L'Oeillet.
Héloise Leloir pinx.t. Regnier & Brittannier lith. Imp. Lith. Formentin & Co.
Paris, Victor Delarue & C.ie Editeurs, Place du Louvre, 10. Et chez Genix & C.ie, Rue Montmorency, 27. Berlin, bei Gebruder Rocca Leipzig, bei Gebruder Rocca.
Tinted lithograph with fine hand-colour. Sheet: 440 x 300mm (17¼ x 11¾''), with large margins.
A interior scene in which two young women look at a carnation pulled from a bouquet on the ground.
[Ref: 50138] £90.00
(£108.00 incl.VAT)
[Carnations] 3.eme Feuille de 4.eme Cahier.
Carle delin. Bonnet direx.
A Paris, Chez Bonnet, rue St Jacques, au coin de celle de la Parcheminerie [n.d., c.1780].
Fine crayon-manner etching, printed in colours. 260 x 205mm (10¼ x 8"), large margins.
A fine example of colour printing, with the colour printed from separate plates, with no hand retouching. The publisher, Louis Marin Bonnet, was the inventor of crayon manner. He operated from the above address between 1776 and 1789. See Dunthorne 211 for a print probably from the same series. See Ref: 58812, 58814
[Ref: 58813] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
Earl of Northesk. [in ink.]
J. Hibbert Jun.r Bath, Fecit. [n.d., c.1800.]
Scarce aquatint. Plate: 295 x 220mm (11½ x 8½''). Small margins.
A portrait of William Carnegie, 7th Earl of Northesk (1858-1831) as a Post Captain. Carnegie joined the Royal Navy in 1771 and served during the American Wars of Independence and French Revolutionary Wars.
[Ref: 50416] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Le Carnaval à Paris, Bal Masqué à L'Opéra. Imagerie Nouvelle.
Lith. Haguethal, à Pont-à-Mousson. Deposé.
[n.d., c.1850.]
Scarce coloured lithograph. Sheet 350 x 445mm (13¾ x 17½"). Original folds with splits repaired, taped stains in top edge. Damaged.
A view of the Grand Bal de l'Opéra, with the revellers in costume and a large orchestra on stage.
[Ref: 64030] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Caro.
Zum neuen Jarh 1816. J.A. Klein.
Etching. Plate: 140 x 80mm (5½ x 3''), with large margins.
A portrait of a poodle sitting on his hind legs by German etcher Johann Adam Klein.
[Ref: 47613] £90.00
(£108.00 incl.VAT)
The Queen's Trial in the House of Peers. August 1820.
Engraved for Smeeton's Edition of the Trial of the Queen.
[1820.]
Etching. 199 x 235mm (7¾ x 9¼"). Creasing as normal.
The trial of Queen Caroline, Queen consort of George IV. Following allegations of adultery, Caroline was removed from the liturgy of the Church of England. However, the King's ministers did not agree to divorce, and instead entered into negotiations with Caroline. She rejected this offer and a trial began, which only increased public support for her. for a larger view of the trial, see ref. 24466
[Ref: 28949] £65.00
(£78.00 incl.VAT)
Her Royal Highness Caroline Amelia Elizabeth Princess of Wales Princess of Brunswick and Luneburgh etc etc most humbly Dedicated to Her Royal Highness the Reigning Duchess of Bronswick & Luneburgh by Their Highnesses
Schroeder [n.d., c.1790].
Stipple printed in brown, rare; sheet 155 x 110mm (6 x 4¼"). Trimmed, losing text at bottom; staining
Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, later Queen Caroline (1768 - 1821), was the wife of George IV from 1795, and his queen consort from 29 January 1820 until her death. Shortly after giving birth to Princess Charlotte of Wales, Caroline and George separated, and after she moved to Italy in 1814 rumours surrounding her relationship with her servant Bartolomeo Pergami (also spelt Bergami) culminated in her trial for adultery in 1820. Not in O'D.
[Ref: 35959] £120.00
(£144.00 incl.VAT)
Lindorf's, First View of Caroline.
Thos. Stothard, Pinxit. C. Knight, Sculp.
London: Published Jany. 1st. 1788, by John Harris, Sweetings Alley Cornhill & No.8 Broad Street.
Stipple with etching in brown ink, sheet 390 x 340mm. 15¼ x 13½". Trimmed to plate.
