL-TABLE, CIRCA 1640 Having an oval drop-leaf top, each leaf held open by a central shaped 490 loper sliding out from a box to the underside of the fixed top, the flat run-moulded rails with moulded lower-edge, on rising-baluster turned legs, joined by plain stretchers all round, open: 66.5cm wide x 62cm deep x 57cm high, (26in wide x 24in deep x 22in high)

£1,500 - 2,000

Literature: See R. W. Symonds, Furniture Making in Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century England (1955), p. 70, fig. 109, for a comparable joined stool fitted with an oval drop-leaf top.

491 * A GOOD CHARLES II JOINED OAK GATELEG OCCASIONAL TABLE, CIRCA 1670 Having an oval drop-leaf top formed from single-boards, bold spiral and baluster-turned end supports, on sledge-type feet, joined by a broad platform stretcher, with simple gates, open: 87cm wide x 70cm deep x 66.5cm high, (34in wide x 27 1/2in deep x 26in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

491

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 145 492

493

494

495

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 146 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 492 * A MOTHER-OF-PEARL INLAID OAK TABLE CABINET 17th century elements The hinged door with central inlaid panel, circa 1650, of mother-of- pearl flowers issuing from a bone vase, within a moulded and arched surround, the interior fitted with four small drawers, 30cm wide x 25cm deep x 31cm high, (11 1/2in wide x 9 1/2in deep x 12in high)

£500 - 800

493 * Y 496 A GEORGE III ROSEWOOD, FRUITWOOD AND SATINWOOD TABLE CABINET, CIRCA 1800-20 In the form of a press cupboard, and with moulded cornice above a pair of panelled doors centred by an oval of satinwood, enclosing three short and four long drawers, all with sycamore or holly double line inlay to their edges, on outswept bracket feet, 28cm wide x 19.5cm deep x 35cm high, (11in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 13 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

494 * A GEORGE III MAHOGANY AND EBONY TEACADDY Of sarcophagus form, the lid fitted with a shaped bale handle with rosette backplates, the interior with three canisters, each edged with ebony and with circular ebony lid, raised on bracket feet, 26.5cm wide x 14cm deep x 15.5cm high, (10in wide x 5 1/2in deep x 6in high)

£200 - 300

495 * AN EARLY VICTORIAN COROMANDEL AND BRASS-INLAID TEA CADDY, CIRCA 1850 With domed lid inlaid with a brass roundel edged with the garter, lined to the underside of the lid with stamped and gilt-tooled red velvet, and fitted with a pair of canisters, each with a sprung lid inlaid with a garter-edged brass roundel - one engraved ‘B’ for black, the other ‘G’ for green, 24.5cm wide x 13.5cm deep x 18cm high, (9 1/2in wide x 5in deep x 7in high)

£200 - 300

496 * A RARE AND UNUSUALLY SMALL BOARDED OAK, PINE AND PAINTED DESK BOX, CIRCA 1670 Possibly New England, America The hinged lid with moulded edge and enclosing a red-painted interior fitted with a rear till with hinged cover, all four sides of the box carved with floral strapwork, and painted red, 27cm wide x 20cm deep x 16.5cm high, (10 1/2in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 6in high)

£1,200 - 1,800

Provenance: Reputedly purchased from a house in Quincey, Boston, Massachusetts.

Although this box is believed to originate from the United States, it may also be a ‘prototype’ from Devon, England.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 147 497 * A GOOD PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOLS, DERBYSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 Each having a pair of arched splats with a smooth top and scalloped inner edge, profusely chip-carved and centred by a stylized tuliphead, adorned with turned drop-pendants and acorn-finials, with scroll- terminals and applied turned split-mouldings to the back uprights, the panelled seat on block and ball-turned front legs, joined by a ball- 45cm wide x 40cm deep 497 turned fore-rail and multiple plain stretchers, x 101cm high, (17 1/2in wide x 15 1/2in deep x 39 1/2in high) (2)

£1,000 - 1,500

498 * A RARE AND DOCUMENTED CHARLES II OAK BACKSTOOL, YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1675 Having a pair of arched splats carved and pierced with tight-scrolls, and centred by a mask, the ‘horse-shoe’ and bicuspid-shaped lower edge unusually filled with a fleur-de-lys, the back uprights with inward- facing scroll terminals, boarded seat, on block and ball-turned front legs, joined by a ball and fillet-turned fore-rail, the design repeated on the cross rail of the rare H-form stretcher and equally rare back stretcher, 48.5cm wide x 45cm deep x 102cm high, (19in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 40in high)

£2,000 - 3,000

Illustrated Tobias Jellinek, Early British Chairs and Seats 1500 to 1700 (2009), p.297, pl. 412.

499 * A PAIR OF CHARLES II JOINED OAK BACKSTOOLS, YORKSHIRE, CIRCA 1670 498 Of relatively broad form, each having a pair of arched and cusp- profiled splats carved with tight scrolls and a central tear-drop shaped mask, embellished with ball pendants, the back uprights with scroll and hatch-carved ends above applied split ball-turned mouldings, the panelled seat on block and ball-turned front legs, joined by a conforming fore-rail, and plain multiple stretchers, 49cm wide x 41cm deep x 100.5cm high, (19in wide x 16in deep x 39 1/2in high) (2)

£1,000 - 1,500

499

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 148 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 500

500 * A RARE AND FINE ELIZABETH I/JAMES I JOINED OAK AND MASTIC-INLAID COFFER, CIRCA 1600-20 Having a triple-panelled lid, the front with three framed panels, each with raised reserve finely mastic-inlaid with scrolls, and two with bog-oak and holly inlaid roundels, and the third central panel with the initials ‘F T’, each headed by a carved demi-flower, the broad top rail strap-work carved, all remaining front rails guilloche-carved using various motifs, namely fleur-de-lys and pomegranates, with carved twin-panelled sides, 101.5cm wide x 53cm deep x 67.5cm high, (39 1/2in wide x 20 1/2in deep x 26 1/2in high)

£3,000 - 5,000

501 * A CHARLES I JOINED OAK PANEL-BACK OPEN ARMCHAIR, WEST COUNTRY, CIRCA 1630 The back panel designed with a large carved and punched-decorated saltire, below a double leafy-scroll carved cresting set between the back uprights, the downswept and scroll-ended arms on inverted- baluster turned front supports, the boarded seat with ovolo-moulded edge, above bold bicuspid-shaped seat rails, the matching baluster- turned front legs joined by plain stretchers all round, 62cm wide x 58cm deep x 97cm high, (24in wide x 22 1/2in deep x 38in high)

£3,000 - 4,000

501

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 149 502 503

504

505 506 507

510

508 509

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 150 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 502 * A LATE 15TH/EARLY 16TH CENTURY COPPER ALLOY SOCKET CANDLESTICK, FLEMISH/NETHERLANDISH, CIRCA 1500 The slightly tapering socket with unusual circular and rectangular extraction holes, the stem with four blade knops and set into a base with domed centre, dished drip-pan and spreading circular foot, 10.5cm base diameter x 23cm high

£600 - 800

503 * A GOOD EARLY 16TH CENTURY BRASS ALLOY SOCKET CANDLESTICK, NORTH-WEST EUROPEAN, PROBABLY FRENCH, CIRCA 1520-40 With rectangular extraction apertures to the tapering socket, the stem with a pair of acorn knops between three blade knops, the base with high, domed central section and flared footrim, 16cm base diameter x 25.5cm high

£800 - 1,000

Literature: See C. Bangs, The Lear Collection: A Study of Copper-Alloy Socket Candlesticks A.D.200-1700, Catalogue No. 39. 511

504 A LARGE 17TH CENTURY BRASS PRICKET CANDLESTICK, NETHERLANDISH/FLEMISH 508 * Topped by a 12.5cm iron pricket secured by four rivets to an iron AN EARLY VICTORIAN LEADED BRONZE BELL, DATED 1852 plate, the whole secured to the stepped drip-pan by three copper With green-painted wooden stock with iron fittings, the bell cast with alloy-headed rivets, on a slightly broadening stem turned with three decorative cords and the date ‘1852’, with clapper, 32cm diameter of lenticular knops, raised on a stepped line-decorated base, 46.5cm mouth of bell x 32cm high to top of wooden stock high £400 - 600 £600 - 800 509 * Provenance AN EARLY TO MID-19TH CENTURY THREE-BRANCH BRASS The Danny Robinson Collection. CHANDELIER, ENGLISH, CIRCA 1830 AND LATER Topped by a trefoil hanging loop, and with a fluted and reeded cap 505 * above a knopped column and a bulb fitted with three loops to hold A LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON AND the hook-ended candle arms, each cast with an hexagonal knop and ASH RUSHLIGHT HOLDER, CIRCA 1800, PROBABLY WELSH terminating in a dished drip-pan and a cylindrical candle-cup, once The jaws with flattened near-circular ends, and having a partially drilled for electricity, 63cm diameter x 48cm high twist-work stem and ‘U’-shaped partially twist-work arm terminating in a facetted ball or polyhedron, all set into a broadening rectangular- £700 - 1,000 section ash base with traces of paint, 23.5cm high 510 * £300 - 500 A 17TH CENTURY LEADED BRONZE BELL, ITALIAN/FLEMISH With unusual iron mount cast in the form of a dragon, the bell cast 506 * with four cherubs, iron clapper, 16.5cm diameter x 24cm high overall A LARGE LATE 18TH/EARLY 19TH CENTURY WROUGHT IRON (14cm high to crown of bell) TABLE RUSHNIP AND CANDLE-HOLDER, IRISH With rectangular jaws, partial twist-work stem and right-angled twist- £300 - 400 work arm terminating in a wrapped conical candle socket, raised on a crown base of four twist-work legs on a flat ring, 27.5cm high 511 * A MEMORIAL BRASS FRAGMENT, PROBABLY ENGLISH, £200 - 300 PROBABLY 16TH CENTURY Of a woman, wearing a French hood, ruff and gown with puffed 507 * shoulders, her hands joined in prayer, on a later velvet-covered AN UNUSUAL EARLY TO MID-19TH CENTURY WROUGHT wooden board, mount 15.5cm high; overall 13cm wide x 23cm high IRON AND BEECH RUSHLIGHT HOLDER, ENGLISH/WELSH With filed jaws, square-section plain stem and arm at right-angles, £300 - 400 fitted with a dished drip-pan and looped piece of iron, possibly a replacement for the original candle socket, all on a turned beech base Provenance: with central small dome, 10cm base diameter x 20cm high Formerly in the collection of Price and Isobel Glover, Park Avenue, New York City. £300 - 400

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 151 512

512 * A RARE AND REMARKABLE ELIZABETH I TAPESTRY LONG CUSHION COVER, CIRCA 1580 Woven in coloured wools and silks, depicting the Return of the Prodigal Son, the figures within lush gardens surrounded by fountains, flowers and fruit trees beneath decorative arches, the spandrels with cherubs, warp fringe, framed and glazed, 39cm x 67cm

£4,000 - 6,000

For comparable examples see Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge, accession no. T.1-1953, and The Metropolitan Museum of Art, accession nos. 54.7.6 and 54.7.7.

Literature: For a comprehensive discussion of the challenges around attempting to attribute English tapestry to individual workshops see Hilary L. Turner, Tapestries once at Chastleton House and their influence on the image of the tapestries called Sheldon: a re-assessment, Antiquaries Journal, 2008, Vol. 88 pp. 313-343. See also Hilary L. Turner, Tapestry sections depicting the Prodigal Son: how safe is an attribution to Mr Sheldon’s tapestry venture at Barcheston?, Archaeologia Aeliana, 5th 513 series, XXXVII, 2008, pp.183-196.

See Lot 74.

513 * A GOOD CHARLES II NEEDLEWORK PANEL, CIRCA 1660 Finely and naively worked in on linen, with brightly coloured wools and silks, depicting Cupid approaching the sleeping Psyche as she lies on a grassy knoll between trees and flowers, a stag and a fox in the foreground, the personified sun watching over, framed and glazed, 22cm x 23cm

£1,500 - 2,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 152 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 514

516 515 514 * 516 * AN EARLY 16TH CENTURY EMBROIDERED PANEL A SILK-VELVET ‘TABLE-RUNNER’, ITALIAN, CIRCA 1560 FRAGMENT OF LINEN, PROBABLY ENGLISH, CIRCA 1510-30 The crimson cut velvet appliquéd with silk and linen motifs, Embroidered with metal thread and coloured silks in mainly split and embroidered with coloured silks and metal thread, edged with , with couched work, designed with a monarch holding couched corded metal thread, designed with repeating scrolling the sovereign sceptre, his hand raised in the gesture of justice, his mythical beasts and cherubs, silk and metal thread fringing to each queen seated beside him on the coronation chair, framed and glazed, end and metal thread braid to each long edge, backed with linen, a 12.5cm x 16cm later linen and later silk, 131cm x 22.5cm

£800 - 1,200 £400 - 600

515 517 AN EARLY 16TH CENTURY EMBROIDERED ORPHREY PANEL FIVE 19TH CENTURY APPLIQUE MOTIFS OF LINEN, PROBABLY ENGLISH, CIRCA 1520-30 Each of floral design embroidered in silk and gold thread, length Embroidered with gilt thread and coloured silks in split and satin stitch, 10cm; together with a purse panel of embroidered linen, padded and with couched work, the figures worked separately on fine linen and lined in pink silk, length 18.5cm and a length of floral wool braiding, applied, designed with three pairs of saints, possibly including Dominic approximately 234cm, (3) holding a book, Agnes an olive branch and Justina wearing a crown and holding a sword, lined, 94.5cm x 17cm, together with a small £100 - 150 panel of linen embroidered with metal thread and coloured silks, circa 1500, probably English, depicting the Virgin and Angel Gabriel, the panel joined to a fragment of velvet, 15cm x 21cm excluding velvet, (2)

£800 - 1,200

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 153 518

519

518 * A JAMES I BOARDED OAK BOX, CIRCA 1620 The single-piece top with triple-reeded edge above an arcaded or nulled front board with chip-carved ends, 66cm wide x 33cm deep x 18cm high, (25 1/2in wide x 12 1/2in deep x 7in high)

£400 - 600

519 * A SMALL QUEEN ANNE OAK ‘TABLE-TOP’ CHEST OF DRAWERS, CIRCA 1710 Possibly the upper section of a child’s chest-on-stand, or chest-on- chest, having a moulded cornice above two short and three long graduated drawers, all edge-moulded and fitted with brass keyhole 520 escutcheons, and later brass ring handles and backplates, later base moulding, three of the drawers with original wooden self-locking spring locks to their baseboards, two with iron locks, 48cm wide x 18cm deep x 60.5cm high, (18 1/2in wide x 7in deep x 23 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

520 * A JAMES I BOARDED OAK BOX, CIRCA 1610 The lid with chip-carved ends and unusual line-carving to its edges, the interior with till, the front and sides reed-carved, 63.5cm wide x 31cm deep x 24.5cm high, (25in wide x 12in deep x 9 1/2in high)

£400 - 600

521 * 521 A CHARLES II OAK TABLE-TOP SPICE CUPBOARD, CIRCA 1680 The top board with ovolo-moulded edge, above a door with applied geometric mitre-mouldings and iron escutcheon, fitted to the interior with an arrangement of nine small drawers with loop handles, 36cm wide x 20cm deep x 33cm high, (14in wide x 7 1/2in deep x 12 1/2in high)

£600 - 800

521

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 154 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 522

523

522 * 523 A SMALL CHARLES II JOINED OAK LIVERY CUPBOARD, A LOUIS XV FRUITWOOD COMMODE, FRENCH CIRCA 1660 Having a fully-cleated boarded top inlaid to the centre with a five-point With a pair of quadruple-panelled and lozenge-carved cupboard star, above two short drawers centred by a small brass-edged drawer, doors, atop three plain panels, all below an interlaced leafy-lunette two long drawers below, serpentine-shaped aprons, on round-shaped carved top rail, triple-panelled sides, 123cm wide x 45.5cm deep x feet, 109cm wide x 61cm deep x 82cm high, (42 1/2in wide x 24in 153.5cm high, (48in wide x 17 1/2in deep x 60in high) deep x 32in high)

£2,000 - 3,000 £2,000 - 3,000 For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 155 524 524 524

525

527 528

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 156 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 524 * 528 * A GOOD EARLY 18TH CENTURY CARVED BOXWOOD SNUFF AN UNUSUAL AND GOOD 17TH CENTURY CAST BRASS BOX, DUTCH LADLE, WITH MAKER’S MARKS Carved with the Dutch Lion, Moses bearing a tablet representing the The handle stamped nine times with ‘EC’ or ‘EG’ beneath a crown, Ten Commandments, and King David playing a harp, the hinged cover and ending in a human face beneath a pierced terminal, a two- with a winged figured holding a tethered bird, 6cm wide x 5cm deep x pronged hook or stand to the reverse, 12cm bowl diameter x 41cm 11cm high, (2in wide x 1 1/2in deep x 4in high) high

£600 - 800 £1,000 - 1,500

525 * Literature: A COLLECTION OF CORKSCREWS Leaded bronze skillets by two English founders - Richard Poope of To include three barrel corkscrews, two mounted with the Royal Chilham and John Palmar of Canterbury - were cast with handles Arms, the third with Gothic decoration, nine pull corkscrews, seven terminating in human faces. Another, by John Diamond, was probably with wooden handles, some with brush, two all metal, one two- made in the South-East. All of these founders were active in the 17th pillar corkscrew, marked ‘ENGLISH MADE’, four folding metal century. corkscrews, one miniature example 3.5cm high, a pocket cased corkscrew, a cork puller, and a ciphon, in leather case, (20) Two skillets attributed to Edmund Giles, active in Lewes at the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century, were cast with similar £1,500 - 2,000 handle terminals. One is in a private collection, the other in Lewes Museum [Cat. No. OR 121]. See R. Butler & C. Green, English Bronze 526 * Cooking Vessels & their Founders 1350 - 1830 (2003), p. 46 [John AN UNUSUAL 18TH CENTURY LIGNUM VITAE AND BRASS Diamond], pp. 68 - 70 [Edmund Giles], p. 81 [John Palmar] & p. 85 GRINDER OR MILL, POSSIBLY FOR COFFEE, ENGLISH [Richard Poope]. With two threaded cup-like ends, unscrewing to reveal a brass and iron grinding mechanism, with decorative engraving, and a folding iron Why this brass ladle is stamped nine times along the length of its crank handle, also engraved, closed 11.5cm high handle is unclear. The marks have been struck down its centre, and some effort has been made to space them regularly: the gap £300 - 400 between each mark is between 2cm and 2.5cm. Multiple marks, although usually in a cluster, are not unknown. See, for instance, a 527 * brass skimmer stamped six times, and another stamped three times, A LATE 17TH/EARLY 18TH CENTURY AND LATER CEDAR, by the maker known only by the initials ‘DT’ [R. & V. Butler, A Study HORN AND BONE-INLAID TOBACCO BOX, ENGLISH, CIRCA Collection of Marked Domestic Brass and other Base Metalware c. 1660-1715 1600 - c. 1900, p. 29, Numbers 41 & 42]. The lid mounted with a later white metal badge of Charles I, and with central bone plaque inscribed ‘IT IS A FREND TO WHOM I LEND .’, Each of the marks to this ladle appear to have been struck with the within a stylised border of leaves, horn sides and cedar base, 8cm same punch, although all, being struck by hand, and with varying wide x 9cm deep x 2cm high, (3in wide x 3 1/2in deep x 0 1/2in high) force, have slight differences in appearance. No two of the struck marks to this ladle are exactly the same and some read with the £800 - 1,200 initials ‘EC’, whilst one looks more like ‘EG’. This brazier’s mark does not appear in the ‘Study Collection’. The marks overall shape A number of these boxes survive, engraved with dates ranging from and the crowned initials are reminiscent of mid- to late 17th century 1664 [sold Sotheby’s, 28th November 2001] - 1714 [sold Christie’s, silversmith’s and pewterer’s marks. 8th November 2006, Lot 97]. The verses on all of them are designed to be read clockwise, starting at the top.

