A LONDON DELFT POLYCHROME FLASK MODELED AS A TURK
A LONDON DELFT POLYCHROME FLASK MODELED AS A TURK

CIRCA 1665

Details
A LONDON DELFT POLYCHROME FLASK MODELED AS A TURK
CIRCA 1665
Modeled as a bust, a crecent to his turban, a necklace about the moustached figure's neck, the underside with the initials W/.T.M.
4 ½ in. (11.4 cm.) high
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Phillips, London, 13 December 2000, lot 75.
With Alistair Sampson, London.
Literature
A. Dunsmore, ed., This Blessed Pot, This Earth, English Pottery Studies in Honour of Jonathan Horne, London, 2011, pp. 182-4, fig. 2.

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Sallie Glover
Sallie Glover

Lot Essay


The present flask possibly depicts Murad IV, the sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1623-40. It has been posited that it was likely made to decorate one of London's 'Turk's head' coffeehouses, which began proliferating around Exchange Alley around 1662. That year, The Kingdom's Intelligencer, a weekly paper, reported that the Turk's Head coffeehouse had opened, and was selling proper coffee, as well as " Sherbets made in Turkie, of lemons, roses, and violets perfumed; and Tea, or Chaa, according to its goodness. The house seal was Morat the Great." See John Timbs, Club Life of London, vol. II, London, 1866. Also see Dunsmore, ed., op. cit., pp. 182-4.

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