A hunter with his gun and dogs looks up at a women singing from a song book on a balcony, accompanying herself on a guitar. Illustrates 'Caroline de Lichtfield, ou Mémoires d'une Famille Prussienne', by Swiss novelist Isabelle de Montolieu (1751 - 1832), an influential instant best-seller in the 1780s that stayed in print until the mid-19th century. Six line quotation from volume I in English and French below title. After Thomas Stothard (1755 - 1834).
[Ref: 13885] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
[Caroline de Lichtfield] The Baron, proposing Walstein, to Caroline. A thousand confused ideas were crossing & combating...held in her white and virgin hand. [&] Lindorf's, first View of Caroline. As Caroline was singing in the Pavilion, accompanying herself with her Guitar....Indiffrence is of Bliss the foe. Caroline de Lichtfield, tom. I.
Thos. Stothard, Pinxit. C. Knight, Sculp.
London: Published Jany. 1st. 1788, by John Harris, Sweetings Alley Cornhill & No.8, Broad Street.
Pair of stipple engravings with etching. Each sheet c.440 x 340mm (17¼ x 13½"). Trimmed to plate except at top.
Illustrating the novel 'Caroline de Lichtfield' by Isabelle de Montolieu (1751 - 1832). After Thomas Stothard (1755 - 1834). Quotations in the original French to right of the English translations.
[Ref: 9741] £520.00
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Her Royal Highness the Princess Carolina &c.
P. Mercier Pictor Principis pinx. 1728. J. Simon fec: et excud.
Rare mezzotint, very fine & impressive. Sheet 475 x 305mm (18¾ x 12"). Trimmed close to plate. Slight crease bottom right.
Princess Caroline Elizabeth (1713-57), fourth child of George II. She died, unmarried and childless, on 28 December 1757, aged 44, at St James's Palace. CS 33, i of iv. Ex: collection of The Hon. Christopher Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 67553] £360.00
Her Royal Highness the Princess Carolina &c.
P. Mercier Pictor Principis pinx. 1728. J. Simon fec: et excud.
Mezzotint. Sheet 475 x 305mm (18¾ x 12"). Trimmed close to plate.
Princess Caroline Elizabeth (1713-57), fourth child of George II. She died, unmarried and childless, on 28 December 1757, aged 44, at St James's Palace. CS 33, i of iv.
[Ref: 43553] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
A Canoe and Natives of Mulgrave's Range.
R. Cleveley Del.t. T. Medland sculp.t.
Published Oct. 15. 1789 by J. Stockdale.
Engraving. 210 x 255mm (8½ x 10"). Trimmed within plate at top. Small margins on 3 sides. Very slight staining at top, small tear on right.
An outrigger canoe of 'Lord Musgrave's Range', apparently a coral island near the Caroline Islands. From Phillip's 'The voyage of Governor Phillip to Botany Bay', published in London in 1789, although illustrating John Marshall's voyage from Port Jackson to Whampoa in China, also described in the book.
[Ref: 44037] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
Tamor des Îles Carolines et sa Femme, vus sur l'Ìle Tinian.
J.s Arago delin.t. Lerouge et Chobard sculp.t.
[Paris, 1822-4.]
Stipple. 240 x 320mm (9½ x 12½"), with large margins.
A warrior of the Caroline Islands, dressed in loincloth to show off his body tatoos and carrying a carved club, with his wife and child. Drawn by Jacques Étienne Victor Arago (1790-1855) and published in the official account of Louis-Claude de Freycinet's circumnavigation, 'Voyage Autour Du Monde fait par ordre du roi sur les corvettes de S.M l'Uranie et la Physicienne pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820'.
[Ref: 53636] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
Carolina Mathildis D.G. Daniae Norveg: Vand: Gothor: Regina. Nata Princ: Wall: d: 22 Iul. 1751.
J.E. Nilson fec: et exc: A.V.
C. Gr: et Priv: S.C.R.Maj: Ac. [n.d. c.1780.]
Etching. 222 x 158mm (8¾ x 6¼"). Trimmed and laid on album page.
Caroline Matilda (1751-75), posthumous daughter of Frederick, Prince of Wales, and sister of George III. She married her cousin, Christian VII of Denmark, at fifteen, an unhappy union. In 1772 they divorced and she spent the rest of her life in Hanover, never seeing her children again. See 17493 for Christian VII; and 17598 for Juliana Maria, who saw him restored to the throne.
