Description

HISTORY - LOUIS XV of France (Versailles, 1710 - ib., 1774) - Letter signed Letter signed, dated Versailles January 26, 1755, by the hand of a secretary, addressed to the Prince of Santa Croce in response to Christmas greetings. 1 p. In-4°. In French, countersigned. Ink slightly faded. A few small marginal wormholes.

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HISTORY - LOUIS XV of France (Versailles, 1710 - ib., 1774) - Letter signed Letter signed, dated Versailles January 26, 1755, by the hand of a secretary, addressed to the Prince of Santa Croce in response to Christmas greetings. 1 p. In-4°. In French, countersigned. Ink slightly faded. A few small marginal wormholes.

Estimate 80 - 100 GBP
Starting price 50 GBP

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For sale on Monday 29 Jul : 14:00 (BST)
mayfair-london, United Kingdom
L'Autographe Auctions
+4420.353.503.63
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[MARIE-THERESE, infanta of Spain and dauphine of France ]. Coffre de voyage aux armes. Sl, sd (c. 1745). Superb historical object bearing the coat of arms of the dauphine Marie-Thérèse-Antoinette of Spain, first wife of Louis de France, eldest son of Louis XV. Red morocco traveling case with coat of arms. H 23 x L 57.5 x W 29.7 cm. An exceptional piece for its rarity, quality and princely origin, this chest was made in France by the leatherworker L . Lecoq, whose telltale mark is stamped on the back (rooster emblem surrounded by his number L L) with a gilded iron on the morocco. The Lecoqs were a family and a true dynasty of leatherworkers with handed-down expertise, who were loyal suppliers to the Versailles court throughout the 18th century. Marie-Thérèse Antoinette Raphaëlle de Bourbon, Infanta of Spain and Dauphine of France, born in Madrid in 1726 and died in Versailles in 1746, was a Spanish princess, daughter of Philip V and Elisabeth Farnese, who was married to the Dauphin Louis de France, eldest child of Louis XV and future father of Louis XVI (he never reigned) in 1745, in order to reconcile France and Spain (in parallel with the marriage of Madame Première to the Infante Philippe). This type of travel furniture is a rare reminder of the train that every French princess followed on her travels. These small trunks could have been used to store accessories, crockery, miscellaneous books and so on. (OHR, 2525). The trunk is in very good condition. Minor wear marks on the morocco, discreet soiling (blackened dust on the trimmings or underside) and minor restorations (underside and opening cords fitted later, probably in place of brackets often of the same metal as the exterior trimmings on this type of object). Slightly obscured or oxidized gilding on all pushed irons.