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 157 529 529

530

532 533

531

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 158 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. 534

529 * 532 * Y A PAIR OF SMALL GILT SOFTWOOD WALL MIRRORS, A REGENCY ROSEWOOD AND BRASS-INLAID WORK BOX, OR FRENCH, IN THE EARLY 18TH CENTURY RÉGENCE MANNER ‘BASKET’, CIRCA 1815 Each having a central rectangular plate within a border with foliate Of boat shape, and with an articulated wooden strap handle between corners and a small marginal mirror plate at each cardinal point, the a pair of compartments with sliding tambour tops, the sides inlaid with outer frame carved with flowers and leaves, 36cm wide x 5.5cm deep foliated scrolls and flowers in engraved brass, 27.5cm wide x 13.5cm x 41cm high, (14in wide x 2in deep x 16in high) (2) deep x 11cm high (excluding handle)

£500 - 800 £400 - 600

530 * 533 * AN INTERESTING SET OF OAK STOCKS AND WHIPPING POST A LATE 17TH CENTURY GAMING PURSE, FRENCH OR Of typical form, with four leg-holes and two iron wrist restraints, one ITALIAN, CIRCA 1660-80 inscribed HAVE MERCY, the other JUSTICE, historic French-grey Of green silk velvet appliquéd with silver thread fleur-de-lys, scrolling paint, 147cm wide x 152cm deep x 27cm high, (57 1/2in wide x 59 arrow head and motifs to the sides, and repeated to the base around 1/2in deep x 10 1/2in high) a quatrefoil, lined with kidskin, 14cm diameter, together with a Victorian burgundy velvet cylinder purse, decorated with glass £2,000 - 3,000 beads and pearls, lined with silk and a floral embroidered woollen insert, 11.5cm wide, and a panel of 20th century silk, rayon and Provenance: metallic thread lampas woven with a chinoiserie design in muted Rainthorpe Hall, Tasburgh, Norfolk. shades of bronze, blue and red, 60cm x 62.5cm

531 £300 - 500 A CHARLES II NEEDLEWORK SEAT COVER, CIRCA 1670 Designed with rows of carnations and roses within a flame-stitch For an almost identical gaming purse see The Metropolitan Museum, surround, worked in coloured wools on a linen ground, 37cm x New York, accession no. 2009.300.6234. 31.5cm 534 £300 - 500 CIRCLE OF PETER VAN DEN VELDE (ANTWERP 1634-CIRCA 1724) A harbour scene, ebonized moulded frame oil on canvas 116.2 x 139.6cm (45 3/4 x 54 15/16in).

£3,000 - 5,000

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. THE OAK INTERIOR | 159 535 * AN EXTREMELY RARE CHARLES I OAK MURAL GLASS CASE, CIRCA 1640 Having a pair of doors, each fitted with five baluster-turned spindles, enclosing a single shelf, the pediment top with fretted fall front, designed with two doves flanking a fleur-de-lys, 66.5cm wide x 22cm deep x 81cm high, (26in wide x 8 1/2in deep x 31 1/2in high)

£8,000 - 12,000

The ‘pair’ to this cupboard sold Sotheby’s, 1974, lot 214. Illustrated, Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), p. 290, fig. 3:317a.

END OF SALE

An almost identical glass case illustrated Victor Chinnery, Oak Furniture: The British Tradition (2016), ACC, fig. 3:317a

For details of the charges payable in addition to the final Hammer Price of each Lot 160 | BONHAMS please refer to paragraphs 7 & 8 of the Notice to Bidders at the back of the catalogue. NOTICE TO BIDDERS This notice is addressed by Bonhams to any person who may be Prices below and above the Estimates, so Estimates should not be solving any disputes which may arise in relation to bids made at the interested in a Lot, and to all persons participating in the auction relied on as an indication of the actual selling price or value of a Lot. Sale. At some Sales, for example, jewellery Sales, we may use screens process including auction attendees, Bidders and potential Bidders Estimates are in the currency of the Sale. on which images of the Lots will be projected. This service is provided (including any eventual Buyer of the Lot). For ease of reference we refer Condition Reports to assist viewing at the Sale. The image on the screen should be to such persons as “Bidders” or “you”. 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It is in your interests to return your designed to operate on mains electricity will be suitable for connection withdrawals and late entries may affect the time at which a Lot you are form as soon as possible, as if two or more Bidders submit identical to the mains electricity supply and you should obtain a report from a interested is put up for Sale. We have complete discretion in which to bids for a Lot, the first bid received takes preference. In any event, all qualified electrician on their status before doing so. Such items which refuse any bid, to nominate any bidding increment we consider bids should be received at least 24 hours before the start of the Sale. are unsuitable for connection are sold as items of interest for display appropriate, to divide any Lot, to combine two or more Lots, to Please check your Absentee Bidding Form carefully before returning it purposes only. If you yourself do not have expertise regarding a Lot, withdraw any Lot from a Sale and, before the Sale has been closed, to to us, fully completed and signed by you. It is your responsibility to you should consult someone who does to advise you. We can assist in put up any Lot for auction again. Auction speeds can exceed 100 Lots check with our Bids Office that your bid has been received. This arranging facilities for you to carry out or have carried out more detailed to the hour and bidding increments are generally about 10%; however, additional service is complimentary and is confidential. Such bids are inspections and tests. Please ask our staff for details. these do vary from Sale to Sale and from Auctioneer to Auctioneer. made at your own risk and we cannot accept liability for our failure to Any person who damages a Lot will be held liable for the Please check with the department organising the Sale for advice on receive and/or place any such bids. All bids made on your behalf will be loss caused. this. Where a Reserve has been applied to a Lot, the Auctioneer may, made at the lowest level possible subject to Reserves and other bids 3. DESCRIPTIONS OF LOTS AND ESTIMATES in his absolute discretion, place bids (up to an amount not equalling or made for the Lot. Where appropriate your bids will be rounded down to Contractual Description of a Lot exceeding such Reserve) on behalf of the Seller. We are not the nearest amount consistent with the Auctioneer’s bidding The Catalogue contains an Entry about each Lot. Each Lot is sold by responsible to you in respect of the presence or absence of any increments. New Bidders must also provide proof of identity and its respective Seller to the Buyer of the Lot as corresponding only with Reserve in respect of any Lot. If there is a Reserve it will be no higher address when submitting bids. Failure to do this will result in your bid that part of the Entry which is printed in bold letters and (except for the than the lower figure for any Estimate in the Catalogue, assuming that not being placed. colour, which may be inaccurately reproduced) with any photograph of the currency of the Reserve has not fluctuated adversely against the Bidding via the internet the Lot in the Catalogue. The remainder of the Entry, which is not currency of the Estimate. The Buyer will be the Bidder who makes the Please visit our Website at http://www.bonhams.com for printed in bold letters, represents Bonhams’ opinion (given on behalf of highest bid acceptable to the Auctioneer for any Lot (subject to any details of how to bid via the internet. the Seller) about the Lot only and is not part of the Contractual applicable Reserve) to whom the Lot is knocked down by the Bonhams will not be liable for service delays, interruptions or other Description in accordance with which the Lot is sold by the Seller. Auctioneer at the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer. Any dispute as to the failures to make a bid caused by losses of internet connection, fault or Estimates highest acceptable bid will be settled by the Auctioneer in his absolute failure with the website or bidding process, or malfunction of any In most cases, an Estimate is printed beside the Entry. Estimates are discretion. All bids tendered will relate to the actual Lot number software or system, computer or mobile device. only an expression of Bonhams’ opinion made on behalf of the Seller of announced by the Auctioneer. An electronic currency converter may be Bidding through an agent the range where Bonhams thinks the Hammer Price for the Lot is likely used at the Sale. This equipment is provided as a general guide as to Bids will be treated as placed exclusively by and on behalf of the to fall; it is not an Estimate of value. It does not take into account any the equivalent amount in certain currencies of a given bid. We do not person named on the Bidding Form unless otherwise agreed by us in VAT or Buyer’s Premium payable or any other fees payable by the accept any responsibility for any errors which may occur in the use of writing in advance of the Sale. If you wish to bid on behalf of another Buyer, which are detailed in paragraph 7 of the Notice to Bidders, the currency converter. We may use video cameras to record the Sale person (your principal) you must complete the pre-registration below. Prices depend upon bidding and lots can sell for Hammer and may record telephone calls for reasons of security and to assist in requirements set out above both on your own behalf and with full

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 details of your principal, and we will require written confirmation from 8. VAT Sale of any Lot if you are in breach of your warranties as Buyer, if we the principal confirming your authority to bid. The prevailing rate of VAT at the time of going to press is 20%, but this consider that such Sale would be unlawful or otherwise cause liabilities You are specifically referred to your due diligence requirements is subject to government change and the rate payable will be the rate for the Seller or Bonhams, or would be detrimental to Bonhams’ concerning your principal and their source of funds, and the in force on the date of the Sale. reputation. warranties you give in the event you are the Buyer, which are The following symbols, shown beside the Lot number, are used to 10. COLLECTION AND STORAGE contained in paragraph 3 of the Buyer’s Agreement, set out at denote that VAT is due on the Hammer Price and Buyer’s Premium: The Buyer of a Lot will not be allowed to collect it until payment in full Appendix 2 at the back of the Catalogue. † VAT at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price and and in cleared funds has been made (unless we have made a special Nevertheless, as the Bidding Form explains, any person placing a bid Buyer’s Premium arrangement with the Buyer). For collection and removal of purchased as agent on behalf of another (whether or not he has disclosed that Ω VAT on imported items at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price Lots, please refer to Sale Information at the front of the Catalogue. Our fact) will be jointly and severally liable with the principal to the Seller and and Buyer’s Premium offices are open 9.00am – 5pm Monday to Friday. Details relating to to Bonhams under any contract resulting from the acceptance of a bid. VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer the collection of a Lot, the storage of a Lot and our Storage Contractor * Equally, please let us know if you intend to nominate another person to Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer’s Premium after the Sale are set out in the Catalogue. bid on your behalf at the Sale unless this is to be carried out by us G Gold bullion exempt from VAT on the Hammer Price and subject 11. SHIPPING pursuant to a Telephone or Absentee Bidding Form that you have to VAT at the prevailing rate on the Buyer’s Premium For information and estimates on domestic and international shipping completed. If we do not approve the agency arrangements in writing • Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or as well as export licenses please contact before the Sale, we are entitled to assume that the person bidding at the Buyer’s Premium Alban Shipping on +44 (0) 1582 493 099 the Sale is bidding on his own behalf. Accordingly, the person bidding a Buyers from within the EU: VAT is payable at the prevailing rate [email protected] at the Sale will be the Buyer and will be liable to pay the Hammer Price on just the Buyer’s Premium (NOT the Hammer Price). Buyers 12. EXPORT/TRADE RESTRICTIONS and Buyer’s Premium and associated charges. If we approve the from outside the EU: VAT is payable at the prevailing rate on It is your sole responsibility to comply with all export and import identity of your client in advance, we will be in a position to address the both Hammer Price and Buyer’s Premium. If a Buyer, having regulations relating to your purchases and also to obtain any relevant invoice to your principal rather than you. We will require proof of the registered under a non-EU address, decides that the item is not export and/or import licence(s). Export licences are issued by Arts agent’s client’s identity and residence in advance of any bids made by to be exported from the EU, then he should advise Bonhams Council England and application forms can be obtained from its the agent on his behalf. Please refer to our Conditions of Business and immediately. Export Licensing Unit. The detailed provisions of the export licensing contact our Customer Services Department for further details. In all other instances no VAT will be charged on the Hammer Price, arrangements can be found on the ACE website http://www. Bonhams undertakes Customer Due Diligence (CDD) into its Sellers and but VAT at the prevailing rate will be added to Buyer’s Premium which artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/supporting-museums/cultural-property/ Buyers as required by the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and will be invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. export-controls/export-licensing/ or by phoning ACE on +44 (0)20 Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017 (“the 9. PAYMENT 7973 5188. The need for import licences varies from country to country Regulations”). Bonhams’ interpretation of the Regulations and Treasury It is of critical importance that you ensure that you have readily available and you should acquaint yourself with all relevant local requirements Approved industry Guidance is that CDD under the Regulations is not funds to pay the Purchase Price and the Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT and provisions. The refusal of any import or export licence(s) or required by Buyers into Sellers at Bonhams auctions or vice versa. and any other charges and Expenses to us)in full before making a bid any delay in obtaining such licence(s) shall not permit the rescission 6. CONTRACTS BETWEEN THE BUYER AND SELLER AND THE for the Lot. If you are a successful Bidder, payment will be due to us by of any Sale nor allow any delay in making full payment for the Lot. BUYER AND BONHAMS 4.30 pm on the second working day after the Sale so that all sums are Generally, please contact our shipping department before the Sale if On the Lot being knocked down to the Buyer, a Contract for Sale of cleared by the eighth working day after the Sale. Payments made by you require assistance in relation to export regulations. the Lot will be entered into between the Seller and the Buyer on the anyone other than the registered Buyer will not be accepted. Bonhams 13. CITES REGULATIONS terms of the Contract for Sale set out in Appendix 1 at the back of the reserves the right to vary the terms of payment at any time. Please be aware that all Lots marked with the symbol Y are subject to Catalogue. You will be liable to pay the Purchase Price, which is the Bonhams’ preferred payment method is by bank transfer. CITES regulations when exporting these items outside the EU. These Hammer Price plus any applicable VAT. At the same time, a separate You may electronically transfer funds to our Account. If you do so, please regulations may be found at contract is also entered into between us as Auctioneers and the Buyer. quote your paddle number and invoice number as the reference. Our http://www.defra.gov.uk/ahvla-en/imports-exports/cites/ or may be This is our Buyer’s Agreement, the terms of which are set out in Account details are as follows: requested from: Appendix 2 at the back of the Catalogue. Please read the terms of the Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) Wildlife Contract for Sale and our Buyer’s Agreement contained in the Bank: National Westminster Bank Plc Licensing Catalogue in case you are the successful Bidder including the Address: PO Box 4RY Floor 1, Zone 17, Temple Quay House warranties as to your status and source of funds. We may change the 250 Regent Street 2 The Square, Temple Quay terms of either or both of these agreements in advance of their being London W1A 4RY BRISTOL BS1 6EB entered into, by setting out different terms in the Catalogue and/or by Account Name: Bonhams 1793 Limited Tel: +44 (0) 117 372 8774 placing an insert in the Catalogue and/or by notices at the Sale venue Account Number: 25563009 The refusal of any CITES licence or permit and any delay in obtaining and/or by oral announcements before and during the Sale. It is your Sort Code: 56-00-27 such licences or permits shall not give rise to the rescission or responsibility to ensure you are aware of the up to date terms of the IBAN Number: GB 33 NWBK 560027 25563009 cancellation of any Sale, nor allow any delay in making full payment Buyer’s Agreement for this Sale. for the Lot. 7. BUYER’S PREMIUM AND OTHER CHARGES PAYABLE BY If paying by bank transfer, the amount received after the 14. THE SELLERS AND/OR BONHAMS’ LIABILITY THE BUYER deduction of any bank fees and/or conversion of the currency of Other than any liability of the Seller to the Buyer of a Lot under the Under the Buyer’s Agreement, a premium (the Buyer’s Premium) is payment to pounds sterling must not be less than the sterling amount Contract for Sale, neither we nor the Seller are liable (whether in payable to us by the Buyer in accordance with the terms of the Buyer’s payable, as set out on the invoice. negligence or otherwise) for any error or misdescription or omission Agreement and at rates set out below, calculated by reference to the in any Description of a Lot or any Estimate in respect of it, whether Hammer Price and payable in addition to it. Payment may also be made by one of the following methods: contained in the Catalogue or otherwise, whether given orally or in

writing and whether given before or during the Sale. Neither we nor the For this Sale the following rates of Buyer’s Premium will be payable by Sterling personal cheque drawn on a UK branch of a bank or Seller will be liable for any loss of Business, profits, revenue or income, Buyers on each Lot purchased: building society: all cheques must be cleared before you can collect or for loss of reputation, or for disruption to Business or wasted time on your purchases and should be made payable to Bonhams 1793 the part of management or staff, or for indirect losses or consequential 27.5% up to £2,500 of the Hammer Price Limited. damages of any kind, irrespective in any case of the nature, volume or 25% of the Hammer Price above £2,500 and up to £300,000 source of the loss or damage alleged to be suffered, and irrespective 20% of the Hammer Price above £300,000 and up to £3,000,000 Cash: you may pay for Lots purchased by you at this Sale of whether the said loss or damage is caused by or claimed in respect 13.9% of the Hammer Price above £3,000,000 with notes or coins in the currency in which the Sale is conducted of any negligence, other tort, breach of contract (if any) or statutory (but not any other currency) provided that the total amount payable duty, restitutionary claim or otherwise. In any circumstances where Storage and handling charges may also be payable by the Buyer by you in respect of all Lots purchased by you at the Sale does not we and/or the Seller are liable in relation to any Lot or any Description as detailed on the specific Sale Information page at the front of the exceed £3,000, or the equivalent in the currency in which the Sale is or Estimate made of any Lot, or the conduct of any Sale in relation catalogue. conducted, at the time when payment is made. If the amount payable to any Lot, whether in damages, for an indemnity or contribution, by you for Lots exceeds that sum, the balance must be paid otherwise or for a restitutionary remedy or otherwise, our and/or the Seller’s The Buyer’s Premium and all other charges payable to us by the Buyer than in coins or notes; this limit applies to both payment at our liability (combined, if both we and the Seller are liable) will be limited are subject to VAT at the prevailing rate, currently 20%. premises and direct deposit into our bank account. to payment of a sum which will not exceed by way of maximum the amount of the Purchase Price of the Lot irrespective in any case of VAT may also be payable on the Hammer Price of the Lot, where Debit cards issued in the name of the Buyer (including China Union the nature, volume or source of any loss or damage alleged to be indicated by a symbol beside the Lot number. See paragraph 8 below Pay (CUP) cards and debit cards issued by Visa and MasterCard suffered or sum claimed as due, and irrespective of whether the liability for details. There is no limit on payment value if payment is made in person only). arises from any negligence, other tort, breach of contract (if any) or using Chip & Pin verification. statutory duty or otherwise. Nothing set out above will be construed On certain Lots, which will be marked “AR” in the Catalogue and as excluding or restricting (whether directly or indirectly) our liability or which are sold for a Hammer Price of €1,000 or greater (converted into may also be accepted up to £5,000, subject to Payment by telephone excluding or restricting any person’s rights or remedies in respect of (i) the currency of the Sale using the European Central Bank Reference appropriate verification procedures, although this facility is not available fraud, or (ii) death or personal injury caused by our negligence (or by rate prevailing on the date of the Sale), the Additional Premium will for first time buyers. If the amount payable by you for Lots exceeds that the negligence of any person under our control or for whom we are be payable to us by the Buyer to cover our Expenses relating to the sum, the balance must be paid by other means. legally responsible), or (iii) acts or omissions for which we are liable payment of royalties under the Artists Resale Right Regulations 2006. under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957, or (iv) any other liability to the The Additional Premium will be a percentage of the amount of the Credit cards issued in the name of the Buyer (including China Union extent the same may not be excluded or restricted as a matter of law Hammer Price calculated in accordance with the table below, and shall Pay (CUP) cards and credit cards issued by Visa and MasterCard or (v) our undertakings under paragraphs 9 (in relation to specialist not exceed €12,500 (converted into the currency of the Sale using only). There is a £5,000 limit on payment value if payment is made in Stamp or Book Sales only) and 10 of the Buyer’s Agreement. The same the European Central Bank Reference rate prevailing on the date of person using Chip & Pin verification. applies in respect of the Seller, as if references to us in this paragraph the Sale). were substituted with references to the Seller. It may be advisable to notify your debit or credit card provider of your 15. BOOKS Hammer Price Percentage amount intended purchase in advance to reduce delays caused by us having to As stated above, all Lots are sold on an “as is” basis, subject to all From €0 to €50,000 4% seek authority when you come to pay. faults, imperfections and errors of Description save as set out below. From €50,000.01 to €200,000 3% However, you will be entitled to reject a Book in the circumstances set From €200,000.01 to €350,000 1% Note: only one debit or credit card may be used for payment of an out in paragraph 11 of the Buyers Agreement. Please note that Lots From €350,000.01 to €500,000 0.5% account balance. If you have any questions with regards to card comprising printed Books, unframed maps and bound manuscripts are Exceeding €500,000 0.25% payments, please contact our Customer Services Department. not liable to VAT on the Buyer’s Premium. We reserve the rights to investigate and identify the source of any funds 16. CLOCKS AND WATCHES received by us, to postpone completion of the sale of any Lot at our All Lots are sold “as is”, and the absence of any reference to the discretion while we complete our investigations, and to cancel the condition of a clock or watch does not imply that the Lot is in good

