
Sällsynt och ovanlig murbruk från Oldfield Foundry (c1540 — 1741) gjuten av Henry Oldfield II. Murbrukets design är från slutet av 1500-talet, gjuten med en vänd läpp ovanför en dubbelgjuten kropp, 15 cm diameter 11 cm hög
Obs - Mycket intressant har mycket tidigare 1300-talsformar använts på kroppen, gjutna med ett floriat kors, de kungliga huvudena för kung Edward III och drottning Phillipa, tillsammans med 'Rufford' lombardiska skriftbokstäverna 'R M' som ursprungligen tros vara för Nottingham-klockgrundaren Richard Mellour som arbetade i Nottingham 1488 - 1500. Dessa medeltida frimärken förvärvades av Oldfields vid köp av gjuteriet i
1540-talet och fortsatte att användas selektivt därefter.
Proveniens - Illustrerad och diskuterad, Michael Finlay, 'English Decorated Mortars and Their Makers' Fig 171, sid 94.
Phillips husförsäljning, Hall, Barnstaple, North Devon, 1996.
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2 | 12 mar, 11:07 | 654 EUR |
1 | 25 feb, 16:35 | 595 EUR |
1 | 21 feb, 14:26 | 357 EUR |
Sällsynt och ovanlig murbruk från Oldfield Foundry (c1540 — 1741) gjuten av Henry Oldfield II. Murbrukets design är från slutet av 1500-talet, gjuten med en vänd läpp ovanför en dubbelgjuten kropp, 15 cm diameter 11 cm hög
Obs - Mycket intressant har mycket tidigare 1300-talsformar använts på kroppen, gjutna med ett floriat kors, de kungliga huvudena för kung Edward III och drottning Phillipa, tillsammans med 'Rufford' lombardiska skriftbokstäverna 'R M' som ursprungligen tros vara för Nottingham-klockgrundaren Richard Mellour som arbetade i Nottingham 1488 - 1500. Dessa medeltida frimärken förvärvades av Oldfields vid köp av gjuteriet i
1540-talet och fortsatte att användas selektivt därefter.
Proveniens - Illustrerad och diskuterad, Michael Finlay, 'English Decorated Mortars and Their Makers' Fig 171, sid 94.
Phillips husförsäljning, Hall, Barnstaple, North Devon, 1996.
Inga anmärkningar.
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12 Manor Farm Barns, Glandford
Holt, Norfolk
NR25 7JP
Storbritannien
The Beedham family has been collecting early oak furniture and related works of art for over 70 years, however, the origins of this collection goes even further back. Historically, the Beedham family ran pubs in the South Yorkshire area for over 250 years and in former times it was custom and practice that an incoming pub landlord would take over the whole of the items in the establishment from the previous landlord. It was in this way the Beedham Collection really started. Herbert Beedham, my father, was the first of the family to leave the public house trade and he started up his own Antique business, and brought to the business a wealth of furniture and objects which had been passed down by the family over many years. Herbert had a great passion for early items and would regularly visit the antique and ‘junk’ shops of Sheffield, coming back, much to my mother’s dismay, with yet more antiques and collectables. It was during this time he struck up a friendship with the curator of the Graves Art Gallery in Sheffield who introduced Herbert to the, at that time, unknown L S Lowry, from whom he subsequently tried desperately and sadly unsuccessfully to buy a painting. Herbert’s greatest passion was to collect Tudor and Elizabethan Manor House furniture and objects. A Daily Telegraph reporter once visited his shop and wrote an article in the paper emphasising the love that he showed for his items, running his hands over the polished surfaces. Beedham Antiques was established in 1974 and moved to Holme Hall in Bakewell Derbyshire a large Grade I listed 15th/16th Manor House (pictured) where many of the privately owned pieces pieces for sale in this collection were displayed in their authentic surroundings. Paul Beedham, Herberts’ son, took over the business in 2012 and has proudly celebrated its 50th year anniversary and is carrying on its tradition of supplying the finest Tudor, Elizabethan and Jacobean furniture to important Manor Houses and collectors. Since our family were great private collectors, many of the pieces on display in the saleroom have not been seen on the market for a number of decades. Beedham Family