[Ref: 17597] £60.00
(£72.00 incl.VAT)
Serenissima Carolina DG Magnae Britanniae Franciae et Hiberniae Regina &c. Inaugurata XI die Octobris Anno 1727.
G. Kneller S.R. Imp. et Mag. Brit. Baronets. Pinx. Ab Originali J. Smith Fecit.
Sold by I. Smith at ye Lyon & Crown in Russell Street Covent Garden [n.d., c.1727].
Mezzotint. Sheet 345 x 250mm (13½ x 9¾"). Trimmed to plate and tipped into album page.
Caroline Wilhelmina of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683 - 1737), queen of George II; in an oval, her hair in curls, wearing crown and pearl necklace, close low dress lined with ermine and jewels. Engraved after Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646 - 1723), the portrait originally showed Caroline as Princess of Wales; the title was reworked when she became queen, and reworked again for this state, when the crown and pearl necklace were added and her jewels made more elaborate. Chaloner Smith 268, II.
[Ref: 20463] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales.
G. Kneller Eques Baron.tus pinxit. Geo: Vertue Sculpsit.
[n.d. c.1724.]
Engraving. Plate 355 x 210mm (14 x 8¼"), with large margins. Crease.
Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach, queen of George II (1683-1737). Alexander: 281.
[Ref: 24349] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
S. Carolina D.G. Mag: Brit: Fra: et Hib: Regina.
G. Kneller S.R. Imp. et Mag. Brit. Baronet.s Pinx.
J. Smith Fec. et ex.
Mezzotint. Plate 203 x 152mm. 8 x 6". Ink stain on left shoulder; false margins added
Caroline, Queen of George II (1683-1737), of Brandenburg-Ansbach. Her parents died while she was still a child and she spent her early life in Berlin, before marrying Prince George of Hanover, the future King George II, in 1705. She accompanied him to England as Princess of Wales in 1714. After Sir Godfrey Kneller (1646 - 1723). CS: 269.ii.
[Ref: 24354] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Her Most Excellent Majesty Caroline, Queen of Great Britain France and Ireland. &c. &c. &c.
G. Kneller Eques Baron.tus pinxit. Geo: Vertue Sculpsit 1727.
[c.1727.]
Engraving. Sheet 460 x 355mm (18 x 13¾"). Trimmed to plate.
Portrait of Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683-1737), queen of George II, in an oval. This engraving was first published in 1724, when Caroline was Princess of Wales; for this state the title has been updated and the Prince of Wales's feathers in the border replaced with a crown. Alexander: 416
[Ref: 48144] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Serenissima Carolina. D.G Mag: Brit: Fran: et Hib: Regina.
Amiconi Pinx. A.Vanhaeken Fecit.
1736. Sold by T. Jefferys in the Strand and W.Herbert on London Bridge.
Fine mezzotint. 355 x 250 (14 x 10"). Faint crease in upper left corner. Small margins.
Portrait of Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683 - 1737), Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and Electress of Hanover from 11 June 1727 until her death in 1737 as the wife of King George II. CS 3. O'Donoghue 347/3. Ex: Collection of The Hon. Christopher Lennox-Boyd.
[Ref: 65188] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Serenissima Carolina. D.G Mag: Brit: Fran: et Hib: Regina.
Amiconi Pinx. A.Vanhaeken Fecit. 1736.
Sold by T. Jefferys in the Strand and W.Herbert on London Bridge.
Mezzotint, 18th century watermark 355 x 250 (14 x 10"), large margins on 3 sides. Faint crease in upper right corner, narrow margin at bottom.
Portrait of Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683 - 1737), Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and Electress of Hanover from 11 June 1727 until her death in 1737 as the wife of King George II. CS 3. O'Donoghue 347/3. E
[Ref: 65836] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
Guillelmine Charlotte Reine de la Grande Bretagne.
Kneller p. v. Gunst s.
[D. Mortier excudit.] [engraved c.1714, but later.]
Rare engraving. Plate 349 x 272mm (13¾ x 10¾"), large margins, with later 18th century watermark. Tear and hole in centre.
Portrait of Caroline of Ansbach (1683-1737), when Princess of Wales, half-length directed to left, looking towards the viewer, in ermine-trimmed dress with precious stones on chest and shoulders, in roundel Greek frame with olive branches and clarion below, curtain at top left; after Kneller. She was Princess of Wales in 1714-27, when she became the queen of George II.