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 details of your principal, and we will require written confirmation from 8. VAT Sale of any Lot if you are in breach of your warranties as Buyer, if we condition and without defects, repairs or restorations. Most clocks to retain their appearance. Bidders should be aware that Estimates Please see the Contract for Sale printed in this Catalogue. Because the principal confirming your authority to bid. The prevailing rate of VAT at the time of going to press is 20%, but this consider that such Sale would be unlawful or otherwise cause liabilities and watches have been repaired in the course of their normal lifetime assume that gemstones may have been subjected to such treatments. of the difficulty in determining whether an item of glass has been You are specifically referred to your due diligence requirements is subject to government change and the rate payable will be the rate for the Seller or Bonhams, or would be detrimental to Bonhams’ and may now incorporate parts not original to them. Furthermore, A number of laboratories issue certificates that give more detailed repolished, in our Catalogues reference is only made to visible chips concerning your principal and their source of funds, and the in force on the date of the Sale. reputation. Bonhams makes no representation or warranty that any clock or watch Descriptions of gemstones. However there may not be consensus and cracks. No mention is made of repolishing, severe or otherwise. warranties you give in the event you are the Buyer, which are The following symbols, shown beside the Lot number, are used to 10. COLLECTION AND STORAGE is in working order. As clocks and watches often contain fine and between different laboratories on the degrees, or types of treatment for 23. VEHICLES contained in paragraph 3 of the Buyer’s Agreement, set out at denote that VAT is due on the Hammer Price and Buyer’s Premium: The Buyer of a Lot will not be allowed to collect it until payment in full complex mechanisms, Bidders should be aware that a general service, any particular gemstone. In the event that Bonhams has been given or The Veteran Car Club of Great Britain Appendix 2 at the back of the Catalogue. † VAT at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price and and in cleared funds has been made (unless we have made a special change of battery or further repair work, for which the Buyer is solely has obtained certificates for any Lot in the Sale these certificates will be Dating Plates and Certificates Nevertheless, as the Bidding Form explains, any person placing a bid Buyer’s Premium arrangement with the Buyer). For collection and removal of purchased responsible, may be necessary. disclosed in the Catalogue. Although, as a matter of policy, Bonhams When mention is made of a Veteran Car Club Dating Plate or Dating as agent on behalf of another (whether or not he has disclosed that Ω VAT on imported items at the prevailing rate on Hammer Price Lots, please refer to Sale Information at the front of the Catalogue. Our 17. FIREARMS – PROOF, CONDITION AND CERTIFICATION endeavours to provide certificates from recognised laboratories for Certificate in this Catalogue, it should be borne in mind that the Veteran fact) will be jointly and severally liable with the principal to the Seller and and Buyer’s Premium offices are open 9.00am – 5pm Monday to Friday. Details relating to Proof of Firearms certain gemstones, it is not feasible to obtain certificates for each Lot. Car Club of Great Britain using the services of Veteran Car Company to Bonhams under any contract resulting from the acceptance of a bid. VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer the collection of a Lot, the storage of a Lot and our Storage Contractor The term “proof exemption” indicates that a firearm has been examined In the event that no certificate is published in the Catalogue, Bidders Ltd, does from time to time, review cars already dated and, in some * Equally, please let us know if you intend to nominate another person to Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer’s Premium after the Sale are set out in the Catalogue. at a Proof House, but not proved, as either (a) it was deemed of should assume that the gemstones may have been treated. Neither instances, where fresh evidence becomes available, the review can result bid on your behalf at the Sale unless this is to be carried out by us G Gold bullion exempt from VAT on the Hammer Price and subject 11. SHIPPING interest and not intended for use, or (b) ammunition was not available. Bonhams nor the Seller accepts any liability for contradictions or in an alteration of date. Whilst the Club and Veteran Car Company Ltd pursuant to a Telephone or Absentee Bidding Form that you have to VAT at the prevailing rate on the Buyer’s Premium For information and estimates on domestic and international shipping In either case, the firearm must be regarded as unsafe to fire unless differing certificates obtained by Buyers on any Lots subsequent to make every effort to ensure accuracy, the date shown on the Dating completed. If we do not approve the agency arrangements in writing • Zero rated for VAT, no VAT will be added to the Hammer Price or as well as export licenses please contact subsequently proved. Firearms proved for Black Powder should not be the Sale. Plate or Dating Certificate cannot be guaranteed as correct and intending before the Sale, we are entitled to assume that the person bidding at the Buyer’s Premium Alban Shipping on +44 (0) 1582 493 099 used with smokeless ammunition. Estimated Weights purchasers should make their own enquiries as to the date of the car. the Sale is bidding on his own behalf. Accordingly, the person bidding a Buyers from within the EU: VAT is payable at the prevailing rate [email protected] The term “Certificate of Unprovability” indicates that a firearm has been If a stone(s) weight appears within the body of the Description in capital 24. WINE at the Sale will be the Buyer and will be liable to pay the Hammer Price on just the Buyer’s Premium (NOT the Hammer Price). Buyers 12. EXPORT/TRADE RESTRICTIONS examined at a Proof House and is deemed both unsuitable for proof letters, the stone(s) has been unmounted and weighed by Bonhams. Lots which are lying under Bond and those liable to VAT may not be and Buyer’s Premium and associated charges. If we approve the from outside the EU: VAT is payable at the prevailing rate on It is your sole responsibility to comply with all export and import and use. Reproof is required before any such firearm is to be used. If the weight of the stone(s) is stated to be approximate and does not available for immediate collection. identity of your client in advance, we will be in a position to address the both Hammer Price and Buyer’s Premium. If a Buyer, having regulations relating to your purchases and also to obtain any relevant Guns Sold as Parts appear in capital letters, the stone(s) has been assessed by us within Examining the wines invoice to your principal rather than you. We will require proof of the registered under a non-EU address, decides that the item is not export and/or import licence(s). Export licences are issued by Arts Barrels of guns sold as parts will only be made available for sleeving its/their settings, and the stated weight is a statement of our opinion It is occasionally possible to provide a pre-Sale tasting for larger agent’s client’s identity and residence in advance of any bids made by to be exported from the EU, then he should advise Bonhams Council England and application forms can be obtained from its and measurements once rendered unserviceable according to the Gun only. This information is given as a guide and Bidders should satisfy parcels (as defined below). This is generally limited to more recent and the agent on his behalf. Please refer to our Conditions of Business and immediately. Export Licensing Unit. The detailed provisions of the export licensing Barrel Proof Act of 1968 to 1978 and the Rules of Proof. themselves with regard to this information as to its accuracy. everyday drinking wines. Please contact the department for details. contact our Customer Services Department for further details. In all other instances no VAT will be charged on the Hammer Price, arrangements can be found on the ACE website http://www. Condition of Firearms Signatures It is not our policy to inspect every unopened case. In the case of wines Bonhams undertakes Customer Due Diligence (CDD) into its Sellers and but VAT at the prevailing rate will be added to Buyer’s Premium which artscouncil.org.uk/what-we-do/supporting-museums/cultural-property/ Comment in this Catalogue is restricted, in general, to exceptional 1. A diamond brooch, by Kutchinsky older than 20 years the boxes will usually have been opened and levels Buyers as required by the Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and will be invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. export-controls/export-licensing/ or by phoning ACE on +44 (0)20 condition and to those defects that might affect the immediate safety of When the maker’s name appears in the title, in Bonhams’ opinion the and appearance noted in the Catalogue where necessary. You should Transfer of Funds (Information on the Payer) Regulations 2017 (“the 9. PAYMENT 7973 5188. The need for import licences varies from country to country a firearm in normal use. An intending Bidder unable to make technical piece is by that maker. make proper allowance for variations in ullage levels and conditions of Regulations”). Bonhams’ interpretation of the Regulations and Treasury It is of critical importance that you ensure that you have readily available and you should acquaint yourself with all relevant local requirements examinations and assessments is recommended to seek advice from a 2. A diamond brooch, signed Kutchinsky corks, capsules and labels. Approved industry Guidance is that CDD under the Regulations is not funds to pay the Purchase Price and the Buyer’s Premium (plus VAT and provisions. The refusal of any import or export licence(s) or gunmaker or from a modern firearms specialist. All prospective Bidders Has a signature that, in Bonhams’ opinion, is authentic but may contain Corks and Ullages required by Buyers into Sellers at Bonhams auctions or vice versa. and any other charges and Expenses to us)in full before making a bid any delay in obtaining such licence(s) shall not permit the rescission are advised to consult the ˚ of bore and wall-thickness measurements gemstones that are not original, or the piece may have been altered. Ullage refers to the space between the base of the cork and the wine. 6. CONTRACTS BETWEEN THE BUYER AND SELLER AND THE for the Lot. If you are a successful Bidder, payment will be due to us by of any Sale nor allow any delay in making full payment for the Lot. posted in the saleroom and available from the department. Bidders 3. A diamond brooch, mounted by Kutchinsky Ullage levels for Bordeaux shaped bottles are only normally noted BUYER AND BONHAMS 4.30 pm on the second working day after the Sale so that all sums are Generally, please contact our shipping department before the Sale if should note that guns are stripped only where there is a strong Has been created by the jeweller, in Bonhams’ opinion, but using when below the neck and for Burgundy, Alsace, German and Cognac On the Lot being knocked down to the Buyer, a Contract for Sale of cleared by the eighth working day after the Sale. Payments made by you require assistance in relation to export regulations. indication of a mechanical malfunction. Stripping is not, otherwise, stones or designs supplied by the client. shaped bottles when greater than 4 centimetres (cm). Acceptable the Lot will be entered into between the Seller and the Buyer on the anyone other than the registered Buyer will not be accepted. Bonhams 13. CITES REGULATIONS undertaken. Guns intended for use should be stripped and cleaned 20. PHOTOGRAPHS ullage levels increase with age; generally acceptable levels are as terms of the Contract for Sale set out in Appendix 1 at the back of the reserves the right to vary the terms of payment at any time. Please be aware that all Lots marked with the symbol Y are subject to beforehand. Hammer guns should have their rebound mechanisms Explanation of Catalogue Terms follows: Catalogue. You will be liable to pay the Purchase Price, which is the Bonhams’ preferred payment method is by bank transfer. CITES regulations when exporting these items outside the EU. These checked before use. The safety mechanisms of all guns must be tested • “Bill Brandt”: in our opinion a work by the artist. Under 15 years old – into neck or less than 4cm Hammer Price plus any applicable VAT. At the same time, a separate You may electronically transfer funds to our Account. If you do so, please regulations may be found at before use. All measurements are approximate. • “Attributed to Bill Brandt”: in our opinion probably a work by the 15 to 30 years old – top shoulder (ts) or up to 5cm contract is also entered into between us as Auctioneers and the Buyer. quote your paddle number and invoice number as the reference. Our http://www.defra.gov.uk/ahvla-en/imports-exports/cites/ or may be Original Gun Specifications Derived from Gunmakers artist, but less certainty to authorship is expressed than in the Over 30 years old – high shoulder (hs) or up to 6cm This is our Buyer’s Agreement, the terms of which are set out in Account details are as follows: requested from: The Sporting Gun Department endeavours to confirm a gun’s original preceding category. It should be noted that ullages may change between publication Appendix 2 at the back of the Catalogue. Please read the terms of the specification and date of manufacture with makers who hold their • “Signed and/or titled and/or dated and/or inscribed”: in our opinion of the Catalogue and the Sale and that corks may fail as a result of Animal Health and Veterinary Laboratories Agency (AHVLA) Wildlife Contract for Sale and our Buyer’s Agreement contained in the Bank: National Westminster Bank Plc original records. the signature and/or title and/or date and/or inscription are in the transporting the wine. We will only accept responsibility for Descriptions Licensing Catalogue in case you are the successful Bidder including the Address: PO Box 4RY Licensing Requirements artist’s hand. of condition at the time of publication of the Catalogue and cannot Floor 1, Zone 17, Temple Quay House warranties as to your status and source of funds. We may change the 250 Regent Street Firearms Act 1968 as amended • “Signed and/or titled and/or dated and/or inscribed in another accept responsibility for any loss resulting from failure of corks either 2 The Square, Temple Quay terms of either or both of these agreements in advance of their being London W1A 4RY Bonhams is constantly reviewing its procedures and would remind hand”: in our opinion the signature and/or title and/or date and/or before or after this point. BRISTOL BS1 6EB entered into, by setting out different terms in the Catalogue and/or by Account Name: Bonhams 1793 Limited you that, in the case of firearms or shotguns subject to certification, inscription have been added by Options to buy parcels Tel: +44 (0) 117 372 8774 placing an insert in the Catalogue and/or by notices at the Sale venue Account Number: 25563009 to conform with current legislation, Bonhams is required to see, as another hand. A parcel is a number of Lots of identical size of the same wine, bottle The refusal of any CITES licence or permit and any delay in obtaining and/or by oral announcements before and during the Sale. It is your Sort Code: 56-00-27 appropriate, your original registered firearms dealer’s certificate / shot • The date given is that of the image (negative). Where no further size and Description. The Buyer of any of these Lots has the option such licences or permits shall not give rise to the rescission or responsibility to ensure you are aware of the up to date terms of the IBAN Number: GB 33 NWBK 560027 25563009 gun certificate / firearm certificate / museum firearms licence / Section date is given, this indicates that the photographic print is vintage to accept some or all of the remaining Lots in the parcel at the same cancellation of any Sale, nor allow any delay in making full payment Buyer’s Agreement for this Sale. 5 authority or import licence (or details of any exemption from which (the term “vintage” may also be included in the Lot Description). A price, although such options will be at the Auctioneer’s sole discretion. for the Lot. 7. BUYER’S PREMIUM AND OTHER CHARGES PAYABLE BY If paying by bank transfer, the amount received after the you may benefit, for instance Crown servant status) for the firearm(s) vintage photograph is one which was made within approximately Absentee Bidders are, therefore, advised to bid on the first Lot in a 14. THE SELLERS AND/OR BONHAMS’ LIABILITY THE BUYER deduction of any bank fees and/or conversion of the currency of you have purchased prior to taking full payment of the amount 5-10 years of the negative. Where a second, later date appears, parcel. Other than any liability of the Seller to the Buyer of a Lot under the Under the Buyer’s Agreement, a premium (the Buyer’s Premium) is payment to pounds sterling must not be less than the sterling amount shown on your invoice. Should you not already be in possession of this refers to the date of printing. Where the exact printing date is Wines in Bond Contract for Sale, neither we nor the Seller are liable (whether in payable to us by the Buyer in accordance with the terms of the Buyer’s payable, as set out on the invoice. such an authority or exemption, you are required to initially pay a not known, but understood to be later, “printed later” will appear in Wines lying in Bond are marked Δ. All Lots sold under Bond, and negligence or otherwise) for any error or misdescription or omission Agreement and at rates set out below, calculated by reference to the deposit of 95% of the total invoice with the balance of 5% payable on the Lot Description. which the Buyer wishes to remain under Bond, will be invoiced without in any Description of a Lot or any Estimate in respect of it, whether Hammer Price and payable in addition to it. Payment may also be made by one of the following methods: presentation of your valid certificate or licence showing your authority • Unless otherwise specified, dimensions given are those of the piece VAT or Duty on the Hammer Price. If the Buyer wishes to take the Lot contained in the Catalogue or otherwise, whether given orally or in to hold the firearm(s) concerned. of paper on which the image is printed, including any margins. as Duty paid, UK Excise Duty and VAT will be added to the Hammer writing and whether given before or during the Sale. Neither we nor the For this Sale the following rates of Buyer’s Premium will be payable by Sterling personal cheque drawn on a UK branch of a bank or Please be advised that if a successful Bidder is then unable to produce Some photographs may appear in the Catalogue without margins Price on the invoice. Seller will be liable for any loss of Business, profits, revenue or income, Buyers on each Lot purchased: building society: all cheques must be cleared before you can collect the correct paperwork, the Lot(s) will be reoffered by Bonhams in the illustrated. Buyers must notify Bonhams at the time of the sale whether they wish or for loss of reputation, or for disruption to Business or wasted time on your purchases and should be made payable to Bonhams 1793 next appropriate Sale, on standard terms for Sellers, and you will be • All photographs are sold unframed unless stated in the Lot to take their wines under Bond or Duty paid. If a Lot is taken under the part of management or staff, or for indirect losses or consequential 27.5% up to £2,500 of the Hammer Price Limited. responsible for any loss incurred by Bonhams on the original Sale to Description. Bond, the Buyer will be responsible for all VAT, Duty, clearance and damages of any kind, irrespective in any case of the nature, volume or 25% of the Hammer Price above £2,500 and up to £300,000 you. 21. PICTURES other charges that may be payable thereon. source of the loss or damage alleged to be suffered, and irrespective 20% of the Hammer Price above £300,000 and up to £3,000,000 Cash: you may pay for Lots purchased by you at this Sale In the case of RFD certificates and Section 5 authorities, we wish Explanation of Catalogue Terms Buyers outside the UK must be aware that any forwarding agent of whether the said loss or damage is caused by or claimed in respect 13.9% of the Hammer Price above £3,000,000 with notes or coins in the currency in which the Sale is conducted to keep an up-to-date copy on file. Please supply us with a Fax or The following terms used in the Catalogue have the following meanings appointed to export their purchases must have a movement certificate of any negligence, other tort, breach of contract (if any) or statutory (but not any other currency) provided that the total amount payable photocopy. It would be helpful if you could send us an updated copy but are subject to the general provisions relating to Descriptions for Lots to be released under Bond. duty, restitutionary claim or otherwise. In any circumstances where Storage and handling charges may also be payable by the Buyer by you in respect of all Lots purchased by you at the Sale does not whenever your certificate or authority is renewed or changed. contained in the Contract for Sale: Bottling Details and Case Terms we and/or the Seller are liable in relation to any Lot or any Description as detailed on the specific Sale Information page at the front of the exceed £3,000, or the equivalent in the currency in which the Sale is Lots marked ‘S1´ and bearing red labels are Section 1 firearms and • “Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion a work by the artist. When the The following terms used in the Catalogue have the following or Estimate made of any Lot, or the conduct of any Sale in relation catalogue. conducted, at the time when payment is made. If the amount payable require a valid British Firearms certificate, RFD Licence or import artist’s forename(s) is not known, a series of asterisks, followed by meanings: to any Lot, whether in damages, for an indemnity or contribution, by you for Lots exceeds that sum, the balance must be paid otherwise licence. the surname of the artist, whether preceded by an initial or not, CB – Château bottled or for a restitutionary remedy or otherwise, our and/or the Seller’s The Buyer’s Premium and all other charges payable to us by the Buyer than in coins or notes; this limit applies to both payment at our Lots marked ‘S2’ and bearing blue labels are Section 2 firearms and indicates that in our opinion the work is by the artist named; DB – Domaine bottled liability (combined, if both we and the Seller are liable) will be limited are subject to VAT at the prevailing rate, currently 20%. premises and direct deposit into our bank account. require a valid British Shotgun certificate, RFD licence or import licence. • “Attributed to Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion probably a work by EstB – Estate bottled to payment of a sum which will not exceed by way of maximum the Lots marked ‘S5´ and bearing specially marked red labels are Section the artist but less certainty as to authorship is expressed than in the BB – Bordeaux bottled amount of the Purchase Price of the Lot irrespective in any case of VAT may also be payable on the Hammer Price of the Lot, where 5 prohibited firearms and require a valid Section 5 Authority or import preceding category; BE – Belgian bottled Debit cards issued in the name of the Buyer (including China Union the nature, volume or source of any loss or damage alleged to be indicated by a symbol beside the Lot number. See paragraph 8 below licence. • “Studio/Workshop of Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion a work by FB – French bottled Pay (CUP) cards and debit cards issued by Visa and MasterCard suffered or sum claimed as due, and irrespective of whether the liability for details. There is no limit on payment value if payment is made in person Lots marked with a ‘S58´ and bearing yellow labels are for obsolete an unknown hand in a studio of the artist which may or may not GB – German bottled only). arises from any negligence, other tort, breach of contract (if any) or using Chip & Pin verification. calibres and no licence is required unless ammunition is held. have been executed under the artist’s direction; OB – Oporto bottled statutory duty or otherwise. Nothing set out above will be construed On certain Lots, which will be marked “AR” in the Catalogue and Unmarked Lots require no licence. • “Circle of Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion a work by a hand closely UK – United Kingdom bottled as excluding or restricting (whether directly or indirectly) our liability or which are sold for a Hammer Price of €1,000 or greater (converted into may also be accepted up to £5,000, subject to Please do not hesitate to contact the Modern Sporting Gun associated with a named artist but not necessarily his pupil; owc – original wooden case Payment by telephone excluding or restricting any person’s rights or remedies in respect of (i) the currency of the Sale using the European Central Bank Reference appropriate verification procedures, although this facility is not available Department should you have any queries. • “Follower of Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion a work by a painter iwc – individual wooden case fraud, or (ii) death or personal injury caused by our negligence (or by rate prevailing on the date of the Sale), the Additional Premium will for first time buyers. If the amount payable by you for Lots exceeds that Taxidermy and Related Items working in the artist’s style, contemporary or nearly contemporary, oc – original carton the negligence of any person under our control or for whom we are be payable to us by the Buyer to cover our Expenses relating to the sum, the balance must be paid by other means. On behalf of the Seller of these articles, Bonhams undertakes to but not necessarily his pupil; SYMBOLS legally responsible), or (iii) acts or omissions for which we are liable payment of royalties under the Artists Resale Right Regulations 2006. comply fully with Cites and DEFRA regulations. Buyers are advised • “Manner of Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion a work in the style of THE FOLLOWING SYMBOLS ARE USED TO DENOTE under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957, or (iv) any other liability to the The Additional Premium will be a percentage of the amount of the to inform themselves of all such regulations and should expect the the artist and of a later date; Credit cards issued in the name of the Buyer (including China Union extent the same may not be excluded or restricted as a matter of law Y Subject to CITES regulations when exporting these items outside Hammer Price calculated in accordance with the table below, and shall exportation of items to take some time to arrange. • “After Jacopo Bassano”: in our opinion, a copy of a known work of Pay (CUP) cards and credit cards issued by Visa and MasterCard or (v) our undertakings under paragraphs 9 (in relation to specialist the EU, see clause 13. not exceed €12,500 (converted into the currency of the Sale using 18. FURNITURE the artist; only). There is a £5,000 limit on payment value if payment is made in Stamp or Book Sales only) and 10 of the Buyer’s Agreement. The same TP Objects displayed with a TP will be located at the Cadogan the European Central Bank Reference rate prevailing on the date of Upholstered Furniture • “Signed and/or dated and/or inscribed”: in our opinion the signature person using Chip & Pin verification. applies in respect of the Seller, as if references to us in this paragraph Tate warehouse and will only be available for collection from this the Sale). Whilst we take every care in cataloguing furniture which has been and/or date and/or inscription are from the hand of the artist; were substituted with references to the Seller. location. It may be advisable to notify your debit or credit card provider of your upholstered we offer no Guarantee as to the originality • “Bears a signature and/or date and/or inscription”: in our opinion 15. BOOKS W Objects displayed with a w will be located in the Bonhams Hammer Price Percentage amount of the wood covered by fabric or upholstery. the signature and/or date and/or inscription have been added by intended purchase in advance to reduce delays caused by us having to As stated above, all Lots are sold on an “as is” basis, subject to all Warehouse and will only be available for collection from this From €0 to €50,000 4% 19. JEWELLERY another hand. seek authority when you come to pay. faults, imperfections and errors of Description save as set out below. location. From €50,000.01 to €200,000 3% Gemstones 22. PORCELAIN AND GLASS However, you will be entitled to reject a Book in the circumstances set Δ Wines lying in Bond. From €200,000.01 to €350,000 1% Historically many gemstones have been subjected to a variety of Damage and Restoration Note: only one debit or credit card may be used for payment of an out in paragraph 11 of the Buyers Agreement. Please note that Lots AR An Additional Premium will be payable to us by the Buyer to From €350,000.01 to €500,000 0.5% treatments to enhance their appearance. Sapphires and rubies are For your guidance, in our Catalogues we attempt to detail, as far account balance. If you have any questions with regards to card comprising printed Books, unframed maps and bound manuscripts are cover our Expenses relating to payment of royalties under the Exceeding €500,000 0.25% routinely heat treated to improve their colour and clarity, similarly as practicable, all significant defects, cracks and restoration. Such payments, please contact our Customer Services Department. not liable to VAT on the Buyer’s Premium. Artists Resale Right Regulations 2006. See clause 7 for details. emeralds are frequently treated with oils or resin for the same purpose. practicable Descriptions of damage cannot be definitive, and in We reserve the rights to investigate and identify the source of any funds ○ The Seller has been guaranteed a minimum price for the Lot, 16. CLOCKS AND WATCHES Other treatments such as staining, irradiation or coating may have providing Condition Reports, we cannot Guarantee that there are no received by us, to postpone completion of the sale of any Lot at our All Lots are sold “as is”, and the absence of any reference to the either by Bonhams or a third party. This may take the form of an been used on other gemstones. These treatments may be permanent, other defects present which have not been mentioned. Bidders should discretion while we complete our investigations, and to cancel the condition of a clock or watch does not imply that the Lot is in good irrevocable bid by a third party, who may make a financial gain on whilst others may need special care or re-treatment over the years satisfy themselves by inspection, as to the condition of each Lot.

