
Nette Megens
Head of Department, Director
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Sold for £13,750 inc. premium
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Head of Department, Director

Department Director

Head of Sale
Provenance:
Gift of Augustus III, King of Poland and Elector of Saxony, to Gerlach Adolf von Münchhausen in 1745;
Dr. Edward G. Shiffman Collection, sold Sotheby's New York, 19-20 October 1994, lot 252;
The Hoffmeister Collection of Meissen Porcelain, part II, sold in these rooms, 26 May 2010, lot 88;
Acquired in the above sale
Literature:
D. Hoffmeister, Meissener Porzellan des 18. Jahrhunderts, vol. II (1999), no. 368
Exhibited:
Hamburg, Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe, 1999-2009
Gerlach Adolf Freiherr von Münchhausen (1688-1770) was born into an aristocratic family from Lower Saxony. In 1715, he entered the service of the Elector of Hannover, King George II of England, who appointed von Münchhausen Acting Privy Councillor in 1727, and High Steward of the Prefecture of Celle in 1732. Münchhausen played an increasingly important political role in the years following the death of the Emperor Charles VI, and was particularly trusted by both George II and his successor, George III. The latter appointed him Prime Minister of Braunschweig and the Electorate of Hannover in 1765.
Claus Boltz has discovered correspondence in the Dresden State Archives that reveal that von Münchhausen played a leading role during negotiations in 1745 for a loan of 3.5 million Reichstalers by Braunschweig to Saxony. The correspondence between Münchhausen and the Saxon minister, Johann Christian von Hennicke, reveals that Hennicke - who was responsible under Count Brühl for the Meissen manufactory - requested a copy of Münchhausen's arms on 4th January 1745. Münchhausen, in turn, sent a letter of thanks for the "magnifique Königl. Porcellain present" (magnificent Royal gift of porcelain) on 17th April 1745 (quoted in Hoffmeister 1999, II, p. 602).
Marcus Köhler has noted (in Fragile Dipolamcy (20097), pp. 197f.) that in 1745 Münchhausen represented the Elector of Hannover (George II) at the coronation of Stephen of Lorraine as Holy Roman Emperor in Frankfurt. As such, he would have had to attend the coronation and other state banquets, but he also had to host two dinners himself in his capacity as the Elector of Hannover's representative. Köhler also describes (p. 198) the political delicacy involved in this gift: Münchhausen was a servant of the Elector of Hannover, but his estates lay partly in Saxony making him in a sense a subject of the Elector of Saxony. In his letter of thanks, Münchhausen wrote as a "royal subject and vassal of His Royal Majesty in Poland", rather than as a minister of the Elector of Hannover.