Related Lots
-

Lot 0246
A rare Russian small brass samovar “Egoist”
Estimate: 900-1000€




Lot 0246
A rare Russian small brass samovar “Egoist”
Estimate: 900-1000€A rare Russian small brass samovar “Egoist”. Maker’s mark of TUM (Mikhail Polyakov). 19th century.
Height: 24.5 cm.Starting price: 800€
Estimate: 900-1000€ -

Lot 0245
A rare Russian traveling brass samovar. I. Malishev
Estimate: 2500-3000€







Lot 0245
A rare Russian traveling brass samovar. I. Malishev
Estimate: 2500-3000€A rare Russian traveling brass samovar. Maker’s mark of the I. Malishev manufactory. Tula, mid-19th century. See similar: ‘The Miracle of the Antique Samovar,’ Kolomenskoe Museum, Moscow, 2015.
Height: 30 cm.Starting price: 2000€
Estimate: 2500-3000€ -

Lot 0243
An Antique Russian samovar table
Estimate: 750-1000€









Lot 0243
An Antique Russian samovar table
Estimate: 750-1000€An Antique Russian samovar table. Wood, marble. The mid of the 19th century.
Dimensions: 77 x 65 x 43 cm.Starting price: 650€
Estimate: 750-1000€ -

Lot 0242
An English Lantern Clock, a 17th-century
Estimate: 1200-1500€


Lot 0242
An English Lantern Clock, a 17th-century
Estimate: 1200-1500€An English Lantern Clock, a 17th-century domestic timepiece, crafted primarily from brass and featuring a striking mechanism.
This early form of domestic clock, often called “house clocks” or “chamber clocks,” was widely popular in England during the period.
Lantern clocks are renowned for their distinctive square brass frame, bell surmount, four corner pillars, and single hour hand.
The design reflects Renaissance influences, with intricate engravings on the dial plate and classical column-inspired pillars.
Produced in large numbers by skilled London guild artisans, lantern clocks remained popular until pendulum-based timekeeping emerged in the late 17th century.
Dimensions: 38 x 16.6 x 15 cm.Starting price: 800€
Estimate: 1200-1500€