[Ref: 52527] £130.00
(£156.00 incl.VAT)
[Queen Caroline] Serenissima et Potentissima Carolina D:G: Mag: Brit: Fran: et Hib: Regina. Inaugurata II die Octobris 1727.
G. Kneller Baronetus Pinxit. Fac.
Sold by J. Bowles at the Black Horse in Cornhill. [n.d. c.1727]
Very rare mezzotint, print 355 x 250mm (14 x 10"). Trimmed to plate and glued to album sheet. Some cockling. Slight central crease.
Half-length portrait of Caroline, Queen of George II (1683-1737), touching a lock of hair at her shoulder with right hand. She wears a gown with loops of pearls at the shoulders decorated with rows of small rectangular jewels down the centre of her bodice, a crown plus pearl necklace and earrings. CS 62.
[Ref: 58883] £220.00
(£264.00 incl.VAT)
[Queen Caroline] Serenissima Carolina D.G Mag: Brit: Fran: et Hib: Regina.
S.r Godfrey Kneller Pinxit. J. Faber jun.r. Fecit.
Printed for & Sold by Tho. Bowles next the Chapter House in St. Pauls Church Yard. And John Bowles at Mercers Hall in Cheapside. [n.d. c.1727]
A fine impression of a rare mezzotint. Sheet 355 x 250mm (14 x 10"). Trimmed to plate and glued to album sheet. Slight central crease.
Three quarter length portrait of Caroline of Ansbach, Queen of George II (1683-1737). She wears ermine-trimmed robes with strings of pearls tied in bows at the shoulders, right hand holding up a fold of her cloak, left hand resting on a crown on a table beside her. An earlier state of this print names her as 'Her Royal Highness Wilhelmina Charlotte Princess of Wales'. CS 60, unlisted later state.
[Ref: 58884] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Queen Caroline] Her Royal Highness Wilhelmina Charlotta Princess of Wales.
G. Kneller S.R. Imp. et Mag. Brit. Baronets. Pinx. 1716. Ab Originali J. Smith Fecit. 1717.
Sold by I. Smith at ye Lyon & Crown in Russell Street Covent Garden -.
Mezzotint. Image 347 x 249mm (13½ x 9¾"). Cut and laid on album sheet.
Wilhelmina Charlotte Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1683-1737), Queen of George II. Her parents died while she was still a child and she spent her early life in Berlin, before marrying Prince George of Hanover, the future King George II, in 1705. She accompanied him to England as Princess of Wales in 1714. This plate was retitled when she became queen and then reworked to add a crown and pearl necklace. From the Belton House Collection assembled in the 18th Century by the Rt. Hon. John Ld. Brownlow, Baron Charleville, & Viscount Tyrconnel in the Kingdom of Ireland. Ex: Collection of The Hon. C. Lenno
[Ref: 12834] £150.00
(£180.00 incl.VAT)
Her Royal Highness Caroline Amelia Elizabeth Princess of Wales, Brunswick, Lunenburg, &c. &c. Mostly humbly Dedicated to Her Royal Highness The Reigning Duchess of Brunswick & Lunenburg, By Her Highness;s Most humble & most devoted Servant Höÿer.
[C. Höÿer pinx.t. P. Sintzenich sculp.t.]
[London, published March 25 1795 by Cornelius Höÿer. No 3 Little Titchfield Street.]
Stipple. 290 x 250mm (11½ x 9¾"). Trimmed into plate, losing inscriptions at bottom. Mounted on album paper at sides.
A head and shoulders portrait of Caroline of Brunswick, within a roundel surmounted with the Prince of Wales's feathers, published shortly after her marriage.
[Ref: 62186] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Caroline, Queen Of England. Engraved from the Original Picture presented to the Corporation of the City of London, by Her Majesty on the 1st. Novr. 1820.
Painted by Jams. Lonsdale, Esqr. Principal Painter in Ordinary to the Queen. Engraved by Henry Meyer, 3, Red Lion Square Bloomsbury.
London, Published for the Proprietor, by H. Meyer, Novr. 27th 1820.
Stipple with etching on india laid paper, 430 x 355mm. 17 x 14". Marginal staining.
Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, later Queen Caroline (1768 - 1821), was the wife of George IV from 1795, and his queen consort from 29 January 1820 until her death. After James Lonsdale (1777 - 1839). Painted during the divorce trial controversy, Lonsdale was evidently a supporter of Caroline against claims of adultery by her husband; her hands are arranged to display her wedding ring in order to emphasize her fidelity to her marriage vows. She holds a letter inscribed 'To His Majesty the King'.
