Notes
Following the French Revolution, many of the laws and institutions associated with the monarchy were
withdrawn or annulled, and in several cases, not immediately replaced. One such was the official
hallmarking of objects made in precious metal, for the Assemblée Législative cancelled the law on the 1 st.
of October 1791. Naturally, with no official controls, sub-standard silver and gold began to flood the
market, with the result that the master goldsmiths, as members of the recognised guild introduced their
own control mark -'Head of a Greek woman' with the letter 'P'- in 1793, as a self-policed guarantee for the
quality of silver. As this single mark was applied to objects made in both 1 st.(958) and 2nd.(843) standard
metal, the Guild decided the following year (1794) to replace it with a similar head, but bearing the number
'1' for l st. quality and a 'Horse's head' mark for objects of 2nd. standard. At the same time, the 'Baby's
head' was introduced as a guarantee for items made in gold. AII these 'temporary' marks were
superceded by the act of 19 Brumaire an VI (9 November 1797) which re-introduced the official controls
and duties on precious metals with new marks, the law coming into effect on 19th June 1798. With the reintroduction
of official controls, it became necessary for any objects not already sold, to be resubmitted
and stamped with the marks in force at the time of sale. Hence it is not unusual to find watch cases from
the period bearing several apparently conflicting sets of marks. Nicolas-Constant Lemaire, born in Orchie (
North of France) in 1757, apprentice in Paris in 1772, first worked in Ferney and later in the Jaquet-Droz
workshop. He settled in Paris circa 1792. He planed to establish in Paris, in cooperation with the
government a manufacture of luxury watch and clock making: automaton clocks, singing bird boxes, ring
watches, watches with equation of time and other complicated watches. He became with Glaezner
Director of the Versailles factory in 1796. He died circa 1832.