Notes
Bronnikov's inventive design features a movement which is an integral part of the case, the dial which serves as the pillar plate and
the bridges and cock supported by brackets milled in the back part of the band. The same idea was later employed by the celebrated
Albert Potter.
Bronnikov
A family from Vjatka, Russia that specialized in the making of all-wood and all-ivory watches. The first recorded member of the family
was Ivan Bronnikov (c. 1770 - 1860), a joiner and turner. His son, Semyon Ivanovitch (1800 - 1875), made a pocket watch enirely carved
out of wood for an 1837 exhibition. The future czar Alexander II is said to have purchased the watch. Two of Semyon's seven sons,
Mikhail Semyonovitch and Nicolai Semyonovitch, continued his work. Mikhail's son Nicolai Mikhailovitch was the last watchmaker
in the family. Nicolai Mikhailovitch traveled to Moscow in 1909 or 1910 and is said to have worked there for the firm of Paul Buhre.
The small town of Vjatka (population today is just over 400,000) is situated east of St. Petersburg on the river Vjatka, between the
Volga and the Ural Mountains. It is an important metallurgical center, which suggests that it was not for the lack of metal that the
Bronnikovs made wooden watches. Unlike metal, wood is not subject to the thermal variations created by very warm and extremely
cold temperatures. All-wood watches were expensive, selling for approximately 120 rubles whereas a gold watch cost from 90 to
100 rubles. In 1867 the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs ordered two pairs of Bronnikov watches. A Prize was won for wood and
ivory watches at the St. Petersburg Exhibition in 1870. In 1873, the Bronnikovs took part in the Vienna International Exhibition, and
in 1896 Mikhail Semyonovitch won a silver medal for a palm-wood watch with palm-wood chain which he showed at the All-Russian
Industrial Exhibition in Nizhny Novgorod. In 1900 Bronnikov watches were sent to the Paris International Exhibition. In 1902 Nicolai
Mikhailovitch exhibited a birch wood watch at the All-Russian Exhibition in St. Petersburg. The clockwork parts were made of various
woods, including walnut, honeysuckle, boxwood, and hardened bamboo; the cases from birchwood, or boxwood, and the dials were
often decorated with ivory or mother-of-pearl. Bronnikov watches feature an unusual type of construction: rather than having the
wheels installed between two plates as is usually the case, the dial also serves as the pillar plate, as well as being an integral part of the
case. These watches were not intended for everyday use but rather as expensive and rare souvenirs. Known signatures include "M.S.
Bronnikov in Vjatka", "The Bronnikov Brothers in Vjatka", and "N.M. Bronnikov in Vjatka".
See: "The Bronnikov Dynasty" by Theodore R. Crom, NWCC Bulletin Vol. 43/6 No. 335, December 2001.