[Ref: 11349] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
[Caroline, Princess of Wales, and Princess Charlotte.]
[F.Bartolozzi] [R.Cosway]
[n.d. c.1800]
Proof stipple in frame. 359 x 258mm. Foxed, trimmed to plate mark.
George, Prince of Wales, was prevailed upon to marry his cousin Caroline of Brunswick as his part of a deal; in return, parliament promised to pay off his enormous debts. George had already married Maria Fitzherbert, a Roman Catholic widow; however, the marriage was void in accordance with the terms of the Royal Marriages Act of 1772. The Prince of Wales also had a number of mistresses; one of them, Lady Jersey, went to meet Caroline when she arrived from Brunswick on 5 April 1795. Caroline was twenty-six years old, of stocky build and little to her credit apart from a fine head of hair. She spoke too much and very coarsely, dressed dowdily, had little moral reticence or good sense. She seems to have had an aversion to washing either her person or her clothes. Consequently she smelled. When Princess Caroline arrived at St James' Palace the Prince of Wales came to visit her. After greeting her, he turned to the Earl of Malmesbury saying, 'Harris, I am not well. Pray get me a glass of brandy'. He then left the room. Caroline's comment to Malmesbury was , 'I find him very stout and by no means as handsome as his portrait'. The ill-matched pair were married on 8 April 1795 and it soon became clear that the Prince of Wales would not tolerate his wife's company unless he was drunk. The marriage was consummated and on 7 January 1796 a daughter, Charlotte, was born to the couple. By March, the proud parents were living separately and rarely spoke to each other. D: 22
[Ref: 1391] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. O Dea Certe. No longer shall ye widow'd Land bemoan, A broken Lineage, and a doubtful Throne...Already for th'Illustrious Youths complain, And pity Monarchs doom'd to sigh in vain. Addison. And God said I will bless her, and she shall be a Mother of Nations: Kings of people shall be of her. Gen: Cap.17. v.16
G: Bickham Sculp:
[n.d. c.1780.]
Engraving with very large margins, scarce. Plate 209 x 166mm (8¼ x 6½"). Publication line scratched, creases in margins.
Queen Caroline (1683-1737), Queen of George II, as Princess of Wales. Her parents died whilst she was still a child and she spent her early life in Berlin before marrying Prince George of Hanover in 1705. Provenance: Heritage Hexham.
[Ref: 30108] £240.00
(£288.00 incl.VAT)
Her Most Gracious Majesty Caroline, Queen of England.
Wageman Del.t T. Woolnoth Sculp.t
Published June, 28th.1820; by T. Woolnoth, 40 Henry Street, Pentonville.
Stipple. Plate 266 x 203mm. 10½ x 8". Trimmed to plate along lower edge.
Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, later Queen Caroline (1768 - 1821), was the wife of George IV from 1795, and his queen consort from 29 January 1820 until her death. Shortly after giving birth to Princess Charlotte of Wales, Carolin and George separated, and after she moved to Italy in 1814 rumours surrounding her relationship with her servant Bartolomeo Pergami (also spelt Bergami) culminated in her trial for adultery in 1820. This portrait was published during the investigation. For the trial, see ref. 13462; for Pergami, see refs. 131, 4335 and 11157
[Ref: 24797] £75.00
(£90.00 incl.VAT)
The Measure of Happiness, or a Royal visit to the Dey of Tunis or the Great Plenipo _
[by William Heath.]
Pub July 20 1820 by S.W. Fores 50 Piccadilly.
Scarce coloured etching, watermark 1820; 1820. 250 x 350mm (9¾ x 13¾"), with margins. Tears and creasing. Borders messy.
Caroline of Brunswick in Turkish costume, with much of her vast bosom on display, smoking a hookah. An interpreter makes pleasantries, to which Caroline replies ''I am as Happy as the Dey [altered to Day] is Long!!!''. A disgruntled Bartolommeo Bergami stands behind. An anti-Caroline satire of her visit to Tunis in 1816, published as George IV tried to win a divorce by the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820. BM Satires 13767.
[Ref: 54560] £230.00
(£276.00 incl.VAT)
Her Majesty Caroline, Queen of Great Britain &c.&c. [&] Count B. Bergami.
