Period:Qing dynasty Production date:1723-1735
Materials:porcelain
Technique:glazed, painted,
Dimensions:Diameter: 22.50 centimetres
Description:
Dish. Coat of arms of Davison impaling Carr. The arms are of Davison of Swarland House, Felton, Northumberland, “Or a fess wavy between six cinquefoil gules, a crescent for difference”, impaling Carr of Newcastle and CockenHall, Durham, “Argent on a bend between three martlets sable as many leopards (?) heads erased or”. The crest is “out of a naval coronet a dove rising argent with an ear or corn in its mouth” for Davison. Made of enamelled porcelain. Iron-red flowers on the back.
IMG
Comments:Howard 1974; p.206. Bowl with a flat base, decorated in iron-red and gold, with the same coat of arms.The crescent is for the Davisons of Swarland House, a cadet branch of the Davisons of Newcastle. The Carrs had lived at Cocken since the reign of Henry VIII. Sir Ralph Carr, who died in 1709, whose family had lived in Newcastle for three generations purchased the Cocken estates from his kinsman in 1665.
Materials:porcelain
Technique:glazed, painted,
Dimensions:Diameter: 22.50 centimetres
Description:
Dish. Coat of arms of Davison impaling Carr. The arms are of Davison of Swarland House, Felton, Northumberland, “Or a fess wavy between six cinquefoil gules, a crescent for difference”, impaling Carr of Newcastle and CockenHall, Durham, “Argent on a bend between three martlets sable as many leopards (?) heads erased or”. The crest is “out of a naval coronet a dove rising argent with an ear or corn in its mouth” for Davison. Made of enamelled porcelain. Iron-red flowers on the back.
IMG
Comments:Howard 1974; p.206. Bowl with a flat base, decorated in iron-red and gold, with the same coat of arms.The crescent is for the Davisons of Swarland House, a cadet branch of the Davisons of Newcastle. The Carrs had lived at Cocken since the reign of Henry VIII. Sir Ralph Carr, who died in 1709, whose family had lived in Newcastle for three generations purchased the Cocken estates from his kinsman in 1665.
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