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1076
Description: Fragment; arched rectangular fireback with embattled, cavetto-moulded edging; English Stuart royal shield, Garter, crown and supporters, stemmed rose and stemmed thistle, respectively, to left and right of crown; initials CR above crown; all within a plain border, with short lengths of twisted rope edging containing, at the top, the initial M between a split date; initials (only S surviving) below date.
Notes: A Carolean composite fireback. The armorial fireback includes stylistic elements - the form of the unicorn and of the harp - identical to those on two series of firebacks dated 1618 and 1619, indicating the work of the same pattern-maker; its width is 490mm.
Inscription: M / 1634 / [?] S / C R
Arms: English Stuart royal (Charles I)
- Decoration tags:
- rounded arched (shape)
- rope (edging)
- carved pattern panels
- composite
- individual letters
- individual numbers
- heraldic
- armorial
- text
Manufactured: in 1634 possibly in the Forest of Dean area of England.
Current location: Black and White House Museum, The Old House, High Town, Hereford, Herefordshire, England.
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1307
Description: Rectangular shape with a flattened arch; astragal edging; top centre, stamp depicting a man and a woman in medieval dress, with inscribed date split to each side; in each corner and angled towards the corner, a triangular stamp formed of two mirrored sea serpents, their tails looped through a band, which also supports a flower rising from the serpents mouths; bottom centre, the weak impression of gadrooned vase fireback.
Notes: A bespoke fireback incorporating pseudo-antique elements, a spurious date inscribed by hand with a, probably deliberate, error in the orientation of the number 9. The 'medieval' couple and the corner stamps have yet to be identified. The impressed fireback is of the mid-17th century of the type illustrated as no. 1189.
Inscription: 16 59 [9 reversed]
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with flattened arch (shape)
- astragal (edging)
- carved stamps
- composite
- individual numbers
Manufactured: in the late-19th to early-20th century in England.
Current location: Lindridge Place, Lamberhurst Quarter, Lamberhurst, Kent, England.
- Attached to series:
- Composite firebacks
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1144
Description: Composite; arched rectangular shaped, armorial fireback, cavetto edging, with Stuart Royal arms, garter, supporters, crown and motto, and 1662 date above crown; this overlies a rectangular plate with fillet edging; top centre in the space each side of the central shield, an initial letter - A to left, B to right - each above a fleur-de-lys, its stem terminating in a small buckle.
Notes: Several firebacks have incorporated the same Stuart royal shield, which probably originally dated to 1619, but with the date altered. A similar fireback, but without the initials and fleurs-de-lys, dated 1661, and reputed to have come from the Totsey, the old guildhall at the market cross in Gloucester, is illustrated in Ames, 1980, 23; possibly the same fireback was reported by the late David Bick to be at The Grange, Minsterworth, Gloucestershire (demolished in the late 1960s).
Inscription: 16 62 / [Garter motto (illeg.)] / A B
Arms: English Stuart royal
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- fillet (edging)
- carved stamps
- carved pattern panels
- composite
- individual letters
- heraldic
- armorial
- royal
- text
Manufactured: in 1662 possibly in the Forest of Dean area of England.
Current location: in private hands, Norton, Wiltshire, England.
Citation: Ames, A., 1980, Collecting Cast Iron (Ashbourne, Moorland Publishing).
Citation: Badeni, J., 22 Sep 1983, 'Whose Fireback?' [letter], Country Life, 174, 4492, p. 772.
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348
Description: Composite; Arched rectangular shaped, armorial fireback, cavetto edging, with Stuart Royal arms, garter, supporters, crown and motto, and 1662 date above crown; this overlies a rectangular plate, with rope-effect, fillet edging; a pattern of four rosettes surrounding a fleur-de-lys, its stem terminating in a small buckle, is repeated on each side of the central armorial fireback, with the initials above; each rosette is stamped separately.
Notes: A variant, bearing the same date, but the initials, A B, and without the rosettes, is at Norton Manor, Malmesbury, Wiltshire.
Copies of this fireback are known.
Inscription: 16 62 / C P / HONI SOIT QVI MAL Y PENSE / DIEV·ET·MON DROIT
Arms: English Stuart royal
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- fillet (edging)
- carved stamps
- whole carved pattern
- composite
- individual letters
- armorial
- royal
- text
Manufactured: in 1662 possibly in the Forest of Dean area of England.
Current location: Tiverton Castle, Tiverton, Devon, England.
(part of the Colchester & Ipswich Museums Service museum group)
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711
Description: Rectangular plate with plain ovolo-moulded edging, superimposed by a fireback with, on top, arched mirrored scrolls surrounding a scallop shell, and below, a conversational scene of a man and woman seated at a small table with a soldier standing to the right and a building and servant behind to the right.
Notes: A composite fireback presumably intended to extend the width of an existing small one; rivets repair a crack.
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with ornate arch (shape)
- ovolo (edging)
- carved pattern panels
- composite
- pictorial
- humans
Manufactured: in the early- to mid-18th century in England.
Current location: not known.
- Attached to series:
- Late pictorial series (all)
- Composite firebacks
- Late pictorial series 4
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962
Description: Arched rectangular shape; ovolo moulded edging; Tudor royal shield, garter, crown, motto and supporters (crowned lion and dragon); plain panels at sides and bottom.
Notes: A common variant has a rose and portcullis either side of the crown, and the top of the lion's crown and the dragon's ear do not overlap the edging; without the extension panels, the approximate dimensions of the main plate are 805mm wide by 590 high. The quality of the relief indicates that this composite fireback was created using an early casting of the armorial back.
Inscription: [Garter] HONI SOIT QVI MAL E PENSE / [motto] DIEV ET MON DROIT
Arms: Tudor royal
- Decoration tags:
- rectangular with round arch (shape)
- rope and wood moulding (edging)
- whole carved pattern
- composite
- planklines
- extension panels
- armorial
Manufactured: in the mid- to late-16th century in the Weald area of England.
Current location: in private hands, Wisborough Green, West Sussex, England.