W.m Derby del.t R. Cooper Sculp.t [&] Sen.r Carloni pinx.t Cooper Sculp.t
Published Aug.t 1. 1820 by R. Cooper, Edward Street, Hampstead Road, and Sold by all Printsellers in the United Kingdom. Printed by McQueen & Co.
Stipple and etching. Plate 343 x 285mm (13½ x 11¼"). Creasing.
Queen Caroline of Brunswick (1768-1821), the Queen consort of King George IV. In 1814, she first met Bartolomeo Bergami and employed him as a servant. Their relationship grew strong, friendly and intimate. It was widely rumoured that they were lovers and so the King, now with a reason, could forge ahead with the divorce. Instead of treating her like a Queen, the church, George and the court introduced a bill in Parliament, the Pains and Penalties Bill 1820, which stripped Caroline of the title of queen consort and dissolve her marriage.
[Ref: 30032] £250.00
(£300.00 incl.VAT)
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Trial of Queen Caroline.
W. Read del. & sc.
[n.d., c.1820.]
Aquatint. Sheet: 270 x 200mm (10½ x 8"). Vertical folds.
A scene showing the trial of Caroline of Brunswick, wife of George IV, for adultery in 1820.
[Ref: 41568] £80.00
(£96.00 incl.VAT)
[Caroline of Brunswick and Bergami] Chastity! Chaste as the Icecle, / That's Curded by the frost from purest snow / and hands on Dian's temple.
Sr Facto del. [Etched by George Cruikshank]
London Pub.d by G. Humphtrety 27 St James's St 1820.
Etching. 135 x 195mm (5¼ x 7¾") very large margins.
Caroline of Brunswick and Bartolomeo Bergami embracing on a couch, she in the Turkish peasant woman costume she wore at a ball given by her in Naples, Bergamo in the hussar costume that he wore as Chamberlain. Originally published as one of four related scenes as 'La Gloire des Honnetes Gens!!', for this issue the plate has been cut down. BM Satires 13731
[Ref: 54457] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
[Caroline of Brunswick] Her Royal Highness Caroline Princess of Wales. Born 17.th May 1768 _ Married to his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales on Wednesday Evening 8.th April, 1795.
Published 25th March 1795, by Laurie & Whittle, 53, Fleet Street, London.
Rare mezzotint. 350 x 255mm (13¾ x 10"). Trimmed to plate at bottom, laid on album page. Small margins on 3 sides.
Full-length portrait of Caroline of Brunswick, wearing plumed head-dress and full court dress decorated with large ribbons and tasselled bows, in front of an arcade with pillars and a classical urn. Not in Chaloner Smith.
[Ref: 64014] £180.00
(£216.00 incl.VAT)
[Caroline of Brunswick] A late Arrival at Mother Wood's.
[George Cruikshank.]
Pub.d June 19 1820 by G. Humphrey 27 St James Street.
Hand-coloured etching. 260 x 390mm (10¼ x 15¾"), with very large margins. Uncut. Slight staining, mostly in margins on left, repaired tear in margin on left.
Queen Caroline, stout and flamboyant, stands on the balcony at Alderman Sir Matthew Wood's house in South Audley Street, looking down complacently with folded arms at the cheering crowd which fills the street. Wood (1768-1843), a Whig politician, persuaded Caroline not to be paid off by Brougham's mission to France and to return to England to confront her husband, George IV. BM Satires 13734.
[Ref: 61866] £280.00
(£336.00 incl.VAT)
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[Caroline of Brunswick] Delicious Dreams! Castles in the Air! Glorious Prospects!
London Published by G. Humphrey 27 St. James St. April 30, 1821.
Etching with very fine hand colour. Sheet 395 x 290mm (15½ x 11¼''). Trimmed to printed border.
A satire on the collapse of the agitation on behalf of the Queen, and the disappointed hopes of her supporters. Queen Caroline is shown, surrounded by her courtiers, slumped asleep in her chair after lunch dreaming of a world in which she enjoys the privileges of being queen. A parody of a print by James Gillray (BM Satire 10979). BM Satire 14175.
[Ref: 63510] £420.00
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[Caroline of Brunswick] The Queen's Matrimonial Ladder.
[George Cruikshank.]
[n.d., c.1820.] Printed by William Hone, Ludgate Hill, London.
Etching. 155 x 65mm (6 x 2½"). Trimmed into two and both backed onto album paper.
