
This auction has ended. View lot details
You may also be interested in




A fine Saxon engraved goblet and cover commemorating the Pragmatic Sanction, Dresden, circa 1725
Sold for £17,500 inc. premium
Looking for a similar item?
Our Glass specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.
Find your local specialistAsk about this lot

Shipping (UK)
A fine Saxon engraved goblet and cover commemorating the Pragmatic Sanction, Dresden, circa 1725
Footnotes
Provenance:
The Otto Dettmers Collection, sold at Sotheby's London, 23 November 1999, lot 67
Following the death of his father Emperor Leopold I, Charles (1685-1740) was crowned Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor of the German Nation, in Vienna in January 1712, and subsequently King of Bohemia in 1723. The Pragmatic Sanction was a treaty arranged by Charles VI in 1713 to secure the succession of a daughter to the Habsburg throne, as by 1711 Charles was the sole male survivor of the House of Habsburg and he had no male heir. Upon his death he was ultimately succeeded by his daughter, Maria Theresia (1717-1780), which resulted in the outbreak of the War of the Austrian Succession in spite of the treaty. The trophies of war flanking the Austro-Hungarian coat of arms on the present lot refer to the Seventh Ottoman-Venetian War (1714-18). The inclusion of this coat of arms alongside those of Bohemia and Silesia represents the glorification of the Pragmatic Sanction, which was ratified by Silesia in 1720, by Bohemia in 1723, and by Hungary in 1724.
An almost identical goblet, formerly in the von Strasser Collection, is now in the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, illustrated by Rudolf von Strasser and Sabine Baumgärtner, Licht und Farbe (2002), pp. 382-386, cat. 230. Goblets which are comparable in style and shape are illustrated by Gisele Haase, Sächsisches Glas (1988), pp. 359-361, cats. 261-264 and 266, and by Sabine Baumgärtner, Sächsisches Glas: Die Glashütten und ihre Erzeugnisse (1977), cats. 133-138. A goblet bearing the same three coats of arms and inscription is illustrated by Rainer Rückert, Die Glassammlung des Bayerischen Nationalmuseums München, Vol. II (1982), p. 224, cat. 634 and another is offered as the following lot in this sale.