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 a successful Sale or a financial loss if unsuccessful. or Bonhams and whether made prior to or during the Sale, is not 8.1.2 to resell the Lot by auction, private treaty or any other means on ▲ Bonhams owns the Lot either wholly or partially or may otherwise part of the Contractual Description upon which the Lot is sold. giving seven days’ written notice to you of the intention to resell; have an economic interest. 3.2 Except as provided in paragraph 2.1.5, the Seller does 8.1.3 to retain possession of the Lot; Ф This lot contains or is made of ivory. The United States not make or give and does not agree to make or give any 8.1.4 to remove and store the Lot at your expense; Government has banned the import of ivory into contractual promise, undertaking, obligation, guarantee, 8.1.5 to take legal proceedings against you for any sum due under the the USA. warranty, or representation of fact, or undertake any duty of Contract for Sale and/or damages for breach of contract; •, †, *, G, Ω, a see clause 8, VAT, for details. care, in relation to any Description of the Lot or any Estimate 8.1.6 to be paid interest on any monies due (after as well as before DATA PROTECTION – USE OF YOUR INFORMATION in relation to it, nor of the accuracy or completeness of any judgement or order) at the annual rate of 5% per annum above Where we obtain any personal information about you, we shall only Description or Estimate which may have been Bonhams. No the base rate of National Westminster Bank Plc from time to use it in accordance with the terms of our Privacy Policy (subject to such Description or Estimate is incorporated into this Contract time to be calculated on a daily basis from the date upon which any additional specific consent(s) you may have given at the time for Sale. such monies become payable until the date of actual payment; your information was disclosed). A copy of our Privacy Policy can be 4 FITNESS FOR PURPOSE AND SATISFACTORY QUALITY 8.1.7 to repossess the Lot (or any part thereof) which has not become found on our Website www.bonhams.com or requested by post from 4.1 The Seller does not make and does not agree to make any your property, and for this purpose (unless the Buyer buys the Customer Services Department, 101 New Bond Street, London, W1S contractual promise, undertaking, obligation, guarantee, Lot as a Consumer from the Seller selling in the course of a 1SR or by email from [email protected] warranty, or representation of fact in relation to the satisfactory Business) you hereby grant an irrevocable licence to the Seller quality of the Lot or its fitness for any purpose. by himself and to his servants or agents to enter upon all or APPENDIX 1 4.2 The Seller will not be liable for any breach of any undertaking, any of your premises (with or without vehicles) during normal whether implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 or otherwise, Business hours to take possession of the Lot or part thereof; BUYERS SALE CONTRACT WITH SELLER as to the satisfactory quality of the Lot or its fitness for any 8.1.8 to retain possession of any other property sold to you by the purpose. Seller at the Sale or any other auction or by private treaty until IMPORTANT: These terms may be changed in advance of the 5 RISK, PROPERTY AND TITLE all sums due under the Contract for Sale shall have been paid in Sale of the Lot to you, by the setting out of different terms 5.1 Risk in the Lot passes to you after 7 days from the day upon full in cleared funds; in the Catalogue for the Sale and/or by placing an insert in which it is knocked down to you on the fall of the Auctioneer’s 8.1.9 to retain possession of, and on three months’ written notice the Catalogue and/or by notices at the Sale venue and/or on hammer in respect of the Lot, or upon collection of the Lot to sell, Without Reserve, any of your other property in the Bonhams’ website, and/or by oral announcements before and if earlier. The Seller will not be responsible thereafter for the possession of the Seller and/or of Bonhams (as bailee for the during the Sale at the Sale venue. You should be alert to this Lot prior to you collecting it from Bonhams or the Storage Seller) for any purpose (including, without limitation, other goods possibility of changes and ask in advance of bidding if there Contractor, with whom you have separate contract(s) as Buyer. sold to you) and to apply any monies due to you as a result of have been any. You will indemnify the Seller and keep the Seller fully indemnified such Sale in satisfaction or part satisfaction of any amounts Under this contract the Seller’s liability in respect of the quality from and against all claims, proceedings, costs, expenses owed to the Seller or to Bonhams; and of the Lot, it’s fitness for any purpose and its conformity with and losses arising in respect of any injury, loss and damage 8.1.10 so long as such goods remain in the possession of the Seller any Description is limited. You are strongly advised to examine caused to the Lot beyond 7 days from the day of the fall of the or Bonhams as its bailee, to rescind the contract for the Sale of the Lot for yourself and/or obtain an independent examination Auctioneer’s hammer until you obtain full title to it. any other goods sold to you by the Seller at the Sale or at any of it before you buy it. 5.2 Title to the Lot remains in and is retained by the Seller until: (i) the other auction or by private treaty and apply any monies received 1 THE CONTRACT Purchase Price and all other sums payable by you to Bonhams from you in respect of such goods in part or full satisfaction of 1.1 These terms and the relevant terms for Bidders and Buyers in in relation to the Lot have been paid in full to and received in any amounts owed to the Seller or to Bonhams by you. the Notice to Bidders govern the Contract for Sale of the Lot by cleared funds by Bonhams, and (ii) Bonhams has completed its 8.2 You agree to indemnify the Seller against all legal and other the Seller to the Buyer. investigations pursuant to clause 3.11 of the Buyer’s Agreement costs of enforcement, all losses and other expenses and costs 1.2 The Definitions and Glossary contained in Appendix 3 in the with Bonhams set out in Appendix 2 in the catalogue. (including any monies payable to Bonhams in order to obtain Catalogue are incorporated into this Contract for Sale and a 6 PAYMENT the release of the Lot) incurred by the Seller (whether or not separate copy can also be provided by Bonhams on request. 6.1 Your obligation to pay the Purchase Price arises when the Lot is court proceedings will have been issued) as a result of Bonhams Where words and phrases are used which are in the List of knocked down to you on the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in taking steps under this paragraph 8 on a full indemnity basis Definitions, they are printed in italics. respect of the Lot. together with interest thereon (after as well as before judgement 1.3 The Seller sells the Lot as the principal to the Contract for Sale, 6.2 Time will be of the essence in relation to payment of the or order) at the rate specified in paragraph 8.1.6 from the date such contract being made between the Seller and you through Purchase Price and all other sums payable by you to Bonhams. upon which the Seller becomes liable to pay the same until Bonhams which acts in the sole capacity as the Seller’s agent Unless agreed in writing with you by Bonhams on the Seller’s payment by you. and not as an additional principal. However, if the Catalogue behalf (in which case you must comply with the terms of that 8.3 On any resale of the Lot under paragraph 8.1.2, the Seller will states that Bonhams sells the Lot as principal, or such a agreement), all such sums must be paid to Bonhams by you in account to you in respect of any balance remaining from any statement is made by an announcement by the Auctioneer, the currency in which the Sale was conducted by not later than monies received by him or on his behalf in respect of the Lot, or by a notice at the Sale, or an insert in the Catalogue, then 4.30pm on the second working day following the Sale and you after the payment of all sums due to the Seller and to Bonhams, Bonhams is the Seller for the purposes of this agreement. must ensure that the funds are cleared by the seventh working within 28 days of receipt of such monies by him or on his behalf. 1.4 The contract is made on the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in day after the Sale. Payment must be made to Bonhams by one 9 THE SELLER’S LIABILITY respect of the Lot when it is knocked down to you. of the methods stated in the Notice to Bidders unless otherwise 9.1 The Seller will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage caused 2 SELLER’S WARRANTIES AND UNDERTAKINGS agreed with you in writing by Bonhams. If you do not pay in full by the Lot after the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in respect of 2.1 The Seller undertakes to you that: any sums due in accordance with this paragraph, the Seller will the Lot. 2.1.1 the Seller is the owner of the Lot or is duly authorised to sell the have the rights set out in paragraph 8 below. 9.2 Subject to paragraph 9.3 below, except for breach of the Lot by the owner; 7 COLLECTION OF THE LOT express undertaking provided in paragraph 2.1.5, the Seller 2.1.2 save as disclosed in the Entry for the Lot in the Catalogue, the 7.1 Unless otherwise agreed in writing with you by Bonhams, will not be liable for any breach of any term that the Lot will Seller sells the Lot with full title guarantee or, where the Seller the Lot will be released to you or to your order only when: (i) correspond with any Description applied to it by or on behalf of is an executor, trustee, liquidator, receiver or administrator, with Bonhams has received cleared funds to the amount of the the Seller, whether implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 or whatever right, title or interest he may have in the Lot; full Purchase Price and all other sums owed by you to the otherwise. 2.1.3 except where the Sale is by an executor, trustee, liquidator, Seller and to Bonhams and (ii) Bonhams has completed its 9.3 Unless the Seller sells the Lot in the course of a Business and receiver or administrator the Seller is both legally entitled to investigations pursuant to clause 3.11 of the Buyer’s Agreement the Buyer buys it as a Consumer, sell the Lot, and legally capable of conferring on you quiet with Bonhams set out in Appendix 2 in the catalogue. 9.3.1 the Seller will not be liable (whether in negligence, other tort, possession of the Lot and that the Sale conforms in every 7.2 The Seller is entitled to withhold possession from you of any breach of contract or statutory duty or in restitution or under the respect with the terms implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979, other Lot he has sold to you at the same or at any other Sale Misrepresentation Act 1967, or in any other way) for any lack of Sections 12(1) and 12(2) (see the Definitions and Glossary); and whether currently in Bonhams’ possession or not, until conformity with, or inaccuracy, error, misdescription or omission 2.1.4 the Seller has complied with all requirements, legal or otherwise, payment in full and in cleared funds of the Purchase Price and in any Description of the Lot or any Entry or Estimate in relation relating to any export or import of the Lot, and all duties and all other sums due to the Seller and/or Bonhams in respect of to the Lot made by or on behalf of the Seller (whether made in taxes in respect of the export or import of the Lot have (unless the Lot. writing, including in the Catalogue, or on the Website, or orally, stated to the contrary in the Catalogue or announced by the 7.3 You should note that Bonhams has reserved the right not to or by conduct or otherwise) and whether made before or after Auctioneer) been paid and, so far as the Seller is aware, all third release the Lot to you until its investigations under paragraph this agreement or prior to or during the Sale; parties have complied with such requirements in the past; 3.11 of the Buyers’ Agreement set out in Appendix 2 have been 9.3.2 the Seller will not be liable for any loss of Business, Business 2.1.5 items consigned for sale by the Seller are not connected with or completed to Bonhams’ satisfaction. profits or revenue or income or for loss of reputation or for derived from any criminal activity, including without limitation tax 7.4 You will collect and remove the Lot at your own expense disruption to Business or wasted time on the part of the Buyer evasion, money laundering, terrorist financing or breach of any from Bonhams’ custody and/ or control or from the Storage or of the Buyer’s management or staff or, for any indirect losses applicable international trade sanctions; Contractor’s custody in accordance with Bonhams’ instructions or consequential damages of any kind, irrespective in any case 2.1.6 subject to any alterations expressly identified as such made by or requirements. of the nature, volume or source of the loss or damage alleged to announcement or notice at the Sale venue or by the Notice to 7.5 You will be wholly responsible for packing, handling and be suffered, and irrespective of whether the said loss or damage Bidders or by an insert in the Catalogue or on the Bonhams transport of the Lot on collection and for complying with all is caused by or claimed in respect of any negligence, other website, the Lot corresponds with the Contractual Description import or export regulations in connection with the Lot. tort, breach of contract, statutory duty, restitutionary claim or of the Lot, being that part of the Entry about the Lot in the 7.6 You will be wholly responsible for any removal, storage or other otherwise; Catalogue which is in bold letters and (except for colour) with charges or expenses incurred by the Seller if you do not remove 9.3.3 in any circumstances where the Seller is liable to you in respect any photograph of the Lot in the Catalogue. the Lot in accordance with this paragraph 7 and will indemnify of the Lot, or any act, omission, statement, or representation 3 DESCRIPTIONS OF THE LOT the Seller against all charges, costs, including any legal costs in respect of it, or this agreement or its performance, and 3.1 Paragraph 2.1.5 sets out what is the Contractual Description and fees, expenses and losses suffered by the Seller by reason whether in damages, for an indemnity or contribution or for of the Lot. In particular, the Lot is not sold as corresponding of your failure to remove the Lot including any charges due a restitutionary remedy or in any way whatsoever, the Seller’s with any part of the Entry in the Catalogue which is not printed under any Storage Contract. All such sums due to the Seller will liability will be limited to payment of a sum which will not exceed in bold letters, the remainder of which Entry merely sets out be payable on demand. by way of maximum the amount of the Purchase Price of the (on the Seller’s behalf) Bonhams’ opinion about the Lot and 8 FAILURE TO PAY FOR THE LOT Lot irrespective in any case of the nature, volume or source which is not part of the Contractual Description upon which 8.1 If the Purchase Price for a Lot is not paid to Bonhams in full in of any loss or damage alleged to be suffered or sum claimed the Lot is sold. Any statement or representation other than that accordance with the Contract for Sale, the Seller will be entitled, as due, and irrespective of whether the liability arises from part of the Entry referred to in paragraph 2.1.5 (together with with the prior written agreement of Bonhams but without further any negligence, other tort, breach of contract, statutory duty, any express alteration to it as referred to in paragraph 2.1.5), notice to you, to exercise one or more of the following rights bailee’s duty, restitutionary claim or otherwise. including any Description or Estimate, whether made orally or in (whether through Bonhams or otherwise): 9.4 Nothing set out in paragraphs 9.1 to 9.3 above will be writing, including in the Catalogue or on Bonhams’ Website, or by 8.1.1 to terminate immediately the Contract for Sale of the Lot for construed as excluding or restricting (whether directly or conduct, or otherwise, and whether by or on behalf of the Seller your breach of contract; indirectly) any person’s liability or excluding or restricting any

