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  1. www.silvermakersmarks.co.uk › Makers › London-WI-WMLondon Makers Marks - WI-WM

    David Willaume I 1697..1709 (registered Apr 1697) Bleeding bowl, box, fork, plate, salver, spoon, tankard 1712..1720 (registered Apr 1697 & 1719) 1725..1727 (registered Jul 1720) (image courtesy of Waddingtons, Toronto) Edward Wimans 1698 (registered Apr 1697 Bleeding bowl Charles Williams c1700 (registered Apr 1697

  2. Queen Anne 1700s. Charles Burton. Tiffany Serpentine. J B Pyne. Four George Ii Silver Candlesticks. Antique Silver C 1700. View All Popular Serveware, Ceramics, Silver and Glass Searches. Shop our david willaume selection from top sellers and makers around the world. Global shipping available.

  3. WILLAUME, David. David Willaume 1 – goldsmith/metalworker; banker/financier. Born on 7 June 1658 on the Pont des Morts (the Bridge of the Dead), in Metz France, he was the third of six children of Adam Willaume and Anne Phillipe who had married in 1651. This somewhat unglamorous sounding birthplace – The Bridge of the Dead – allegedly ...

  4. David Tanqueray. 9622 Pair of George I Silver Chargers. £55,000. David Tanqueray,son of David Tanqueray of St Lo, Normandy, apprenticed to David Willaume 1708, free 1722. 1st mark as largeworker 1713. Married Anne, David Willaume’s daughter in 1717. Second mark (sterling) 1720. Subordinate Goldsmith to the King 1729 and 1732.

  5. The handles of the cistern and the finial of the fountain are modeled in the form of the heraldic supporters and crest of the earls of Meath, for whom this...

  6. A FINE WILLIAM III SILVER-GILT EWER MARK OF DAVID WILLAUME, LONDON, 1700 Of helmet-form, on gadrooned spreading foot, the lower body applied with strapwork calyx, with gadrooned upper mid-band, applied with the head of Diana and a stylized shell beneath the lip, the handle formed as a scrolling female herm, the front engraved with a coat-of-arms within a foliate and scalework cartouche, marked ...

  7. Willaume, David (maker) Place of origin. London (made) Object Type. The design of the ewer is based on an inverted Roman helmet. It was introduced into English silver by Huguenot craftsmen in the late 17th century. Ewers were used to hold water and were usually accompanied by basins. They were set out on the sideboard in a dining room, or ...

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