Hone uses the device of the ladder to plot a simple linear history of Caroline of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel’s unhappy marriage. Each page of the pamphlet describes a step on the ladder and is accompanied by an illustration. The pamphlet came with a 'toy', a folded cardboard "ladder" which depicted the various stages of Queen Caroline's marriage to George IV. She was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Queen of Hanover from 29 January 1820 until her death in 1821 as the estranged wife of King George IV. She was Princess of Wales from 1795 to 1820.
[Ref: 66910] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
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A Correct Representation of Her Majesty Queen Caroline Returning From the House of Lords, 1820
I.R. Cruikshank fecit. R W ad vivam del.t.
Pub.d by G. Humphrey 27 S.t James's Street, London [n.d., c.1820].
Aquatint with fine hand colour. Sheet 215 x 410mm (8½ x 16"). Trimmed into printed border at sides
Caroline of Brunswick in an open coach with six horses and liveried footmen, being cheered by crowds in New Palace Yard.
[Ref: 62136] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
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[Caroline of Lichtfield.] Caroline & Lindorf. [&] Caroline & Walstein.
Tho.as Stothard pinx. John Ogborne sculp. [&] Joseph Strutt sculp.
London, Publish'd July 10, 1787, Rupert Street, Hay Market..
Pair of stipples with hand colour, with very large margins. Each 330 x 360mm (13 x 14¼").
Two scenes from Isabelle de Montolieu's novel 'Caroline of Lichtfield': a young married woman falls for a handsome soldier, but realises he is less worthy of her affections than her older, less dashing husband. These stipples were published a year after the publication of Thomas Holcroft’s English translation. Montolieu also translated Jane Austen’s 'Sense and Sensibility' and 'Persuasion' into French.
[Ref: 28193] £450.00
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[Netherlands. Carolina, Prinsesse van Oranje.]
[Jacob Houbraken.]
[Jacobus Haffman. n.d, c.1754.]
Engraving. Proof before letters. On watermarked paper. Platemark: 360 x 220mm (14¼ x 8¾").
A portrait of Princess Carolina of Nassau-Weilburg (1743 - 1787), sister of William V, as a young princess. Half-length in frontal view, seated on a chair and holding a flower and a fan. In an oval with an allegorical scene below and roses in the lower corners. Proof before letters. From a series of 21 engravings entitled 'Portraits of Stadholders and their Family', published in 1754.
[Ref: 35623] £140.00
(£168.00 incl.VAT)
Îles CarolinesL Dances et Costum des Naururels.
J.s. Arago delin.t. Lerouge et Choubard sculpt.
[Paris, 1822-4.]
Stipple. 235 x 320mm (9¼ x 12½"), with wide margins.
Men of the Caroline Islands dancing with staves, under instruction from a man at the side. A plate from the official account of Louis-Claude de Freycinet's circumnavigation, 'Voyage Autour Du Monde fait par ordre du roi sur les corvettes de S.M l'Uranie et la Physicienne pendant les années 1817, 1818, 1819 et 1820'.
[Ref: 54234] £190.00
(£228.00 incl.VAT)
Gawin Carow Knight. In His Majesty's Collection.
From the Original Drawing by Hans Holbein. Engraved by F. Bartolozzi R.A. Historical Engraver to his Majesty.
Published as the Act directs June 7. 1796 by I. Chamberlaine Brompton Row Knightsbridge.
Coloured stipple and etching on roseate paper, 325 x 275mm. 12¾ x 10¾". Slightly soiled.
After Hans Holbein the Younger (1497/8 - 1543), for 'Portraits of Illustrious Personages of the Court of Henry VIII Engraved in imitation of the original drawings of Hans Holbein in the Collection of His Majesty, with biographical and historical memoirs' issued in parts between 1792 and 1800. Not in BM or NPG. From the collection of Cecil Bisshopp Harmsworth, 1st Baron Harmsworth.
[Ref: 9642] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Carpenter.
[n.d., c.1850.]
Coloured wood engraving. Sheet 135 x 215mm, 5½ x 8½". Trimmed, laid on album paper.
An educational image of a pair of carpenters in their workshop.
[Ref: 16430] £70.00
(£84.00 incl.VAT)
[Carpenters] Charpentier. Zimmermann.
[after Jean-Frédéric Wentzel] Lith. C. Fasoli et Ohlman à Stras.sbg.
