A GERMAN ENAMELLED GOLD SNUFF-BOX
A GERMAN ENAMELLED GOLD SNUFF-BOX
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THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN (LOTS 3727-3733)
A GERMAN ENAMELLED GOLD SNUFF-BOX

BY LES FRÈRES SOUCHAY, MARKED, HANAU, CIRCA 1780, STRUCK WITH THE HANAU TOWN MARK FOR NINETEEN CARAT GOLD

Details
A GERMAN ENAMELLED GOLD SNUFF-BOX
BY LES FRÈRES SOUCHAY, MARKED, HANAU, CIRCA 1780, STRUCK WITH THE HANAU TOWN MARK FOR NINETEEN CARAT GOLD
oval box, the cover, sides and base set with panels of translucent red enamel over a moiré pattern engine-turned ground within white enamel and gold bead frames, with outer sablé gold borders set with trailing gold flower-heads amidst translucent green enamel foliate borders, sablé vase pilasters, the cover centred with an oval enamel plaque depicting a classical scene
2½ in. (65 mm.) wide
Sale room notice
Please note that the Chinese translation for this lot is incorrect in the printed and e-catalogue. The correct translation is available on christies.com.
請注意在拍賣目錄和電子目錄有關本拍品的中文翻譯有誤。正確的翻譯請見christies.com。

Brought to you by

David McLachlan
David McLachlan

Lot Essay

The brothers Esay (1723-1791) and Marc André Souchay (1730-1811) came from one of Hanau's Huguenot families of bijouteries, French speaking Huguenot jewellers who had been attracted to Hanau by the privileges and financial incentives extended by Prince Regent William (1682-1760), later Landgrave William VIII (1730-1760), to anyone who was willing to set up in business in Hanau. Within a very short period of time, Hanau developed into an important center for luxury goods with some thirty-two bijoutiers involved in the production of gold boxes. By the early 1770s Etienne Flamant, an expert guillocheur originally from Geneva, signed a contract with the leading Hanau goldsmiths for them to supply him with around 385 to 430 gold boxes for decoration every year. Les Frères Souchay agreed to supply him with 120 boxes, which gives some indication of the scale of gold box production in Hanau at this time.

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