Travel box with the arms of Marie Joséphine... - Lot 59 - Osenat

Lot 59
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Estimation :
12000 - 18000 EUR
Travel box with the arms of Marie Joséphine... - Lot 59 - Osenat
Travel box with the arms of Marie Joséphine de Savoie, Countess of Provence, wife of the future King Louis XVIII. In wood covered with red morocco richly decorated on all sides with foliage scrolls in small gold iron. Lid decorated in the center with the great arms of the Countess under royal crown in a crown of palms held by a shell. Corners struck alternately with the fleur-de-lys and the Savoy eagle under a crown. Lateral carrying handles with chiselled and gilded brass fleur-de-lys bases. Closing by two hooks with flower bases and lock in chased brass with opening ring (gilding remnants). Lining in sky blue moire, raised in border of a braid in yellow and silver trimmings. Underside of the chest with four spherical feet, and stamped in gold with the initials "A L" interspersed with a cock. Work of the sheath maker Antoine LANSON. 35 x 21 cm x Ht : 23 cm. W.C. (Used in use, the key is missing). Around 1760-1780. Biographies: Marie-Joséphine-Louise de SAVOIE, does not figure among the queens of France, because she died in 1810, with her family in England, four years before the accession to the throne of her husband Louis XVIII. In her memoirs, published in Brussels in 1833 by Louis Hauman and Cnie, booksellers, recounts: "This year 1810 must have been unfavourable to me, which ended with the death of the queen my wife, expired at Goldfield Hall, on November 13, 1810. This excellent princess, to whom our misfortunes had doubly attached me, had borne them with an unusual magnanimity: quietly, when vulgar friends abandoned themselves to their despair, she never made one of those acts of weakness which lower the dignity of a prince. Nor did she ever give me any interior sorrow, and she showed herself queen in exile as she would have been on the throne. Her gentle cheerfulness suited me, her courage that nothing could bring down, tempered mine. In a word, I can say of the queen my wife what my ancestor Louis XIV said of hers when he lost her: "Her death is
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