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 a successful Sale or a financial loss if unsuccessful. or Bonhams and whether made prior to or during the Sale, is not 8.1.2 to resell the Lot by auction, private treaty or any other means on person’s rights or remedies in respect of (i) fraud, or (ii) death are used in this agreement, they are printed in italics. Reference under investigation for neither have been charged nor convicted ▲ Bonhams owns the Lot either wholly or partially or may otherwise part of the Contractual Description upon which the Lot is sold. giving seven days’ written notice to you of the intention to resell; or personal injury caused by the Seller’s negligence (or any is made in this agreement to information printed in the Notice to in connection with any criminal activity. have an economic interest. 3.2 Except as provided in paragraph 2.1.5, the Seller does 8.1.3 to retain possession of the Lot; person under the Seller’s control or for whom the Seller is legally Bidders, printed in the Catalogue for the Sale, and where such 3.10 Where you are acting as agent for another party (“your Ф This lot contains or is made of ivory. The United States not make or give and does not agree to make or give any 8.1.4 to remove and store the Lot at your expense; responsible), or (iii) acts or omissions for which the Seller is liable information is referred to it is incorporated into this agreement. Principal”), you undertake and warrant that: Government has banned the import of ivory into contractual promise, undertaking, obligation, guarantee, 8.1.5 to take legal proceedings against you for any sum due under the under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957, or (iv) any other liability 1.3 Except as specified in paragraph 4 of the Notice to Bidders the 3.10.1 you have conducted suitable customer due diligence into the USA. warranty, or representation of fact, or undertake any duty of Contract for Sale and/or damages for breach of contract; to the extent the same may not be excluded or restricted as a Contract for Sale of the Lot between you and the Seller is made your Principal under applicable Sanctions and Anti-Money •, †, *, G, Ω, a see clause 8, VAT, for details. care, in relation to any Description of the Lot or any Estimate 8.1.6 to be paid interest on any monies due (after as well as before matter of law. on the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in respect of the Lot, Laundering laws and regulations; DATA PROTECTION – USE OF YOUR INFORMATION in relation to it, nor of the accuracy or completeness of any judgement or order) at the annual rate of 5% per annum above 10 MISCELLANEOUS when it is knocked down to you. At that moment a separate 3.10.2 your Principal is not a Sanctioned Party and not owned, partially Where we obtain any personal information about you, we shall only Description or Estimate which may have been Bonhams. No the base rate of National Westminster Bank Plc from time to 10.1 You may not assign either the benefit or burden of the Contract contract is also made between you and Bonhams on the terms owned or controlled by a Sanctioned Party, and you have no use it in accordance with the terms of our Privacy Policy (subject to such Description or Estimate is incorporated into this Contract time to be calculated on a daily basis from the date upon which for Sale. in this Buyer’s Agreement. reason to suspect that your Principal has been charged or any additional specific consent(s) you may have given at the time for Sale. such monies become payable until the date of actual payment; 10.2 The Seller’s failure or delay in enforcing or exercising any power 1.4 We act as agents for the Seller and are not answerable or convicted with, money laundering, terrorism or other crimes; your information was disclosed). A copy of our Privacy Policy can be 4 FITNESS FOR PURPOSE AND SATISFACTORY QUALITY 8.1.7 to repossess the Lot (or any part thereof) which has not become or right under the Contract for Sale will not operate or be personally responsible to you for any breach of contract or other 3.10.3 funds used for your or your Principal’s purchase are not found on our Website www.bonhams.com or requested by post from 4.1 The Seller does not make and does not agree to make any your property, and for this purpose (unless the Buyer buys the deemed to operate as a waiver of his rights under it except to default by the Seller, unless Bonhams sells the Lot as principal. connected with or derived from any criminal activity, including Customer Services Department, 101 New Bond Street, London, W1S contractual promise, undertaking, obligation, guarantee, Lot as a Consumer from the Seller selling in the course of a the extent of any express waiver given to you in writing. Any 1.5 Our personal obligations to you are governed by this agreement without limitation tax evasion, money laundering or terrorist 1SR or by email from [email protected] warranty, or representation of fact in relation to the satisfactory Business) you hereby grant an irrevocable licence to the Seller such waiver will not affect the Seller’s ability subsequently to and we agree, subject to the terms below, to the following financing; quality of the Lot or its fitness for any purpose. by himself and to his servants or agents to enter upon all or enforce any right arising under the Contract for Sale. obligations: 3.10.4 items purchased by you and your Principal through Bonhams APPENDIX 1 4.2 The Seller will not be liable for any breach of any undertaking, any of your premises (with or without vehicles) during normal 10.3 If either party to the Contract for Sale is prevented from 1.5.1 we will, until the date and time specified in the Notice to Bidders are not being purchased or to be used in any way connected whether implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 or otherwise, Business hours to take possession of the Lot or part thereof; performing that party’s respective obligations under the Contract or otherwise notified to you, store the Lot in accordance with with or to facilitate breaches of applicable Tax, Anti-Money BUYERS SALE CONTRACT WITH SELLER as to the satisfactory quality of the Lot or its fitness for any 8.1.8 to retain possession of any other property sold to you by the for Sale by circumstances beyond its reasonable control or paragraph 5; Laundering or Anti-Terrorism laws and regulations; and purpose. Seller at the Sale or any other auction or by private treaty until if performance of its obligations would by reason of such 1.5.2 subject to any power of the Seller or us to refuse to release 3.10.5 that you consent to Bonhams relying upon your customer due IMPORTANT: These terms may be changed in advance of the 5 RISK, PROPERTY AND TITLE all sums due under the Contract for Sale shall have been paid in circumstances give rise to a significantly increased financial the Lot to you, we will release the Lot to you in accordance diligence, undertaking to retain records of your due diligence Sale of the Lot to you, by the setting out of different terms 5.1 Risk in the Lot passes to you after 7 days from the day upon full in cleared funds; cost to it, that party will not, for so long as such circumstances with paragraph 4 once you have paid to us, in cleared funds, for at least 5 years and to make such due diligence records in the Catalogue for the Sale and/or by placing an insert in which it is knocked down to you on the fall of the Auctioneer’s 8.1.9 to retain possession of, and on three months’ written notice prevail, be required to perform such obligations. This paragraph everything due to us and the Seller and following completion of available for inspection by an independent auditor in the event the Catalogue and/or by notices at the Sale venue and/or on hammer in respect of the Lot, or upon collection of the Lot to sell, Without Reserve, any of your other property in the does not apply to the obligations imposed on you by paragraph our enquiries pursuant to paragraph 3.11; we request you to do so. Bonhams’ website, and/or by oral announcements before and if earlier. The Seller will not be responsible thereafter for the possession of the Seller and/or of Bonhams (as bailee for the 6. 1.5.3 we will provide guarantees in the terms set out in paragraphs 9 3.11 We reserve the rights to make enquiries about any person during the Sale at the Sale venue. You should be alert to this Lot prior to you collecting it from Bonhams or the Storage Seller) for any purpose (including, without limitation, other goods 10.4 Any notice or other communication to be given under the and 10. transacting with us and to identify the source of any funds possibility of changes and ask in advance of bidding if there Contractor, with whom you have separate contract(s) as Buyer. sold to you) and to apply any monies due to you as a result of Contract for Sale must be in writing and may be delivered by 1.6 We do not make or give and do not agree to make or give received from you. In the event we have not completed our have been any. You will indemnify the Seller and keep the Seller fully indemnified such Sale in satisfaction or part satisfaction of any amounts hand or sent by first class post or air mail or fax transmission, if to any contractual promise, undertaking, obligation, Guarantee, investigations in respect of anti-terrorism financing, anti-money Under this contract the Seller’s liability in respect of the quality from and against all claims, proceedings, costs, expenses owed to the Seller or to Bonhams; and the Seller, addressed c/o Bonhams at its address or fax number warranty, representation of fact in relation to any Description laundering or other financial and identity checks concerning of the Lot, it’s fitness for any purpose and its conformity with and losses arising in respect of any injury, loss and damage 8.1.10 so long as such goods remain in the possession of the Seller in the Catalogue (marked for the attention of the Company of the Lot or any Estimate in relation to it, nor of the accuracy either you or the Seller, to our satisfaction at our discretion, any Description is limited. You are strongly advised to examine caused to the Lot beyond 7 days from the day of the fall of the or Bonhams as its bailee, to rescind the contract for the Sale of Secretary), and if to you to the address or fax number of the or completeness of any Description or Estimate which may we shall be entitled to retain Lots and/or proceeds of Sale, the Lot for yourself and/or obtain an independent examination Auctioneer’s hammer until you obtain full title to it. any other goods sold to you by the Seller at the Sale or at any Buyer given in the Bidding Form (unless notice of any change of have been made by us or on our behalf or by or on behalf postpone or cancel any sale and to take any other actions of it before you buy it. 5.2 Title to the Lot remains in and is retained by the Seller until: (i) the other auction or by private treaty and apply any monies received address is given in writing). It is the responsibility of the sender of the Seller (whether made orally or in writing, including in required or permitted under applicable law, without liability to 1 THE CONTRACT Purchase Price and all other sums payable by you to Bonhams from you in respect of such goods in part or full satisfaction of of the notice or communication to ensure that it is received in a the Catalogue or on Bonhams’ Website, or by conduct, or you. 1.1 These terms and the relevant terms for Bidders and Buyers in in relation to the Lot have been paid in full to and received in any amounts owed to the Seller or to Bonhams by you. legible form within any applicable time period. otherwise), and whether made before or after this agreement or 4 COLLECTION OF THE LOT the Notice to Bidders govern the Contract for Sale of the Lot by cleared funds by Bonhams, and (ii) Bonhams has completed its 8.2 You agree to indemnify the Seller against all legal and other 10.5 If any term or any part of any term of the Contract for Sale prior to or during the Sale. No such Description or Estimate is 4.1 Subject to any power of the Seller or us to refuse to release the Seller to the Buyer. investigations pursuant to clause 3.11 of the Buyer’s Agreement costs of enforcement, all losses and other expenses and costs is held to be unenforceable or invalid, such unenforceability incorporated into this agreement between you and us. Any such the Lot to you, once you have paid to us, in cleared funds, 1.2 The Definitions and Glossary contained in Appendix 3 in the with Bonhams set out in Appendix 2 in the catalogue. (including any monies payable to Bonhams in order to obtain or invalidity will not affect the enforceability and validity of the Description or Estimate, if made by us or on our behalf, was everything due to the Seller and to us, and once we have Catalogue are incorporated into this Contract for Sale and a 6 PAYMENT the release of the Lot) incurred by the Seller (whether or not remaining terms or the remainder of the relevant term. (unless Bonhams itself sells the Lot as principal) made as agent completed our investigations under paragraph 3.11, we will separate copy can also be provided by Bonhams on request. 6.1 Your obligation to pay the Purchase Price arises when the Lot is court proceedings will have been issued) as a result of Bonhams 10.6 References in the Contract for Sale to Bonhams will, where on behalf of the Seller. release the Lot to you or as you may direct us in writing. The Where words and phrases are used which are in the List of knocked down to you on the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in taking steps under this paragraph 8 on a full indemnity basis appropriate, include reference to Bonhams’ officers, employees 2 PERFORMANCE OF THE CONTRACT FOR SALE Lot will only be released on production of a buyer collection Definitions, they are printed in italics. respect of the Lot. together with interest thereon (after as well as before judgement and agents and to any subsidiary of Bonhams Holdings Limited You undertake to us personally that you will observe and comply document, obtained from our cashier’s office. 1.3 The Seller sells the Lot as the principal to the Contract for Sale, 6.2 Time will be of the essence in relation to payment of the or order) at the rate specified in paragraph 8.1.6 from the date and to its officers, employees and agents. with all your obligations and undertakings to the Seller under the 4.2 You must collect and remove the Lot at your own expense by such contract being made between the Seller and you through Purchase Price and all other sums payable by you to Bonhams. upon which the Seller becomes liable to pay the same until 10.7 The headings used in the Contract for Sale are for convenience Contract for Sale in respect of the Lot. the date and time specified in the Notice to Bidders, or if no Bonhams which acts in the sole capacity as the Seller’s agent Unless agreed in writing with you by Bonhams on the Seller’s payment by you. only and will not affect its interpretation. 3 PAYMENT AND BUYER WARRANTIES date is specified, by 4.30pm on the seventh day after the Sale. and not as an additional principal. However, if the Catalogue behalf (in which case you must comply with the terms of that 8.3 On any resale of the Lot under paragraph 8.1.2, the Seller will 10.8 In the Contract for Sale “including” means “including, without 3.1 Unless agreed in writing between you and us or as otherwise 4.3 For the period referred to in paragraph 4.2, the Lot can be states that Bonhams sells the Lot as principal, or such a agreement), all such sums must be paid to Bonhams by you in account to you in respect of any balance remaining from any limitation”. set out in the Notice to Bidders, you must pay to us by not later collected from the address referred to in the Notice to Bidders statement is made by an announcement by the Auctioneer, the currency in which the Sale was conducted by not later than monies received by him or on his behalf in respect of the Lot, 10.9 References to the singular will include reference to the plural than 4.30pm on the second working day following the Sale: for collection on the days and times specified in the Notice to or by a notice at the Sale, or an insert in the Catalogue, then 4.30pm on the second working day following the Sale and you after the payment of all sums due to the Seller and to Bonhams, (and vice versa) and reference to any one gender will include 3.1.1 the Purchase Price for the Lot; Bidders. Thereafter, the Lot may be removed elsewhere for Bonhams is the Seller for the purposes of this agreement. must ensure that the funds are cleared by the seventh working within 28 days of receipt of such monies by him or on his behalf. reference to the other genders. 3.1.2 a Buyer’s Premium in accordance with the rates set out in the storage and you must enquire from us as to when and where 1.4 The contract is made on the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in day after the Sale. Payment must be made to Bonhams by one 9 THE SELLER’S LIABILITY 10.10 Reference to a numbered paragraph is to a paragraph of the Notice to Bidders on each lot, and you can collect it, although this information will usually be set respect of the Lot when it is knocked down to you. of the methods stated in the Notice to Bidders unless otherwise 9.1 The Seller will not be liable for any injury, loss or damage caused Contract for Sale. 3.1.3 if the Lot is marked [AR], an Additional Premium which is out in the Notice to Bidders. 2 SELLER’S WARRANTIES AND UNDERTAKINGS agreed with you in writing by Bonhams. If you do not pay in full by the Lot after the fall of the Auctioneer’s hammer in respect of 10.11 Save as expressly provided in paragraph 10.12 nothing in the calculated and payable in accordance with the Notice to 4.4 If you have not collected the Lot by the date specified in the 2.1 The Seller undertakes to you that: any sums due in accordance with this paragraph, the Seller will the Lot. Contract for Sale confers (or purports to confer) on any person Bidders together with VAT on that sum if applicable so that all Notice to Bidders, you authorise us, acting in this instance as 2.1.1 the Seller is the owner of the Lot or is duly authorised to sell the have the rights set out in paragraph 8 below. 9.2 Subject to paragraph 9.3 below, except for breach of the who is not a party to the Contract for Sale any benefit conferred sums due to us are cleared funds by the seventh working day your agent and on your behalf, to enter into a contract (the Lot by the owner; 7 COLLECTION OF THE LOT express undertaking provided in paragraph 2.1.5, the Seller by, or the right to enforce any term of, the Contract for Sale. after the Sale. “Storage Contract”) with the Storage Contractor for the storage 2.1.2 save as disclosed in the Entry for the Lot in the Catalogue, the 7.1 Unless otherwise agreed in writing with you by Bonhams, will not be liable for any breach of any term that the Lot will 10.12 Where the Contract for Sale confers an immunity from, and/or 3.2 You must also pay us on demand any Expenses payable of the Lot on the then current standard terms and conditions Seller sells the Lot with full title guarantee or, where the Seller the Lot will be released to you or to your order only when: (i) correspond with any Description applied to it by or on behalf of an exclusion or restriction of, the responsibility and/or liability pursuant to this agreement. agreed between Bonhams and the Storage Contractor (copies is an executor, trustee, liquidator, receiver or administrator, with Bonhams has received cleared funds to the amount of the the Seller, whether implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979 or of the Seller, it will also operate in favour and for the benefit of 3.3 All payments to us must be made in the currency in which the of which are available on request). If the Lot is stored at our whatever right, title or interest he may have in the Lot; full Purchase Price and all other sums owed by you to the otherwise. Bonhams, Bonhams’ holding company and the subsidiaries Sale was conducted, using, unless otherwise agreed by us in premises storage fees at our current daily rates (currently a 2.1.3 except where the Sale is by an executor, trustee, liquidator, Seller and to Bonhams and (ii) Bonhams has completed its 9.3 Unless the Seller sells the Lot in the course of a Business and of such holding company and the successors and assigns of writing, one of the methods of payment set out in the Notice to minimum of £3 plus VAT per Lot per day) will be payable from receiver or administrator the Seller is both legally entitled to investigations pursuant to clause 3.11 of the Buyer’s Agreement the Buyer buys it as a Consumer, Bonhams and of such companies and of any officer, employee Bidders. Our invoices will only be addressed to the registered the expiry of the period referred to in paragraph 4.2. These sell the Lot, and legally capable of conferring on you quiet with Bonhams set out in Appendix 2 in the catalogue. 9.3.1 the Seller will not be liable (whether in negligence, other tort, and agent of Bonhams and such companies, each of whom Bidder unless the Bidder is acting as an agent for a named storage fees form part of our Expenses. possession of the Lot and that the Sale conforms in every 7.2 The Seller is entitled to withhold possession from you of any breach of contract or statutory duty or in restitution or under the will be entitled to rely on the relevant immunity and/or exclusion principal and we have approved that arrangement, in which 4.5 Until you have paid the Purchase Price and any Expenses in respect with the terms implied by the Sale of Goods Act 1979, other Lot he has sold to you at the same or at any other Sale Misrepresentation Act 1967, or in any other way) for any lack of and/or restriction within and for the purposes of Contracts case we will address the invoice to the principal. full the Lot will either be held by us as agent on behalf of the Sections 12(1) and 12(2) (see the Definitions and Glossary); and whether currently in Bonhams’ possession or not, until conformity with, or inaccuracy, error, misdescription or omission (Rights of Third Parties) Act 1999, which enables the benefit of 3.4 Unless otherwise stated in this agreement all sums payable to Seller or held by the Storage Contractor as agent on behalf of 2.1.4 the Seller has complied with all requirements, legal or otherwise, payment in full and in cleared funds of the Purchase Price and in any Description of the Lot or any Entry or Estimate in relation a contract to be extended to a person who is not a party to the us will be subject to VAT at the appropriate rate and VAT will be the Seller and ourselves on the terms contained in the Storage relating to any export or import of the Lot, and all duties and all other sums due to the Seller and/or Bonhams in respect of to the Lot made by or on behalf of the Seller (whether made in contract, and generally at law. payable by you on all such sums. Contract. taxes in respect of the export or import of the Lot have (unless the Lot. writing, including in the Catalogue, or on the Website, or orally, 11 GOVERNING LAW 3.5 We may deduct and retain for our own benefit from the monies 4.6 You undertake to comply with the terms of any Storage stated to the contrary in the Catalogue or announced by the 7.3 You should note that Bonhams has reserved the right not to or by conduct or otherwise) and whether made before or after All transactions to which the Contract for Sale applies and paid by you to us the Buyer’s Premium, the Commission Contract and in particular to pay the charges (and all costs of Auctioneer) been paid and, so far as the Seller is aware, all third release the Lot to you until its investigations under paragraph this agreement or prior to or during the Sale; all connected matters will be governed by and construed in payable by the Seller in respect of the Lot, any Expenses and moving the Lot into storage) due under any Storage Contract. parties have complied with such requirements in the past; 3.11 of the Buyers’ Agreement set out in Appendix 2 have been 9.3.2 the Seller will not be liable for any loss of Business, Business accordance with the laws of that part of the United Kingdom VAT and any interest earned and/or incurred until payment to You acknowledge and agree that you will not be able to collect 2.1.5 items consigned for sale by the Seller are not connected with or completed to Bonhams’ satisfaction. profits or revenue or income or for loss of reputation or for where the Sale takes place and the Seller and you each submit the Seller. the Lot from the Storage Contractor’s premises until you have derived from any criminal activity, including without limitation tax 7.4 You will collect and remove the Lot at your own expense disruption to Business or wasted time on the part of the Buyer to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of that part of the 3.6 Time will be of the essence in relation to any payment payable paid the Purchase Price, any Expenses and all charges due evasion, money laundering, terrorist financing or breach of any from Bonhams’ custody and/ or control or from the Storage or of the Buyer’s management or staff or, for any indirect losses United Kingdom, save that the Seller may bring proceedings to us. If you do not pay the Purchase Price, or any other sum under the Storage Contract. applicable international trade sanctions; Contractor’s custody in accordance with Bonhams’ instructions or consequential damages of any kind, irrespective in any case against you in any other court of competent jurisdiction to due to us in accordance with this paragraph 3, we will have the 4.7 You will be wholly responsible for packing, handling and 2.1.6 subject to any alterations expressly identified as such made by or requirements. of the nature, volume or source of the loss or damage alleged to the extent permitted by the laws of the relevant jurisdiction. rights set out in paragraph 7 below. transport of the Lot on collection and for complying with all announcement or notice at the Sale venue or by the Notice to 7.5 You will be wholly responsible for packing, handling and be suffered, and irrespective of whether the said loss or damage Bonhams has a complaints procedure in place. 3.7 Where a number of Lots have been knocked down to you, any import or export regulations in connection with the Lot. Bidders or by an insert in the Catalogue or on the Bonhams transport of the Lot on collection and for complying with all is caused by or claimed in respect of any negligence, other monies we receive from you will be applied firstly pro-rata to pay 4.8 You will be wholly responsible for any removal, storage, or other website, the Lot corresponds with the Contractual Description import or export regulations in connection with the Lot. tort, breach of contract, statutory duty, restitutionary claim or APPENDIX 2 the Purchase Price of each Lot and secondly pro-rata to pay all charges for any Lot not removed in accordance with paragraph of the Lot, being that part of the Entry about the Lot in the 7.6 You will be wholly responsible for any removal, storage or other otherwise; amounts due to Bonhams. 4.2, payable at our current rates, and any Expenses we incur Catalogue which is in bold letters and (except for colour) with charges or expenses incurred by the Seller if you do not remove 9.3.3 in any circumstances where the Seller is liable to you in respect BUYER’S AGREEMENT WITH BONHAMS 3.8 You warrant that neither you nor - if you are a company, (including any charges due under the Storage Contract), all of any photograph of the Lot in the Catalogue. the Lot in accordance with this paragraph 7 and will indemnify of the Lot, or any act, omission, statement, or representation IMPORTANT: These terms may be changed in advance of the Sale your directors, officers or your owner or their directors or which must be paid by you on demand and in any event before 3 DESCRIPTIONS OF THE LOT the Seller against all charges, costs, including any legal costs in respect of it, or this agreement or its performance, and of the Lot to you, by the setting out of different terms in the shareholders - are an individual or an entity that is, or is owned any collection of the Lot by you or on your behalf. 3.1 Paragraph 2.1.5 sets out what is the Contractual Description and fees, expenses and losses suffered by the Seller by reason whether in damages, for an indemnity or contribution or for Catalogue for the Sale and/or by placing an insert in the or controlled by individuals or entities that are: 5 STORING THE LOT of the Lot. In particular, the Lot is not sold as corresponding of your failure to remove the Lot including any charges due a restitutionary remedy or in any way whatsoever, the Seller’s Catalogue and/or by notices at the Sale venue and/or by oral 3.8.1 the subject of any sanctions administered or enforced by the We agree to store the Lot until the earlier of your removal of the with any part of the Entry in the Catalogue which is not printed under any Storage Contract. All such sums due to the Seller will liability will be limited to payment of a sum which will not exceed announcements before and during the Sale at the Sale venue. U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Lot or until the time and date set out in the Notice to Bidders, in bold letters, the remainder of which Entry merely sets out be payable on demand. by way of maximum the amount of the Purchase Price of the You should be alert to this possibility of changes and ask in Control, the U.S. Departure of State, the United Nations Security on the Sale Information Page or at the back of the catalogue (or (on the Seller’s behalf) Bonhams’ opinion about the Lot and 8 FAILURE TO PAY FOR THE LOT Lot irrespective in any case of the nature, volume or source advance of bidding if there have been any. Council, the European Union, Her Majesty’s Treasury, or other if no date is specified, by 4.30pm on the seventh day after the which is not part of the Contractual Description upon which 8.1 If the Purchase Price for a Lot is not paid to Bonhams in full in of any loss or damage alleged to be suffered or sum claimed 1 THE CONTRACT relevant sanctions authority (“Sanctions” and a “Sanctioned Sale) and, subject to paragraphs 3, 6 and 10, to be responsible the Lot is sold. Any statement or representation other than that accordance with the Contract for Sale, the Seller will be entitled, as due, and irrespective of whether the liability arises from 1.1 These terms govern the contract between Bonhams personally Party”); or as bailee to you for damage to or the loss or destruction of the part of the Entry referred to in paragraph 2.1.5 (together with with the prior written agreement of Bonhams but without further any negligence, other tort, breach of contract, statutory duty, and the Buyer, being the person to whom a Lot has been 3.8.2 located, organised or resident in a country or territory that is, Lot (notwithstanding that it is not your property before payment any express alteration to it as referred to in paragraph 2.1.5), notice to you, to exercise one or more of the following rights bailee’s duty, restitutionary claim or otherwise. knocked down by the Auctioneer. or whose government is, the subject of Sanctions, including of the Purchase Price). If you do not collect the Lot before the including any Description or Estimate, whether made orally or in (whether through Bonhams or otherwise): 9.4 Nothing set out in paragraphs 9.1 to 9.3 above will be 1.2 The Definitions and Glossary contained in Appendix 3 to the without limitation, Iran, North Korea, Sudan and Syria. time and date set out in the Notice to Bidders (or if no date writing, including in the Catalogue or on Bonhams’ Website, or by 8.1.1 to terminate immediately the Contract for Sale of the Lot for construed as excluding or restricting (whether directly or Catalogue for the Sale are incorporated into this agreement and 3.9 You warrant that the funds being used for your purchase have is specified, by 4.30pm on the seventh day after the Sale) we conduct, or otherwise, and whether by or on behalf of the Seller your breach of contract; indirectly) any person’s liability or excluding or restricting any a separate copy can also be provided by us on request. Where no link with criminal activity including without limitation money may remove the Lot to another location, the details of which words and phrases which are defined in the List of Definitions laundering, tax evasion or terrorist financing, and that you not will usually be set out in the relevant section of the Catalogue. If

