• Call us: +44 (0) 1305 265 080
Lot 84

JACOB BODENDICK (fl. 1661-1688): AN IMPORTANT PAIR OF CHARLES II SILVER GINGER JARS AND COVERS

the base of each struck with the mark of Jacob Bodendick (fl. 1661-1688), London, the oviform bodies richly embossed and chased with flowering scrollwork inhabited by putti, one blowing a horn, and with applied circular panels pierced and chased with flowering foliage inhabited by birds within simple beaded borders and three vacant circular panels, the domed lid with overlapping acanthus leaves on a matted ground and with a knopped finial formed as clasped acanthus leaves,

Condition Report: click here
Estimate: £15,000 - £25,000
Hammer price: £12,000
Bidding ended. Lot has been sold.

the base with a band of stiff upright acanthus leaves, one with the scratch weight 27-11-0 and the other with a scratch weight 27-18-0, 25cm high, (c.54 tr. ozs combined)


Provenance: Almost certainly Thomas Medlycott (1628-1716) recorder of Abingdon, Oxfordshire 1675-1686
His son, James Medlycott (1658-1731) of Ven House, Milborne Port, Somerset
Thomas Medlycott, son of the above
Thomas Hutchings, nephew of the above
Sir William Coles Medlycott (1767-1835), son of the above
Sir William Medlycott (1806-1882)
Sir William Medlycott (1831-1887)
Sir Edward Medlycott (1832-1902)
Sir Mervyn Medlycott (1837-1908)
Sir Hubert Medlycott (1841-1920)
Sir Christopher Medlycott (1907-1986)
Sir Mervyn Medlycott (1947-2021)
and thence by descent.

Note: These exceptional examples of Restoration silver may be compared to a pair of vases in the Dutch style fashionable from the 1660’s exhibited in “The Treasure Houses of Britain: 500 Years of Private Patronage and Art Collecting”, the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, November 1985-March 1986, no. 118. These richly fashioned vases were used as display plates on a sideboard or on the stepped mantel shelves above a fireplace, in the same way that Chinese and Japanese porcelain was displayed at this period. Few of these vases bear a full set of hallmarks, since they were usually made on commission and therefore “not set to sale”, which required assay and marking. Unlike the larger ginger jar exhibited in Washington DC, the Sandford Orcas vases bear the makers mark of Jacob Bodendick, generally regarded as the leading “Dutchman” working in London during the third quarter of the 17th century. The Sandford Orcas ginger jars may also be compared to a pair of Charles II silver vases sold at Christie’s 20th November 2001 with provenance to Mrs William Randolf Hearst Snr. and the British Rail Pension Fund.

Read more

These are each 26cm high x 17cm high.

Both have evidence of solder repairs to bases and both have creased and dented vacant cartouches. 

There is a significant amount of minor denting to bodies but no apparent cracks or holes to metal. 

One of the lids has a solder repair to finial, visible to underside - see additional photos. 

The three vacant cartouches do not appear to have had arms removed or have been patched. These cartouches are not drilled in the same way as the others fitted with florid roundels - and thus presumably did not have roundels. 

The florid pierced roundels are secured by apparently hand made nuts and some of these roundels are slightly loose. The roundels cover circular cartouches which are plain underneath. 

The necks and inner rims of lids are slightly dented and misshapen. 

Our website uses cookies, as almost all websites do, to help provide you with the best possible browsing experience.

Accept Read more