Minerva. A fine and attractive 18K gold chronograph wristwatch
Many of the watches offered for sale in this catal… Read more
Minerva. A fine and attractive 18K gold chronograph wristwatch

Signed Minerva, Antimagnetic, case no. 713'779, circa 1940

Details
Minerva. A fine and attractive 18K gold chronograph wristwatch
Signed Minerva, Antimagnetic, case no. 713'779, circa 1940
Movement: cal. 13-20, manual, 17 jewels, signed
Dial: signed
Case: snap on back, wide stepped fluted lugs, 36 mm. diam., signed

Special Notice
Many of the watches offered for sale in this catalogue are pictured with straps made of endangered or protected animal materials such as alligator or crocodile. These endangered species straps are shown for display purposes only and are not for sale. Christie’s will remove and retain the strap prior to shipment from the sale site. At some sale sites, Christie’s may, at its discretion, make the displayed endangered species strap available to the buyer of the lot free of charge if collected in person from the sale site within 1 year of the date of the sale. Please check with the department for details on a particular lot. On lots marked with an + in the catalogue, VAT will be charged at 7.7% on both the premium as well as the hammer price.

Brought to you by

Sabine Kegel
Sabine Kegel

Lot Essay

This endangered species strap is shown for display purposes only and is not for sale. The watch will be supplied with a calf leather strap.

The present watch is a beautiful example of 1940s styling with bold wide stepped and curved fluted lugs. It impresses by its uncluttered silvered chronograph dial with large subsidiary dials, applied gold dot indexes and gilt Arabic half-hour numerals.

Founded in 1858 by Charles-Yvan Robert and Hyppolyte Robert of Villeret, what would eventually become the Minerva Watch brand in 1887, was initially a "tablisseurs" of watches, an assembler of watches from parts manufactured elsewhere. It wasn't until 1902, under the leadership of C. Robert's sons, Charles-Auguste and Georges-Louis, that Minerva became a watch manufacturer with its own engineering workshops.

The earliest Minerva wristwatch was made in 1909, but the watch company's greatest success came in 1923 with the introduction of the calibre 20, a movement that perfectly illustrates the classic and refined architecture of wrist chronographs of that era, with the iconic “V”-shaped bridge, column-wheel mechanism, a Breguet balance-spring and 17 jewels. With the launch of this watch, the company earned its reputation as a manufacturer of complicated movements of exceptional quality. Minerva was bought by the luxury goods group Richemont in 2006.

More from Rare Watches

View All
View All