Military antiques from the imperial period,
the I. & II. World War till GDR
LOTTO 1215:
Statuette of Prince August of Saxony
dettagli...
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Statuette of Prince August of Saxony
Statuette Prinz August von Preussen, (1779-1843), jüngster Sohn d. Prinzen Ferdinand (jüngster Bruder Friedrichs d. Großen), Darstellung a.d. Schlacht bei Kulm 1813, vor seinen Truppen stürmend m. Fahne (diese fehlt), Degen u. zahlr. Orden, Weißmetallguß/ bronziert, sep. Fahne fehlt, auf quadratischer Plinthe, ergänzter gestufter schwarzer Holzsockel, ges. H. 39,4 cm
All items put up for auction are used. They are auctioned in the condition they are in at the time of the knockdown, with no guarantee for obvious or hidden defects or the presence of the properties described in the catalogue. Books and albums, for example, are not checked for completeness; normal signs of wear, notes or deletions are not mentioned in the catalogue or when the item is called up. Material properties are described based on visual inspection and experience. Only non-destructive testing methods are used (e.g. optical/UV/magnetic). Objects are generally not dismantled. Each bidder is free to have objects tested non-destructively (e.g. x-ray/microscope) before the auction at their own expense and after consultation with the "military Auction House" and the respective consignor.
German military sculptures, Prussian military statuettes, German porcelain bust, Frederich the Great bust, Emperor Wilhelm bust
All items put up for auction are used. They are auctioned in the condition they are in at the time of the knockdown, with no guarantee for obvious or hidden defects or the presence of the properties described in the catalogue. Books and albums, for example, are not checked for completeness; normal signs of wear, notes or deletions are not mentioned in the catalogue or when the item is called up. Material properties are described based on visual inspection and experience. Only non-destructive testing methods are used (e.g. optical/UV/magnetic). Objects are generally not dismantled. Each bidder is free to have objects tested non-destructively (e.g. x-ray/microscope) before the auction at their own expense and after consultation with the "military Auction House" and the respective consignor.

