Exceptional Horological Works of Art

Geneva, Oct 19, 2002

LOT 150

Breguet, No. 2428, sold on November 19, 1909 to Empress Maria Feodorovna. Very fine and rare large silver "hump-back", eight day-going grande et petite sonnerie carriage clock with alarm and quarter-repeating in its original Morocco fitted case.

CHF 1 - 1

EUR 1 - 1

Sold: CHF 130,000

C. Three-body, polished with hinged bezel and back door. Four bun-feet and silver chain handle. D. Silver with Roman numerals, outer minute track with five-minute Arabic markers, concentric inner alarm setting ring with gold hand, engine-turned center. Blued steel "spade" hands. Gilt brass engine-turned dial plate. M. "Hump-back", 12.5 x 9.8 cm., full plate cylindrical pillars, double going barrel for going and striking trains, platform with straight line "moustache" lever escapement, cut bimetallic compensation balance with blued steel Breguet balance spring, quarter repeating and striking two gongs, alarm striking on its own third gong, Grande and Petite Sonnerie/Silent selection levers above the dial, repeating button on the top. Signed on the dial and the movement. Dim. Height 15,5 cm., width 12 cm.


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Grading System
Grade: AAA

Excellent

Case: 3

Good

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3 - 01

Notes

Maria Feodorovna Born Princess Dagmar of Denmark in Copenhagen in 1847, she was the daughter of King Christian IX of Denmark and of Princess Louise de Hesse-Cassel, (the sister of Queen Alexandra of England). Originally betrothed to Great-Duke Nicholas, heir to the throne of Russia, she became the fiancée of his brother Alexander Alexandrovitch, after Nicholas? sudden death in 1865. They were married in November 1866, whereupon Princess Dagmar converted to the Orthodox religion, as was the custom, and took the name of Maria Feodorovna. In 1881, she became Empress of Russia when Alexander acceded to the throne after the assassination of his father, Czar Alexander II. Empress Maria Feodorovna was a supporter of the alliance of Russia with France, and contributed to orienting her husband?s politics in this direction. When Alexander III died in 1894, the Empress gave up all pretensi ons to exercizing power, preferring to devote herself to charitable work. When the Russian Revolution broke out in 1917, she was in Yalta. The Bolsheviks allowed her to leave Russia, and after a brief stay with her sister in England, in 1921 she chose to settle in Denmark, where she died in 1928. The hump-back model of Breguet carriage clocks was often used, both by the house of Breguet and others, such as Cole in England, for instance, two hundred years after its creation. Recently, Breguet issued a very small series of silver hump-back carriage clocks, which look practically identical to their ancestors. During Breguet?s lifetime only a few of them were made. Top quality carriage clocks were among the most expensive pieces produced by Breguet.