[n.d., c.1845.]
Lithograph with fine hand colour heightened with gum arabic, are with large margins. Printed area 200 x 250mm (8 x 9¾"). Small area of loss of image, slight toning of paper on right.
A carpenter's yard with the workers preparing beams.
[Ref: 36600] £95.00
(£114.00 incl.VAT)
[Lady Carpenter.]
[Sir Joshua Reynolds. James Watson.]
[London: Robert Sayer, n.d., c.1768.]
Mezzotint. Plate: 345 x 280mm (13½ x 11"). Scratches and creasing in margins.
A half-length portrait of Lady Almeria Carpenter (1752-1809), hair dressed high. A noted beauty, she was painted by Joshua Reynolds, Richard Cosway and Angelica Kauffman. CS: 26 I of III.
[Ref: 56273] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Lady Almeria Carpenter.]
[Sir Joshua Reynolds. James Watson.]
[London: Robert Sayer, n.d., c.1768.]
Mezzotint. Plate: 345 x 280mm (13½ x 11"). Scratches and creasing in margins.
A half-length portrait of Lady Almeria Carpenter (1752-1809), mistress of Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester. Collector's stamp of Thomas Kirk (1765-1797) an associate of Richard Cosway and EMH. CS: 26 I of III.
[Ref: 46175] £260.00
(£312.00 incl.VAT)
[Battle of Carpi, 1701?] Den 10 July 1701, is in Italien tuschen de Francke en Duytsers [...] [parallel text in latin]
P: Schenk exc: Amst: C.P.
Etching, sheet 150 x 190mm (6 x 7½"). Trimmed; glued to backing sheet; foxing.
Probably the Battle of Carpi, which saw French forces defeat the Austrian and Prussian armies near Legnago in northern Italy in the War of the Spanish Succession. From a series of prints showing conflicts in that war, published in Amsterdam by Pieter Schenck.
[Ref: 38652] £50.00
(£60.00 incl.VAT)
Thomas Carr (late an attorneny in the Temple) was Executed at Tyburn the 18th day of Jan.y 1737 for robing (in Company with Elizabeth Adams) Mr W.m Quarrington in the Angel Tavern Temple-bar.
Publish'd according to Act of Parliament [n.d., c.1737].
Rare engraving. Sheet 200 x 150mm (8 x 6"). Trimmed within plate, creased.
Thomas Carr was vestry clerk of the parish of St Paul, Covent Garden. He and Elizabeth Adams (with whom he lived) stole ninety-three guineas and a diamond ring from William Quarrington. At Tyburn the pair kissed and held hands as the cart moved away from under their feet. See Item 62246 for the matching portrait of Elizabeth Adams.
[Ref: 53146] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Elizabeth Adams. Executed at Tyburn the 18th day of Jan.y 1737 for robbing (in Company with Tho.s Carr) Mr W.m Quarrington in the Angel Tavern Temple-bar.
Publish'd according to Act of Parliament [n.d., c.1737].
Rare engraving. Sheet 200 x 150mm (8 x 6"). Creased. Small margins.
Elizabeth Adams and her partner, Thomas Carr (the vestry clerk of the parish of St Paul, Covent Garden) stole ninety-three guineas and a diamond ring from William Quarrington. At Tyburn the pair kissed and held hands as the cart moved away from under their feet. See Item 53146 for the matching portrait of Thomas Carr.
[Ref: 62246] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)
Anna. Comtissa de Bedford.
Antonius, Van Dyck Eques pinxit. P. Lombart Sculpsit.
Londini, avec Priv. du Roy et ex. parisis. [n.d. c.1660.]
Copper engraving. Plate 350 x 247mm. 13¾ x 9¾".
Anne Carr, Countess of Bedford (1620-1684) was wife to William, Duke of Bedford and daughter or Robert Carr, Earl of Somerset and Frances Howard. According to Burke's Peerage, she was born in 1615 in the Tower of London, but other sources give 1620. Lombart's most famous work was the series of twelve portraits after van Dyck that he engraved around 1660, often known as the 'Countesses' from the Latin of their titles. Mariette in his entry on Lombart in his Abecedario stated that this set alone would suffice to place him 'au rang des premiers graveurs'. All twelve plates are the same size, and show three-quarter-length figures, ten women and two men, in 15mm wide borders that imitate frames of the period.
[Ref: 24656] £160.00
(£192.00 incl.VAT)