After the success I had on facebook with the identification of the Galloglass made by Oojah-Cum-Pivvy I thought I'd try the same approach to find the origin of these rather fine figures. I believe they were made in England, 54mm tall, they are made from some sort of composition material, they may have been made for a toy theatre or something like that.
My thoughts that they might have been made for a toy theatre prompted suggestions that they may have been Shakespearean characters such as Petruchio and Kate from Taming of the Shrew, they certainly have the arrogant stance for that couple. The period costumes have been well researched and carefully painted, I have seen examples of them before so I think they were produced commercially but not in large numbers.
Two more figures from the same series, a boy/Prince and a Monk, they are not the usual wood/glue composition or the plaster of Italian figures, perhaps more like the Blanc de Medun of some French types which is very hard, there is no armature. The base on the Prince is lead and not original but was added by a previous owner.
On the figure of the Boy it says "Courtier temp. Ric II Earl of March" on the man it says "Courtier temp. Edw IV" these were stickers added by the previous owner to notate who the figures represented in his personal collection, sadly he give no indication of their manufacturer, he uses the word temp. to abbreviate "time of".
I acquired them in one of James Opie's auctions for Phillips back in the 80's the seller had been a student of heraldry and his entire medieval collection along with his research archive were up for sale. The lots were all high end connoisseur figures, Courtenay, Ping etc which sold for serious money but these were in a lot of plastics, most of which were conversions to represent personalities in their heraldry, luckily nobody else wanted them so I was the only bidder. Being conversions, all of the figures had these paper stickers on the base to show who they represented.
To date their manufacturer has not been identified so if you recognise them please leave a comment to let us all know.
Fascinating, Brian. And so lucky they were produced in a scale that might see them utilised on the gaming table? I imagine the former owner was a rather well educated fellow, and never that far away from a place of learning. I will keep an eye out for any matching figures.
ReplyDeleteMichael (Wargaming with...)
Thanks Michael, I think they may be a bit too delicate to bring to the gaming table, but they could perhaps do a turn as set dressing.
DeleteLovely figures Brian and very interesting indeed! I certainly like the idea that the first two are Petruchio and Kate, they fit the bill perfectly!
ReplyDeleteThanks Brad, I think they have an elegance that puts them way above mere toys, I wish I knew more about them.
DeleteIntriguing figures. I look forward to hearing more..
ReplyDeleteAlan Tradgardland
Someone out there must know more about them Alan and I'm hoping we'll be able to put some flesh on the bones!
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