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 you have not paid for the Lot in accordance with paragraph 3, 8.1.1 retain the Lot to investigate any question raised or reasonably where we are liable to you in respect of a Lot, or any act, and the Lot is moved to any third party’s premises, the Lot will expected by us to be raised in relation to the Lot; and/or omission, statement, representation in respect of it, or this be held by such third party strictly to Bonhams’ order and we 8.1.2 deliver the Lot to a person other than you; and/or agreement or its performance, and whether in damages, for an will retain our lien over the Lot until we have been paid in full in 8.1.3 commence interpleader proceedings or seek any other order of indemnity or contribution or for a restitutionary remedy or in any accordance with paragraph 3. any court, mediator, arbitrator or government body; and/or way whatsoever, our liability will be limited to payment of a sum 6 RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE LOT 8.1.4 require an indemnity and/or security from you in return for which will not exceed by way of maximum the amount of the 6.1 Title (ownership) in the Lot passes to you (i) on payment of pursuing a course of action agreed to by you. Purchase Price of the Lot plus Buyer’s Premium (less any sum the Purchase Price to us in full in cleared funds and (ii) when 8.2 The discretion referred to in paragraph 8.1: you may be entitled to recover from the Seller) irrespective in investigations have been completed to our satisfaction under 8.2.1 may be exercised at any time during which we have actual or any case of the nature, volume or source of any loss or damage paragraph 3.11. constructive possession of the Lot, or at any time after such alleged to be suffered or sum claimed as due, and irrespective 6.2 Please note however, that under the Contract for Sale, the risk in possession, where the cessation of such possession has of whether the liability arises from negligence, other tort, breach the Lot passes to you after 7 days from the day upon which occurred by reason of any decision, order or ruling of any court, of contract, statutory duty, bailee’s duty, a restitutionary claim it is knocked down to you or upon collection of the Lot if mediator, arbitrator or government body; and or otherwise. earlier, and you are advised to obtain insurance in respect of the 8.2.2 will not be exercised unless we believe that there exists a You may wish to protect yourself against loss by obtaining insurance. Lot as soon as possible after the Sale. serious prospect of a good arguable case in favour of the claim. 10.4 Nothing set out above will be construed as excluding or 7 FAILURE TO PAY OR TO REMOVE THE LOT AND PART 9 FORGERIES restricting (whether directly or indirectly) any person’s liability PAYMENTS 9.1 We undertake a personal responsibility for any Forgery in or excluding or restricting any person’s rights or remedies in 7.1 If all sums payable to us are not so paid in full at the time they accordance with the terms of this paragraph 9. respect of (i) fraud, or (ii) death or personal injury caused by our are due and/or the Lot is not removed in accordance with 9.2 Paragraph 9 applies only if: negligence (or any person under our control or for whom we are this agreement, we will (without further notice to you unless 9.2.1 your name appears as the named person to whom the original legally responsible), or (iii) acts or omissions for which we are otherwise provided below), be entitled to exercise one or more invoice was made out by us in respect of the Lot and that liable under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957, or (iv) any other of the following rights (without prejudice to any rights we may invoice has been paid; and liability to the extent the same may not be excluded or restricted exercise on behalf of the Seller): 9.2.2 you notify us in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after as a matter of law, or (v) under our undertaking in paragraph 9 7.1.1 to terminate this agreement immediately for your breach of you have become aware that the Lot is or may be a Forgery, of these conditions. contract; and in any event within one year after the Sale, that the Lot is a 11 BOOKS MISSING TEXT OR ILLUSTRATIONS 7.1.2 to retain possession of the Lot; Forgery; and Where the Lot is made up wholly of a Book or Books and 7.1.3 to remove, and/or store the Lot at your expense; 9.2.3 within one month after such notification has been given, you any Book does not contain text or illustrations (in either case 7.1.4 to take legal proceedings against you for payment of any sums return the Lot to us in the same condition as it was at the time referred to as a “non-conforming Lot”), we undertake a personal payable to us by you (including the Purchase Price) and/or of the Sale, accompanied by written evidence that the Lot is responsibility for such a non-conforming Lot in accordance with damages for breach of contract; a Forgery and details of the Sale and Lot number sufficient to the terms of this paragraph, if: 7.1.5 to be paid interest on any monies due to us (after as well as identify the Lot. the original invoice was made out by us to you in respect of the before judgement or order) at the annual rate of 5% per annum 9.3 Paragraph 9 will not apply in respect of a Forgery if: Lot and that invoice has been paid; and above the base lending rate of National Westminster Bank Plc 9.3.1 the Entry in relation to the Lot contained in the Catalogue you notify us in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after from time to time to be calculated on a daily basis from the reflected the then accepted general opinion of scholars and you have become aware that the Lot is or may be a non- date upon which such monies become payable until the date of experts or fairly indicated that there was a conflict of such conforming Lot, and in any event within 20 days after the Sale actual payment; opinion or reflected the then current opinion of an expert (or such longer period as we may agree in writing) that the Lot is 7.1.6 to repossess the Lot (or any part thereof) which has not become acknowledged to be a leading expert in the relevant field; or a non-conforming Lot; and your property, and for this purpose (unless you buy the Lot as 9.3.2 it can be established that the Lot is a Forgery only by means of within 20 days of the date of the relevant Sale (or such longer a Consumer) you hereby grant an irrevocable licence to us, by a process not generally accepted for use until after the date on period as we may agree in writing) you return the Lot to us in the ourselves, our servants or agents, to enter upon all or any of which the Catalogue was published or by means of a process same condition as it was at the time of the Sale, accompanied by your premises (with or without vehicles) during normal business which it was unreasonable in all the circumstances for us to written evidence that the Lot is a non-conforming Lot and details hours to take possession of any Lot or part thereof; have employed. of the Sale and Lot number sufficient to identify the Lot.but not if: 7.1.7 to sell the Lot Without Reserve by auction, private treaty or any 9.4 You authorise us to carry out such processes and tests on the Entry in the Catalogue in respect of the Lot indicates that the other means on giving you three months’ written notice of our the Lot as we in our absolute discretion consider necessary to rights given by this paragraph do not apply to it; or intention to do so; satisfy ourselves that the Lot is or is not a Forgery. the Entry in the Catalogue in respect of the Lot reflected the 7.1.8 to retain possession of any of your other property in our 9.5 If we are satisfied that a Lot is a Forgery we will (as principal) then accepted general opinion of scholars and experts or fairly possession for any purpose (including, without limitation, other purchase the Lot from you and you will transfer the title to the indicated that there was a conflict of such opinion; or goods sold to you or with us for Sale) until all sums due to us Lot in question to us, with full title guarantee, free from any liens, it can be established that the Lot is a non-conforming Lot only have been paid in full; charges, encumbrances and adverse claims, in accordance with by means of a process not generally accepted for use until after 7.1.9 to apply any monies received from you for any purpose whether the provisions of Sections 12(1) and 12(2) of the Sale of Goods the date on which the Catalogue was published or by means of at the time of your default or at any time thereafter in payment Act 1979 and we will pay to you an amount equal to the sum of a process which it was unreasonable in all the circumstances for or part payment of any sums due to us by you under this the Purchase Price, Buyer’s Premium, VAT and Expenses paid us to have employed; or agreement; by you in respect of the Lot. the Lot comprises atlases, maps, autographs, manuscripts, 7.1.10 on three months’ written notice to sell, Without Reserve, any of 9.6 The benefit of paragraph 9 is personal to, and incapable of extra illustrated books, music or periodical publications; or your other property in our possession or under our control for assignment by, you. the Lot was listed in the Catalogue under “collections” or any purpose (including other goods sold to you or with us for 9.7 If you sell or otherwise dispose of your interest in the Lot, all “collections and various” or the Lot was stated in the Catalogue Sale) and to apply any monies due to you as a result of such rights and benefits under this paragraph 9 will cease. to comprise or contain a collection, issue or Books which are Sale in payment or part payment of any amounts owed to us; 9.8 Paragraph 9 does not apply to a Lot made up of or including a undescribed or the missing text or illustrations are referred to 7.1.11 refuse to allow you to register for a future Sale or to reject a bid Chinese painting or Chinese paintings, a motor vehicle or motor or the relevant parts of the Book contain blanks, half titles or from you at any future Sale or to require you to pay a deposit vehicles, a Stamp or Stamps or a Book or Books. advertisements. before any bid is accepted by us at any future Sale in which 10 OUR LIABILITY If we are reasonably satisfied that a Lot is a non- conforming case we will be entitled to apply such deposit in payment or part 10.1 We will not be liable whether in negligence, other tort, breach Lot, we will (as principal) purchase the Lot from you and you payment, as the case may be, of the Purchase Price of any Lot of contract or statutory duty or in restitution or under the will transfer the title to the Lot in question to us, with full title of which you are the Buyer. Misrepresentation Act 1967 or in any other way for lack of guarantee, free from any liens, charges, encumbrances and 7.1.12 having made reasonable efforts to inform you, to release your conformity with or any inaccuracy, error, misdescription or adverse claims and we will pay to you an amount equal to the name and address to the Seller, so they might take appropriate omission in any Description of the Lot or any Entry or Estimate sum of the Purchase Price and Buyer’s Premium paid by you in steps to recover the amounts due and legal costs associated in respect of it, made by us or on our behalf or by or on respect of the Lot. with such steps. behalf of the Seller (whether made in writing, including in the The benefit of paragraph 10 is personal to, and incapable of 7.2 You agree to indemnify us against all legal and other costs, all Catalogue, or on the Bonhams’ Website, or orally, or by conduct assignment by, you and if you sell or otherwise dispose of your losses and all other Expenses (whether or not court proceedings or otherwise) and whether made before or after this agreement interest in the Lot, all rights and benefits under this paragraph will have been issued) incurred by us as a result of our taking or prior to or during the Sale. will cease. steps under this paragraph 7 on a full indemnity basis together 10.2 Our duty to you while the Lot is at your risk and/or your property 12 MISCELLANEOUS with interest thereon (after as well as before judgement or order) and in our custody and/or control is to exercise reasonable care 12.1 You may not assign either the benefit or burden of this agreement. at the rate specified in paragraph 7.1.5 from the date upon in relation to it, but we will not be responsible for damage to the 12.2 Our failure or delay in enforcing or exercising any power or right which we become liable to pay the same until payment by you. Lot or to other persons or things caused by: under this agreement will not operate or be deemed to operate 7.3 If you pay us only part of the sums due to us such payment 10.2.1 handling the Lot if it was affected at the time of Sale to you by as a waiver of our rights under it except to the extent of any shall be applied firstly to the Purchase Price of the Lot (or woodworm and any damage is caused as a result of it being express waiver given to you in writing. Any such waiver will not where you have purchased more than one Lot pro-rata towards affected by woodworm; or affect our ability subsequently to enforce any right arising under the Purchase Price of each Lot) and secondly to the Buyer’s 10.2.2 changes in atmospheric pressure; nor will we be liable for: this agreement. Premium (or where you have purchased more than one Lot 10.2.3 damage to tension stringed musical instruments; or 12.3 If either party to this agreement is prevented from performing pro-rata to the Buyer’s Premium on each Lot) and thirdly to any 10.2.4 damage to gilded picture frames, plaster picture frames or that party’s respective obligations under this agreement other sums due to us. picture frame glass; and if the Lot is or becomes dangerous, by circumstances beyond its reasonable control (including 7.4 We will account to you in respect of any balance we hold we may dispose of it without notice to you in advance in any without limitation governmental intervention, industrial action, remaining from any monies received by us in respect of any manner we think fit and we will be under no liability to you for insurrection, warfare (declared or undeclared), terrorism, power Sale of the Lot under our rights under this paragraph 7 after the doing so. failure, epidemic or natural disaster) or if performance of its payment of all sums due to us and/or the Seller within 28 days 10.3.1 We will not be liable to you for any loss of Business, Business obligations would by reason of such circumstances give rise of receipt by us of all such sums paid to us. profits, revenue or income or for loss of Business reputation to a significantly increased financial cost to it, that party will 8 CLAIMS BY OTHER PERSONS IN RESPECT OF THE LOT or for disruption to Business or wasted time on the part of the not, for so long as such circumstances prevail, be required to 8.1 Whenever it becomes apparent to us that the Lot is the subject Buyer’s management or staff or, if you are buying the Lot in the perform such obligations. This paragraph does not apply to the of a claim by someone other than you and other than the course of a Business, for any indirect losses or consequential obligations imposed on you by paragraph 3. Seller (or that such a claim can reasonably be expected to be damages of any kind, irrespective in any case of the nature, 12.4 Any notice or other communication to be given under this made), we may, at our absolute discretion, deal with the Lot in volume or source of the loss or damage alleged to be suffered, agreement must be in writing and may be delivered by hand any manner which appears to us to recognise the legitimate and irrespective of whether the said loss or damage is caused or sent by first class post or air mail or fax transmission (if to interests of ourselves and the other parties involved and lawfully by or claimed in respect of any negligence, other tort, breach Bonhams marked for the attention of the Company Secretary), to protect our position and our legitimate interests. Without of contract, statutory duty, bailee’s duty, a restitutionary claim to the address or fax number of the relevant party given in the prejudice to the generality of the discretion and by way of or otherwise. Contract Form (unless notice of any change of address is given example, we may: 10.3.2 Unless you buy the Lot as a Consumer, in any circumstances in writing). It is the responsibility of the sender of the notice or

NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 you have not paid for the Lot in accordance with paragraph 3, 8.1.1 retain the Lot to investigate any question raised or reasonably where we are liable to you in respect of a Lot, or any act, communication to ensure that it is received in a legible form “Conditions of Sale” the Notice to Bidders, Contract for Sale, Buyer’s “Specialist Examination” a visual examination of a Lot by a specialist Registration and Bidding Form and the Lot is moved to any third party’s premises, the Lot will expected by us to be raised in relation to the Lot; and/or omission, statement, representation in respect of it, or this within any applicable time period. Agreement and Definitions and Glossary. on the Lot. (Attendee / Absentee / Online / Telephone Bidding) be held by such third party strictly to Bonhams’ order and we 8.1.2 deliver the Lot to a person other than you; and/or agreement or its performance, and whether in damages, for an 12.5 If any term or any part of any term of this agreement is held to “Consignment Fee” a fee payable to Bonhams by the Seller “Stamp” means a postage Stamp offered for Sale at a Specialist Paddle number (for office use only) will retain our lien over the Lot until we have been paid in full in 8.1.3 commence interpleader proceedings or seek any other order of indemnity or contribution or for a restitutionary remedy or in any be unenforceable or invalid, such unenforceability or invalidity calculated at rates set out in the Conditions of Business. Stamp Sale. Please circle your bidding method above. accordance with paragraph 3. any court, mediator, arbitrator or government body; and/or way whatsoever, our liability will be limited to payment of a sum will not affect the enforceability and validity of the remaining “Consumer” a natural person who is acting for the relevant purpose “Standard Examination” a visual examination of a Lot by a non- 6 RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE LOT 8.1.4 require an indemnity and/or security from you in return for which will not exceed by way of maximum the amount of the terms or the remainder of the relevant term. outside his trade, Business or profession. specialist member of Bonhams’ staff. This sale will be conducted in accordance with 6.1 Title (ownership) in the Lot passes to you (i) on payment of pursuing a course of action agreed to by you. Purchase Price of the Lot plus Buyer’s Premium (less any sum 12.6 References in this agreement to Bonhams will, where “Contract Form” the Contract Form, or vehicle Entry form, as “Storage Contract” means the contract described in paragraph Sale title: Sale date: the Purchase Price to us in full in cleared funds and (ii) when 8.2 The discretion referred to in paragraph 8.1: you may be entitled to recover from the Seller) irrespective in appropriate, include reference to Bonhams’ officers, employees applicable, signed by or on behalf of the Seller listing the Lots to be 8.3.3 of the Conditions of Business or paragraph 4.4 of the Buyer’s Bonhams’ Conditions of Sale and bidding and buying investigations have been completed to our satisfaction under 8.2.1 may be exercised at any time during which we have actual or any case of the nature, volume or source of any loss or damage and agents. offered for Sale by Bonhams. Agreement (as appropriate). at the Sale will be regulated by these Conditions. You paragraph 3.11. constructive possession of the Lot, or at any time after such alleged to be suffered or sum claimed as due, and irrespective 12.7 The headings used in this agreement are for convenience only “Contract for Sale” the Sale contract entered into by the Seller with “Storage Contractor” means the company identified as such in the should read the Conditions in conjunction with the Sale no. Sale venue: 6.2 Please note however, that under the Contract for Sale, the risk in possession, where the cessation of such possession has of whether the liability arises from negligence, other tort, breach and will not affect its interpretation. the Buyer (see Appendix 1 in the Catalogue). Catalogue. Sale Information relating to this Sale which sets out the the Lot passes to you after 7 days from the day upon which occurred by reason of any decision, order or ruling of any court, of contract, statutory duty, bailee’s duty, a restitutionary claim 12.8 In this agreement “including” means “including, without “Contractual Description” the only Description of the Lot (being “Terrorism” means any act or threatened act of terrorism, whether charges payable by you on the purchases you make If you are not attending the sale in person, please provide details of the Lots on which you wish to bid at least 24 hours it is knocked down to you or upon collection of the Lot if mediator, arbitrator or government body; and or otherwise. limitation”. that part of the Entry about the Lot in the Catalogue which is in bold any person is acting alone or on behalf of or in connection with any and other terms relating to bidding and buying at the earlier, and you are advised to obtain insurance in respect of the 8.2.2 will not be exercised unless we believe that there exists a You may wish to protect yourself against loss by obtaining insurance. 12.9 References to the singular will include reference to the plural letters, any photograph (except for the colour) and the contents of any organisation(s) and/or government(s), committed for political, religious prior to the sale. Bids will be rounded down to the nearest increment. Please refer to the Notice to Bidders in the catalogue Sale. You should ask any questions you have about the Lot as soon as possible after the Sale. serious prospect of a good arguable case in favour of the claim. 10.4 Nothing set out above will be construed as excluding or (and vice versa) and reference to any one gender will include Condition Report) to which the Seller undertakes in the Contract of or ideological or similar purposes including, but not limited to, the for further information relating to Bonhams executing telephone, online or absentee bids on your behalf. Bonhams will Conditions before signing this form. These Conditions 7 FAILURE TO PAY OR TO REMOVE THE LOT AND PART 9 FORGERIES restricting (whether directly or indirectly) any person’s liability reference to the other genders. Sale the Lot corresponds. intention to influence any government and/or put the public or any endeavour to execute these bids on your behalf but will not be liable for any errors or failing to execute bids. 12.10 Reference to a numbered paragraph is to a paragraph of this “Description” also contain certain undertakings by bidders and buyers PAYMENTS 9.1 We undertake a personal responsibility for any Forgery in or excluding or restricting any person’s rights or remedies in any statement or representation in any way descriptive section of the public into fear. General Bid Increments: 7.1 If all sums payable to us are not so paid in full at the time they accordance with the terms of this paragraph 9. respect of (i) fraud, or (ii) death or personal injury caused by our agreement. of the Lot, including any statement or representation relating to its “VAT” value added tax at the prevailing rate at the date of the Sale in and limit Bonhams’ liability to bidders and buyers. are due and/or the Lot is not removed in accordance with 9.2 Paragraph 9 applies only if: negligence (or any person under our control or for whom we are 12.11 Save as expressly provided in paragraph 12.12 nothing in this authorship, attribution, condition, provenance, authenticity, style, the United Kingdom. £10 - 200 ...... by 10s £10,000 - 20,000 ...... by 1,000s this agreement, we will (without further notice to you unless 9.2.1 your name appears as the named person to whom the original legally responsible), or (iii) acts or omissions for which we are agreement confers (or purports to confer) on any person who period, age, suitability, quality, origin, value, estimated selling price “Website” Bonhams Website at www.bonhams.com Data protection – use of your information £200 - 500 ...... by 20 / 50 / 80s £20,000 - 50,000 ...... by 2,000 / 5,000 / 8,000s otherwise provided below), be entitled to exercise one or more invoice was made out by us in respect of the Lot and that liable under the Occupiers Liability Act 1957, or (iv) any other is not a party to this agreement any benefit conferred by, or the (including the Hammer Price). “Withdrawal Notice” the Seller’s written notice to Bonhams revoking Where we obtain any personal information about you, we £500 - 1,000 ...... by 50s £50,000 - 100,000 ...... by 5,000s of the following rights (without prejudice to any rights we may invoice has been paid; and liability to the extent the same may not be excluded or restricted right to enforce any term of, this agreement. “Entry” a written statement in the Catalogue identifying the Lot and its Bonhams’ instructions to sell a Lot. shall only use it in accordance with the terms of our Privacy £1,000 - 2,000 ...... by 100s £100,000 - 200,000 .....by 10,000s exercise on behalf of the Seller): 9.2.2 you notify us in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after as a matter of law, or (v) under our undertaking in paragraph 9 12.12 Where this agreement confers an immunity from, and/or an Lot number which may contain a Description and illustration(s) relating “Without Reserve” where there is no minimum price at which a Lot Policy (subject to any additional specific consent(s) you may £2,000 - 5,000 ...... by 200 / 500 / 800s above £200,000 ...... at the auctioneer’s discretion 7.1.1 to terminate this agreement immediately for your breach of you have become aware that the Lot is or may be a Forgery, of these conditions. exclusion or restriction of, the responsibility and/or liability to the Lot. may be sold (whether at auction or by private treaty). have given at the time your information was disclosed). A contract; and in any event within one year after the Sale, that the Lot is a of Bonhams, it will also operate in favour and for the benefit “Estimate” a statement of our opinion of the range within which the £5,000 - 10,000 ...... by 500s 11 BOOKS MISSING TEXT OR ILLUSTRATIONS GLOSSARY copy of our Privacy Policy can be found on our website 7.1.2 to retain possession of the Lot; Forgery; and Where the Lot is made up wholly of a Book or Books and of Bonhams’ holding company and the subsidiaries of such hammer is likely to fall. The following expressions have specific legal meanings with which you The auctioneer has discretion to split any bid at any time. 7.1.3 to remove, and/or store the Lot at your expense; 9.2.3 within one month after such notification has been given, you any Book does not contain text or illustrations (in either case holding company and the successors and assigns of Bonhams “Expenses” charges and Expenses paid or payable by Bonhams may not be familiar. The following glossary is intended to give you an (www.bonhams.com) or requested by post from Customer 7.1.4 to take legal proceedings against you for payment of any sums return the Lot to us in the same condition as it was at the time referred to as a “non-conforming Lot”), we undertake a personal and of such companies and of any officer, employee and in respect of the Lot including legal Expenses, banking charges and understanding of those expressions but is not intended to limit their Services Department, 101 New Bond Street, London W1S payable to us by you (including the Purchase Price) and/or of the Sale, accompanied by written evidence that the Lot is responsibility for such a non-conforming Lot in accordance with agent of Bonhams and such companies, each of whom will be Expenses incurred as a result of an electronic transfer of money, legal meanings: 1SR United Kingdom or by e-mail from [email protected]. Customer Number Title damages for breach of contract; a Forgery and details of the Sale and Lot number sufficient to the terms of this paragraph, if: entitled to rely on the relevant immunity and/or exclusion and/ charges and Expenses for loss and damage cover, insurance, “artist’s resale right”: the right of the creator of a work of art to receive We may disclose your personal information to any member of 7.1.5 to be paid interest on any monies due to us (after as well as identify the Lot. the original invoice was made out by us to you in respect of the or restriction within and for the purposes of Contracts (Rights of Catalogue and other reproductions and illustrations, any customs a payment on Sales of that work subsequent to the original Sale of our group which means our subsidiaries, our ultimate holding First Name Last Name before judgement or order) at the annual rate of 5% per annum 9.3 Paragraph 9 will not apply in respect of a Forgery if: Lot and that invoice has been paid; and Third Parties) Act 1999, which enables the benefit of a contract duties, advertising, packing or shipping costs, reproductions rights’ that work by the creator of it as set out in the Artists Resale Right company and its subsidiaries (whether registered in the UK or above the base lending rate of National Westminster Bank Plc 9.3.1 the Entry in relation to the Lot contained in the Catalogue you notify us in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after to be extended to a person who is not a party to the contract, fees, taxes, levies, costs of testing, searches or enquiries, preparation Regulations 2006. elsewhere). We will not disclose your data to anyone outside Company name (if applicable) from time to time to be calculated on a daily basis from the reflected the then accepted general opinion of scholars and you have become aware that the Lot is or may be a non- and generally at law. of the Lot for Sale, storage charges, removal charges, removal charges “bailee”: a person to whom goods are entrusted. our group but we may from time to time provide you with date upon which such monies become payable until the date of experts or fairly indicated that there was a conflict of such conforming Lot, and in any event within 20 days after the Sale or costs of collection from the Seller as the Seller’s agents or from a “indemnity”: an obligation to put the person who has the benefit 13 GOVERNING LAW information about goods and services which we feel maybe of Company Registration number (if applicable) actual payment; opinion or reflected the then current opinion of an expert (or such longer period as we may agree in writing) that the Lot is All transactions to which this agreement applies and all defaulting Buyer, plus VAT if applicable. of the indemnity in the same position in which he would have been, interest to you including those provided by third parties. 7.1.6 to repossess the Lot (or any part thereof) which has not become acknowledged to be a leading expert in the relevant field; or a non-conforming Lot; and connected matters will be governed by and construed in “Forgery” an imitation intended by the maker or any other person to had the circumstances giving rise to the indemnity not arisen and the Address your property, and for this purpose (unless you buy the Lot as 9.3.2 it can be established that the Lot is a Forgery only by means of within 20 days of the date of the relevant Sale (or such longer accordance with the laws of that part of the United Kingdom deceive as to authorship, attribution, origin, authenticity, style, date, expression “indemnify” is construed accordingly. If you do not want to receive such information (except for a Consumer) you hereby grant an irrevocable licence to us, by a process not generally accepted for use until after the date on period as we may agree in writing) you return the Lot to us in the where the Sale takes (or is to take) place and we and you each age, period, provenance, culture, source or composition, which at the “interpleader proceedings”: proceedings in the Courts to determine information you specifically requested) please tick this box City ourselves, our servants or agents, to enter upon all or any of which the Catalogue was published or by means of a process same condition as it was at the time of the Sale, accompanied by submit to the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of that part date of the Sale had a value materially less than it would have had if the ownership or rights over a Lot. Would you like to receive e-mailed information from us? if so your premises (with or without vehicles) during normal business which it was unreasonable in all the circumstances for us to written evidence that the Lot is a non-conforming Lot and details of the United Kingdom, save that we may bring proceedings Lot had not been such an imitation, and which is not stated to be such “knocked down”: when a Lot is sold to a Bidder, indicated by the fall please tick this box hours to take possession of any Lot or part thereof; have employed. of the Sale and Lot number sufficient to identify the Lot.but not if: against you in any other court of competent jurisdiction to an imitation in any description of the Lot. A Lot will not be a Forgery by of the hammer at the Sale. Post / Zip code County / State 7.1.7 to sell the Lot Without Reserve by auction, private treaty or any 9.4 You authorise us to carry out such processes and tests on the Entry in the Catalogue in respect of the Lot indicates that the the extent permitted by the laws of the relevant jurisdiction. reason of any damage to, and/or restoration and/ or modification work “lien”: a right for the person who has possession of the Lot to retain other means on giving you three months’ written notice of our the Lot as we in our absolute discretion consider necessary to rights given by this paragraph do not apply to it; or Bonhams has a complaints procedure in place. (including repainting or over painting) having been carried out on the possession of it. Notice to Bidders. At least 24 hours before the Sale, clients must provide Telephone (mobile) Country intention to do so; satisfy ourselves that the Lot is or is not a Forgery. the Entry in the Catalogue in respect of the Lot reflected the DATA PROTECTION – USE OF YOUR INFORMATION Lot, where that damage, “risk”: the possibility that a Lot may be lost, damaged, destroyed, government or state issued photographic proof of ID and date 7.1.8 to retain possession of any of your other property in our 9.5 If we are satisfied that a Lot is a Forgery we will (as principal) then accepted general opinion of scholars and experts or fairly Where we obtain any personal information about you, we shall only restoration or modification work (as the case may be) does not stolen, or deteriorate in condition or value. Telephone (landline) possession for any purpose (including, without limitation, other purchase the Lot from you and you will transfer the title to the indicated that there was a conflict of such opinion; or use it in accordance with the terms of our Privacy Policy (subject to substantially affect the identity of the Lot as one conforming to the “title”: the legal and equitable right to the ownership of a Lot. of birth e.g. - passport, driving licence - and if not included in goods sold to you or with us for Sale) until all sums due to us Lot in question to us, with full title guarantee, free from any liens, it can be established that the Lot is a non-conforming Lot only any additional specific consent(s) you may have given at the time Description of the Lot. “tort”: a legal wrong done to someone to whom the wrong doer has ID document, proof of address e.g - utility bill, bank or credit have been paid in full; charges, encumbrances and adverse claims, in accordance with by means of a process not generally accepted for use until after your information was disclosed). A copy of our Privacy Policy can be “Guarantee” the obligation undertaken personally by Bonhams to the a duty of care. card statement etc. Corporate clients should also provide a E-mail (in capitals) 7.1.9 to apply any monies received from you for any purpose whether the provisions of Sections 12(1) and 12(2) of the Sale of Goods the date on which the Catalogue was published or by means of found on our Website www.bonhams.com or requested by post from Buyer in respect of any Forgery and, in the case of specialist Stamp “warranty”: a legal assurance or promise, upon which the person to copy of their articles of association / company registration Please answer all questions below at the time of your default or at any time thereafter in payment Act 1979 and we will pay to you an amount equal to the sum of a process which it was unreasonable in all the circumstances for Customer Services Department, 101 New Bond Street, London W1S Sales and/or specialist Book Sales, a Lot made up of a Stamp or whom the warranty was given has the right to rely. documents, and the entities name and registered address, or part payment of any sums due to us by you under this the Purchase Price, Buyer’s Premium, VAT and Expenses paid us to have employed; or 1SR, United Kingdom or by email from [email protected]. Stamps or a Book or Books as set out in the Buyer’s Agreement. SALE OF GOODS ACT 1979 documentary proof of its beneficial owners and directors, 1. ID supplied: Government issued ID and (if the ID does not confirm your address) current utility bill/ bank statement. agreement; by you in respect of the Lot. the Lot comprises atlases, maps, autographs, manuscripts, “Hammer Price” the price in the currency in which the Sale is The following is an extract from the Sale of Goods Act 1979: together with a letter authorising the individual to bid on the If a corporate entity, please provide the Certificate of Incorporation or Partnership Deed and a letter authorising you to act. 7.1.10 on three months’ written notice to sell, Without Reserve, any of 9.6 The benefit of paragraph 9 is personal to, and incapable of extra illustrated books, music or periodical publications; or APPENDIX 3 conducted at which a Lot is knocked down by the Auctioneer. “Section 12 Implied terms about title, etc “Loss and Damage Warranty” company’s behalf. Failure to provide this may result in your your other property in our possession or under our control for assignment by, you. the Lot was listed in the Catalogue under “collections” or means the warranty described in (1) In a contract of sale, other than one to which subsection (3) below 2. Are you representing the Bidder? If yes, please complete question 3. any purpose (including other goods sold to you or with us for 9.7 If you sell or otherwise dispose of your interest in the Lot, all “collections and various” or the Lot was stated in the Catalogue DEFINITIONS AND GLOSSARY paragraph 8.2 of the Conditions of Business. applies, there is an implied term on the part of the seller that in the bids not being processed or completed. For higher value lots you may also be asked to provide a bank reference. Sale) and to apply any monies due to you as a result of such rights and benefits under this paragraph 9 will cease. to comprise or contain a collection, issue or Books which are Where these Definitions and Glossary are incorporated, the following “Loss and Damage Warranty Fee” means the fee described in case of a sale he has a right to sell the goods, and in the case of 3. Bidder's name, address and contact details (phone and email): Sale in payment or part payment of any amounts owed to us; 9.8 Paragraph 9 does not apply to a Lot made up of or including a undescribed or the missing text or illustrations are referred to words and phrases used have (unless the context otherwise requires) paragraph 8.2.3 of the Conditions of Business. an agreement to sell he will have such a right at the time when the 7.1.11 refuse to allow you to register for a future Sale or to reject a bid Chinese painting or Chinese paintings, a motor vehicle or motor or the relevant parts of the Book contain blanks, half titles or the meanings given to them below. The Glossary is to assist you to “Lot” any item consigned to Bonhams with a view to its Sale at auction property is to pass. If successful Bidder’s ID: Government issued ID and (if the ID does not confirm their address) current utility bill/bank statement from you at any future Sale or to require you to pay a deposit vehicles, a Stamp or Stamps or a Book or Books. advertisements. understand words and phrases which have a specific legal meaning or by private treaty (and reference to any Lot will include, unless the (2) In a contract of sale, other than one to which subsection (3) below I will collect the purchases myself before any bid is accepted by us at any future Sale in which 10 OUR LIABILITY If we are reasonably satisfied that a Lot is a non- conforming with which you may not be familiar. context otherwise requires, reference to individual items comprised in a applies, there is also an implied term that- Are you acting in a business capacity? If registered for VAT in the EU please enter your registration here: case we will be entitled to apply such deposit in payment or part 10.1 We will not be liable whether in negligence, other tort, breach Lot, we will (as principal) purchase the Lot from you and you LIST OF DEFINITIONS group of two or more items offered for Sale as one Lot). (a) the goods are free, and will remain free until the time Please arrange shippers to contact me with Yes No / - - payment, as the case may be, of the Purchase Price of any Lot of contract or statutory duty or in restitution or under the will transfer the title to the Lot in question to us, with full title “Account” the bank account of Bonhams into which all sums received “Motoring Catalogue Fee” a fee payable by the Seller to Bonhams in when the property is to pass, from any charge or a quote and I agree that you may pass them of which you are the Buyer. Misrepresentation Act 1967 or in any other way for lack of guarantee, free from any liens, charges, encumbrances and in respect of the Purchase Price of any Lot will be paid. consideration of the additional work undertaken by Bonhams in respect encumbrance not disclosed or known to the buyer my contact details. 7.1.12 having made reasonable efforts to inform you, to release your conformity with or any inaccuracy, error, misdescription or adverse claims and we will pay to you an amount equal to the “Additional Premium” a premium, calculated in accordance with of the cataloguing of motor vehicles and in respect of the promotion of before the contract is made, and Please note that all telephone calls are recorded. name and address to the Seller, so they might take appropriate omission in any Description of the Lot or any Entry or Estimate sum of the Purchase Price and Buyer’s Premium paid by you in the Notice to Bidders, to cover Bonhams’ Expenses relating to the Sales of motor vehicles. (b) the buyer will enjoy quiet possession of the goods MAX bid in GBP Telephone or steps to recover the amounts due and legal costs associated in respect of it, made by us or on our behalf or by or on respect of the Lot. payment of royalties under the Artists Resale Right Regulations 2006 “New Bond Street” means Bonhams’ saleroom at 101 New Bond except in so far as it may be disturbed by the owner or Lot no. Brief description (excluding premium Covering bid with such steps. behalf of the Seller (whether made in writing, including in the The benefit of paragraph 10 is personal to, and incapable of which is payable by the Buyer to Bonhams on any Lot marked [AR] Street, London W1S 1SR. other person entitled to the benefit of any charge or Absentee (T / A) 7.2 You agree to indemnify us against all legal and other costs, all Catalogue, or on the Bonhams’ Website, or orally, or by conduct assignment by, you and if you sell or otherwise dispose of your which sells for a Hammer Price which together with the Buyer’s “Notional Charges” the amount of Commission and VAT which would encumbrance so disclosed or known. & VAT) * losses and all other Expenses (whether or not court proceedings or otherwise) and whether made before or after this agreement interest in the Lot, all rights and benefits under this paragraph Premium (but excluding any VAT) equals or exceeds 1000 euros have been payable if the Lot had been sold at the Notional Price. (3) This subsection applies to a contract of sale in the case of which will have been issued) incurred by us as a result of our taking or prior to or during the Sale. will cease. (converted into the currency of the Sale using the European Central “Notional Fee” the sum on which the Consignment Fee payable to there appears from the contract or is to be inferred from its steps under this paragraph 7 on a full indemnity basis together 10.2 Our duty to you while the Lot is at your risk and/or your property 12 MISCELLANEOUS Bank Reference rate prevailing on the date of the Sale). Bonhams by the Seller is based and which is calculated according to circumstances an intention that the seller should transfer only such with interest thereon (after as well as before judgement or order) and in our custody and/or control is to exercise reasonable care 12.1 You may not assign either the benefit or burden of this agreement. “Auctioneer” the representative of Bonhams conducting the formula set out in the Conditions of Business. title as he or a third person may have. at the rate specified in paragraph 7.1.5 from the date upon in relation to it, but we will not be responsible for damage to the 12.2 Our failure or delay in enforcing or exercising any power or right the Sale. “Notional Price” the latest in time of the average of the high and low which we become liable to pay the same until payment by you. Lot or to other persons or things caused by: under this agreement will not operate or be deemed to operate “Bidder” Any person considering, attempting or making a Bid, Estimates given by us to you or stated in the Catalogue or, if no such (4) In a contract to which subsection (3) above applies there is an 7.3 If you pay us only part of the sums due to us such payment 10.2.1 handling the Lot if it was affected at the time of Sale to you by as a waiver of our rights under it except to the extent of any including those who have completed a Bidding Form. Estimates have been given or stated, the Reserve applicable to the Lot. implied term that all charges or encumbrances known to the seller shall be applied firstly to the Purchase Price of the Lot (or woodworm and any damage is caused as a result of it being express waiver given to you in writing. Any such waiver will not “Bidding Form” our Bidding Registration Form, our Absentee Bidding “Notice to Bidders” the notice printed at the back or front of our and not known to the buyer have been disclosed to the buyer where you have purchased more than one Lot pro-rata towards affected by woodworm; or affect our ability subsequently to enforce any right arising under Form or our Telephone Bidding Form. Catalogues. before the contract is made. the Purchase Price of each Lot) and secondly to the Buyer’s 10.2.2 changes in atmospheric pressure; nor will we be liable for: this agreement. “Bonhams” Bonhams 1793 Limited or its successors or assigns. “Purchase Price” the aggregate of the Hammer Price and VAT on the (5) In a contract to which subsection (3) above applies there is also an Premium (or where you have purchased more than one Lot 10.2.3 damage to tension stringed musical instruments; or 12.3 If either party to this agreement is prevented from performing Bonhams is also referred to in the Buyer’s Agreement, the Conditions Hammer Price (where applicable), the Buyer’s Premium and VAT on the implied term that none of the following will disturb the buyer’s quiet pro-rata to the Buyer’s Premium on each Lot) and thirdly to any 10.2.4 damage to gilded picture frames, plaster picture frames or that party’s respective obligations under this agreement of Business and the Notice to Bidders by the words “we”, “us” and Buyer’s Premium and any Expenses. possession of the goods, namely: other sums due to us. picture frame glass; and if the Lot is or becomes dangerous, by circumstances beyond its reasonable control (including “our”. “Reserve” the minimum price at which a Lot may be sold (whether at (a) the seller; 7.4 We will account to you in respect of any balance we hold we may dispose of it without notice to you in advance in any without limitation governmental intervention, industrial action, “Book” a printed Book offered for Sale at a specialist Book Sale. auction or by private treaty). (b) in a case where the parties to the contract intend remaining from any monies received by us in respect of any manner we think fit and we will be under no liability to you for insurrection, warfare (declared or undeclared), terrorism, power “Business” includes any trade, Business and profession. “Sale” the auction Sale at which a Lot is to be offered for Sale by that the seller should transfer only such title as a third Sale of the Lot under our rights under this paragraph 7 after the doing so. failure, epidemic or natural disaster) or if performance of its “Buyer” the person to whom a Lot is knocked down by the Bonhams. person may have, that person; FOR WINE SALES ONLY payment of all sums due to us and/or the Seller within 28 days 10.3.1 We will not be liable to you for any loss of Business, Business obligations would by reason of such circumstances give rise Auctioneer. The Buyer is also referred to in the Contract for Sale and “Sale Proceeds” the net amount due to the Seller from the Sale of a (c) anyone claiming through or under the seller or that third of receipt by us of all such sums paid to us. profits, revenue or income or for loss of Business reputation to a significantly increased financial cost to it, that party will the Buyer’s Agreement by the words “you” and “your”. Lot, being the Hammer Price less the Commission, any VAT chargeable person otherwise than under a charge or encumbrance Please leave lots “available under bond” in bond Please include delivery charges (minimum charge of £20 + VAT) 8 CLAIMS BY OTHER PERSONS IN RESPECT OF THE LOT or for disruption to Business or wasted time on the part of the not, for so long as such circumstances prevail, be required to “Buyer’s Agreement” the contract entered into by Bonhams with the thereon, Expenses and any other amount due to us in whatever disclosed or known to the buyer before the contract is 8.1 Whenever it becomes apparent to us that the Lot is the subject Buyer’s management or staff or, if you are buying the Lot in the perform such obligations. This paragraph does not apply to the Buyer (see Appendix 2 in the Catalogue). capacity and howsoever arising. made. of a claim by someone other than you and other than the course of a Business, for any indirect losses or consequential obligations imposed on you by paragraph 3. “Buyer’s Premium” the sum calculated on the Hammer Price at the “Seller” the person who offers the Lot for Sale named on the Contract (5A) As regards England and Wales and Northern Ireland, the term BY SIGNING THIS FORM YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE SEEN THE CATALOGUE AND HAVE READ AND UNDERSTOOD OUR CONDITIONS OF SALE INCLUDING BUYER’S WARRANTIES AND WISH Seller (or that such a claim can reasonably be expected to be damages of any kind, irrespective in any case of the nature, 12.4 Any notice or other communication to be given under this rates stated in the Notice to Bidders. Form. Where the person so named identifies on the form another implied by subsection (1) above is a condition and the terms TO BE BOUND BY THEM, AND AGREE TO PAY THE BUYER’S PREMIUM, VAT AND ANY OTHER CHARGES MENTIONED IN THE NOTICE TO BIDDERS. THIS AFFECTS YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS. made), we may, at our absolute discretion, deal with the Lot in volume or source of the loss or damage alleged to be suffered, agreement must be in writing and may be delivered by hand “Catalogue” the Catalogue relating to the relevant Sale, including any person as acting as his agent, or where the person named on the implied by subsections (2), (4) and (5) above are warranties.” any manner which appears to us to recognise the legitimate and irrespective of whether the said loss or damage is caused or sent by first class post or air mail or fax transmission (if to representation of the Catalogue published on our Website. Contract Form acts as an agent for a principal (whether such agency is interests of ourselves and the other parties involved and lawfully by or claimed in respect of any negligence, other tort, breach Bonhams marked for the attention of the Company Secretary), “Commission” the Commission payable by the Seller to Bonhams disclosed to Bonhams or not), “Seller” includes both the agent and the Bidder/Agent’s (please delete one) signature: Date: to protect our position and our legitimate interests. Without of contract, statutory duty, bailee’s duty, a restitutionary claim to the address or fax number of the relevant party given in the calculated at the rates stated in the Contract Form. principal who shall be jointly and severally liable as such. The Seller prejudice to the generality of the discretion and by way of or otherwise. Contract Form (unless notice of any change of address is given “Condition Report” a report on the physical condition of a Lot provided is also referred to in the Conditions of Business by the words “you” Covering Bid: A maximum bid (exclusive of Buyers Premium and VAT) to be executed by Bonhams only if we are unable to contact you by telephone, or should the connection be lost during bidding. example, we may: 10.3.2 Unless you buy the Lot as a Consumer, in any circumstances in writing). It is the responsibility of the sender of the notice or to a Bidder or potential Bidder by Bonhams on behalf of the Seller. and “your”. NB.* Payment will only be accepted from an account in the same name as shown on the invoice and Auction Registration form. Please email or fax the completed Auction Registration form and requested information to: NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 NTB/MAIN/V1/3.2020 Bonhams, Customer Services, 101 New Bond Street, London, W1S 1SR. Tel: +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7447 7401, [email protected] Bonhams 1793 Limited. Montpelier Street, London SW7 1HH. Incorporated in England. Company Number 4326560. UK/08/19 Registration and Bidding Form (Attendee / Absentee / Online / Telephone Bidding) Please circle your bidding method above. Paddle number (for office use only)

