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spoon

Spoon
1718-1719 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is an example of a type of spoon described as a 'trefid' pattern, so-called after the way the end of the stem is split into three sections. The design is completely different to that of earlier spoons made in England, and is almost certainly inspired by contemporary examples from the Continent, particularly France. Goldsmiths' Company court minutes from the 1660s refer to 'French fashion spoons', which probably looked similar to this one. This new fashion meant the finial of the spoon was designed so that the spoon could be placed on the table with its open bowl down (the opposite of how it would be placed on the table today). This is why the initials of the original owners are engraved on what we would now think of as the back of the spoon. The set of initials on this example, added some thirty years after the spoon was made, may indicate the spoon was presented as a christening gift.
This is also an example of plate made to the higher standard of silver that became compulsory for the trade between 1696 and 1720. In 1696 an act of Parliament raised the standard of wrought plate from 925 parts of pure silver (known as ‘sterling standard’) to 958 parts of pure silver per thousand. This was an attempt to stop people removing silver coins of sterling standard from circulation and converting them into cups, dishes and other items of plate. The higher standard for plate was reflected in new marks: the mark of the lion passant (the sterling standard mark) was replaced by the figure of Britannia, and in London the mark of the London assay office (a leopard’s head crowned) was replaced by a lion’s head erased. After 1720, goldsmiths and their patrons could choose either sterling or Britannia standards for their wares.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titlespoon (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Silver, forged and engraved
Brief description
silver, Exeter, 1718-19, mark of Peter Arno
Physical description
silver (Britannia standard), trefid pattern with a rat tail
Dimensions
  • Tip of bowl to tip of finial length: 19cm
  • Weight: 29.8g
Marks and inscriptions
  • Punched on the back of the stem, L to R from bowl: the initials 'AR' in a shaped punch, maker's mark of Peter Arno; Britannia standard mark; a castle, the Exeter town mark; date letter for assay year, probably 'S' for 1718-19.
  • Engraved on the back of the finial (ie. on the same side as the hallmarks), two sets of initials and a date: 'I : B' / 'I : F' / 1749'
Credit line
Given by J.H. Fitzhenry
Subjects depicted
Association
Summary
This is an example of a type of spoon described as a 'trefid' pattern, so-called after the way the end of the stem is split into three sections. The design is completely different to that of earlier spoons made in England, and is almost certainly inspired by contemporary examples from the Continent, particularly France. Goldsmiths' Company court minutes from the 1660s refer to 'French fashion spoons', which probably looked similar to this one. This new fashion meant the finial of the spoon was designed so that the spoon could be placed on the table with its open bowl down (the opposite of how it would be placed on the table today). This is why the initials of the original owners are engraved on what we would now think of as the back of the spoon. The set of initials on this example, added some thirty years after the spoon was made, may indicate the spoon was presented as a christening gift.
This is also an example of plate made to the higher standard of silver that became compulsory for the trade between 1696 and 1720. In 1696 an act of Parliament raised the standard of wrought plate from 925 parts of pure silver (known as ‘sterling standard’) to 958 parts of pure silver per thousand. This was an attempt to stop people removing silver coins of sterling standard from circulation and converting them into cups, dishes and other items of plate. The higher standard for plate was reflected in new marks: the mark of the lion passant (the sterling standard mark) was replaced by the figure of Britannia, and in London the mark of the London assay office (a leopard’s head crowned) was replaced by a lion’s head erased. After 1720, goldsmiths and their patrons could choose either sterling or Britannia standards for their wares.
Bibliographic references
  • Harrison, Miles. Exeter & West Country Silver 1700-1900. The Author, 2014. ISBN 9781908616814
  • Pickford, Ian. Silver Flatware. English, Irish and Scottish 1660-1980. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors' Club, 1983. ISBN 0907462359
  • Chanter, J. F.. 'The Barnstaple Goldsmiths' Guild, with some notes on the early history of the town'. In: Report and Transactions of the Devonshire Association, vol. 49 (1917), pp. 163-189.
Collection
Accession number
103-1903

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
Record URL
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