Important Jewelry, Watches and Wristw...

Hong Kong, Furama Hotel, Jun 07, 1999

LOT 447

Jacobus Markwick, London, circa 1680. Very rare and fine silver pair cased watch with early "Barrow" straight line balance spring regulator.

HKD 55,000 - 70,000

USD 8,000 - 10,000

Sold: HKD 80,500

C. Outer double body, polished, with concave bezel and square hinge. Inner double body, bassine with split bezel and loose-ring pendant, polished, the back with winding hole shutter. D. Silver champleve with Roman numerals, half and quarter marks, centred with an engraved rosette. Single blued steel hand. M. Hinged gilt brass full plate with pierced tulip pillars, fusee with chin, short train, plain steel threearm balance, Barrow worm screw regulator, openwork gilt brass English cock with irregular foot, allowing one to see the newly invented balance spring. Signed on the back plate. Diam. 52 mm.


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Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Case: 4-12

Fair

Worn

Movement: *3

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 4-04

Fair

HANDS Later

Notes

The straight line balance spring regulator It is generally the case that in the extensive literature recording the history of English Horology, the invention of the "straight line" or "endless-screw" regulator has been attributed to Nathaniel Barrow (Apprentice 1653, Clockmaker's Company 1660, Master 1669). In France, the same invention has been attributed to Jacques Gloria, whose working dates are comparable. Although the latter was virtually alone in France to employ the idea, there were perhaps a handful of English makers who used it, albeit rarely. It may be that Barrow's claim is based more on subsequent writings than on historical fact. A slightly earlier system employed by Henry Jones, used a completely straight spring mounted on the cock and acting between two pins on the balance, which could have inspired the idea. Thomas Tompion's curved rack-and-pin regulator, held under a separate cock, was probably introduced before 1680, and there is no reason to believe that the watch now offered for sale is much later. However, as with any new invention, Tompion would undoubtedly have been circumspect about allowing his peers to copy the idea at its inception. Nevertheless, rumours of the advance must have been rife, and other makers would have striven hard to emulate the idea. The "Barrow" system is in fact a combination of the old and the new in its layout; the worm screw occupying the position of the pre-balance spring wormand- wheel set-up brackets, but with the addition of the newly invented spring. It may well be that the system was in fact an interpretation of Tompion's idea, arrived at without the benefit of seeing an example of the master's work. Certainly examples are exceptionally rare, and the idea was very quickly dropped.