This sale will be conducted in accordance with The Oak Interior Thursday 22 October 2020 Bonhams’ Conditions of Sale and bidding and buying Sale title: Sale date: at the Sale will be regulated by these Conditions. You should read the Conditions in conjunction with the Sale no. 26030 Sale venue: Oxford Sale Information relating to this Sale which sets out the charges payable by you on the purchases you make If you are not attending the sale in person, please provide details of the Lots on which you wish to bid at least 24 hours and other terms relating to bidding and buying at the prior to the sale. Bids will be rounded down to the nearest increment. Please refer to the Notice to Bidders in the catalogue Sale. You should ask any questions you have about the for further information relating to Bonhams executing telephone, online or absentee bids on your behalf. Bonhams will Conditions before signing this form. These Conditions endeavour to execute these bids on your behalf but will not be liable for any errors or failing to execute bids. also contain certain undertakings by bidders and buyers and limit Bonhams’ liability to bidders and buyers. General Bid Increments: £10 - 200 ...... by 10s £10,000 - 20,000 ...... by 1,000s Data protection – use of your information £200 - 500 ...... by 20 / 50 / 80s £20,000 - 50,000 ...... by 2,000 / 5,000 / 8,000s Where we obtain any personal information about you, we £500 - 1,000 ...... by 50s £50,000 - 100,000 ...... by 5,000s shall only use it in accordance with the terms of our Privacy £1,000 - 2,000 ...... by 100s £100,000 - 200,000 .....by 10,000s Policy (subject to any additional specific consent(s) you may £2,000 - 5,000 ...... by 200 / 500 / 800s above £200,000 ...... at the auctioneer’s discretion have given at the time your information was disclosed). A £5,000 - 10,000 ...... by 500s copy of our Privacy Policy can be found on our website (www.bonhams.com) or requested by post from Customer The auctioneer has discretion to split any bid at any time. Services Department, 101 New Bond Street, London W1S 1SR United Kingdom or by e-mail from [email protected]. Customer Number Title We may disclose your personal information to any member of our group which means our subsidiaries, our ultimate holding First Name Last Name company and its subsidiaries (whether registered in the UK or elsewhere). We will not disclose your data to anyone outside Company name (if applicable) our group but we may from time to time provide you with information about goods and services which we feel maybe of Company Registration number (if applicable) interest to you including those provided by third parties. If you do not want to receive such information (except for Address information you specifically requested) please tick this box City Would you like to receive e-mailed information from us? if so please tick this box Post / Zip code County / State Notice to Bidders. At least 24 hours before the Sale, clients must provide Telephone (mobile) Country government or state issued photographic proof of ID and date of birth e.g. - passport, driving licence - and if not included in Telephone (landline) ID document, proof of address e.g - utility bill, bank or credit card statement etc. Corporate clients should also provide a E-mail (in capitals) copy of their articles of association / company registration Please answer all questions below documents, and the entities name and registered address, documentary proof of its beneficial owners and directors, 1. ID supplied: Government issued ID and (if the ID does not confirm your address) current utility bill/ bank statement. together with a letter authorising the individual to bid on the If a corporate entity, please provide the Certificate of Incorporation or Partnership Deed and a letter authorising you to act. company’s behalf. Failure to provide this may result in your bids not being processed or completed. For higher value lots 2. Are you representing the Bidder? If yes, please complete question 3. you may also be asked to provide a bank reference. 3. Bidder's name, address and contact details (phone and email): If successful Bidder’s ID: Government issued ID and (if the ID does not confirm their address) current utility bill/bank statement I will collect the purchases myself Are you acting in a business capacity? If registered for VAT in the EU please enter your registration here: Please arrange shippers to contact me with Yes No - - a quote and I agree that you may pass them / my contact details. Please note that all telephone calls are recorded. MAX bid in GBP Telephone or Lot no. Brief description (excluding premium Absentee (T / A) Covering bid & VAT) *

FOR WINE SALES ONLY

Please leave lots “available under bond” in bond Please include delivery charges (minimum charge of £20 + VAT)

BY SIGNING THIS FORM YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE SEEN THE CATALOGUE AND HAVE READ AND UNDERSTOOD OUR CONDITIONS OF SALE INCLUDING BUYER’S WARRANTIES AND WISH TO BE BOUND BY THEM, AND AGREE TO PAY THE BUYER’S PREMIUM, VAT AND ANY OTHER CHARGES MENTIONED IN THE NOTICE TO BIDDERS. THIS AFFECTS YOUR LEGAL RIGHTS.

Bidder/Agent’s (please delete one) signature: Date:

Covering Bid: A maximum bid (exclusive of Buyers Premium and VAT) to be executed by Bonhams only if we are unable to contact you by telephone, or should the connection be lost during bidding. NB.* Payment will only be accepted from an account in the same name as shown on the invoice and Auction Registration form. Please email or fax the completed Auction Registration form and requested information to: Bonhams, Customer Services, 101 New Bond Street, London, W1S 1SR. Tel: +44 (0) 20 7447 7447 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7447 7401, [email protected] Bonhams 1793 Limited. Montpelier Street, London SW7 1HH. Incorporated in England. Company Number 4326560. UK/08/19

Bonhams Banbury Road Shipton on Cherwell Kidlington, OX5 1JH

+44 (0) 1865 853 640 bonhams.com

AUCTIONEERS SINCE 1793