<?xml version="1.0"?>
<root>
  <admin>
    <added>1592984497000</added>
    <created>1312637261000</created>
    <flag>Standard Record</flag>
    <id>object-118588</id>
    <indexed>1747160479781</indexed>
    <modified>1713798856000</modified>
    <processed>1747159409017</processed>
    <source>adlib</source>
    <stream>fitz-online</stream>
    <uid>adlib-object-118588</uid>
    <uri>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/118588</uri>
    <uuid>c362c1f5-d6f3-34ae-8504-8affb6010d31</uuid>
    <version>6</version>
  </admin>
  <categories>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-37637</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-37637</uid>
      <uuid>89b09133-dc0a-3a88-bd40-5aef1ad30ecb</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>soft-paste porcelain</summary_title>
  </categories>
  <component>
    <materials>
      <note>
        <value>red, yellow, green, brown, and puce</value>
      </note>
      <reference>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-32638</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-32638</uid>
          <uuid>97b8d1a5-7b8f-3a2a-a275-7d001aeaae2b</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>enamel</summary_title>
      </reference>
    </materials>
    <name>Decoration</name>
    <techniques>
      <note>
        <value>in red, yellow, green, brown, and puce enamels</value>
      </note>
      <reference>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-120086</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-120086</uid>
          <uuid>cdecca31-5ec3-3fe3-9e5d-455d9771fda5</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>painting overglaze</summary_title>
      </reference>
    </techniques>
  </component>
  <department>
    <value>Applied Arts</value>
  </department>
  <description>
    <value>Soft-paste porcelain saucer dish, moulded, and painted overglaze in polychrome enamels with fruit and insects.</value>
  </description>
  <description>
    <value>Soft-paste porcelain saucer dish, moulded and painted overglaze in red, yellow, green, brown, and puce enamels. The circular dish has shallow curved sides  and a feather-edged rim. The inside is decorated with a cluster of walnuts, plums, raspberries, and a pear, with three scattered insects. the border is picked out in turquoise and brown.</value>
  </description>
  <identifier>
    <accession_number>C.71-1933</accession_number>
    <primary>1</primary>
    <type>accession number</type>
    <value>C.71-1933</value>
  </identifier>
  <identifier>
    <priref>118588</priref>
    <type>priref</type>
    <value>118588</value>
  </identifier>
  <identifier>
    <type>uri</type>
    <uri>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/118588</uri>
    <value>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/118588</value>
  </identifier>
  <inscription>
    <method>painted in brown enamel</method>
    <transcription>
      <value>an anchor</value>
    </transcription>
    <type>factory mark</type>
  </inscription>
  <institutions>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>agent-149638</id>
      <uid>adlib-agent-149638</uid>
      <uuid>7376d833-d0a7-3be0-916e-9c892b7a24d8</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>The Fitzwilliam Museum</summary_title>
  </institutions>
  <legal>
    <credit_line>Bequeathed by the Rev. A.V. Valentine-Richards</credit_line>
  </legal>
  <lifecycle>
    <acquisition>
      <agents>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>agent-166300</id>
          <uid>adlib-agent-166300</uid>
          <uuid>64cc72e4-9974-3689-8c93-1065b3faefaa</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>Valentine-Richards, A. V., The Rev</summary_title>
      </agents>
      <date>
        <earliest>1933</earliest>
        <latest>1933</latest>
        <value>1933-04-03</value>
      </date>
      <method>
        <value>bequeathed</value>
      </method>
      <note>
        <value>Entry date: 1933-04-03</value>
      </note>
    </acquisition>
    <creation>
      <date>
        <earliest>1762</earliest>
        <from>
          <earliest>1762</earliest>
          <era>CE</era>
          <latest>1762</latest>
          <precision>circa</precision>
          <value>1762</value>
        </from>
        <latest>1765</latest>
        <note>
          <value>The brown anchor mark is associated with ungilded wares of the gold anchor period, c. 1759-69</value>
        </note>
        <range>1</range>
        <to>
          <earliest>1765</earliest>
          <era>CE</era>
          <latest>1765</latest>
          <precision>circa</precision>
          <value>1765</value>
        </to>
      </date>
      <maker>
        <link>
          <role>
            <value>factory</value>
          </role>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>agent-157802</id>
          <uid>adlib-agent-157802</uid>
          <uuid>e51ed5e2-3605-39a0-b953-487f1f622a3a</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>Chelsea Porcelain Manufactory</summary_title>
      </maker>
      <note>
        <value>Feather-moulded borders were first used at Chelsea c.1755, and continued in production throughout the Chelsea-Derby period. They are also found on Staffordshire salt-glazed stoneware and cream-coloured erthenwares.</value>
      </note>
      <note>
        <value>The bold style of fruit painting is comparable to two plates from a service, at one time owned by the Duke of Cambridge, a grandson of George II. It  was to influence the fruit painting undertaken in the London atelier of James Giles during the late 1760s, and the painting on a Worcester service, made c. 1775-8 for William Henry, Duke of Gloucester, brother of the Duke of Cambridge who owned the Chelsea service.</value>
      </note>
      <periods>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-113159</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-113159</uid>
          <uuid>4bdfb4a7-b307-3dfa-a3d6-8ada4683271e</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>18th Century, third quarter</summary_title>
      </periods>
      <periods>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-113160</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-113160</uid>
          <uuid>c2be1bf6-21bd-3f71-bc96-71c8ff2fa6f3</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>Gold anchor period (1759-69)</summary_title>
      </periods>
      <periods>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-107437</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-107437</uid>
          <uuid>96f4b0d1-fc11-39ff-ae91-1b23d888d479</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>George III</summary_title>
      </periods>
      <places>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-106998</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-106998</uid>
          <uuid>e3be6de7-1089-333e-a2e9-d7165b18816d</uuid>
        </admin>
        <hierarchies>
          <link>
            <type>literal</type>
          </link>
          <name>
            <value>England</value>
          </name>
          <summary_title>England</summary_title>
          <type>country</type>
        </hierarchies>
        <hierarchies>
          <link>
            <type>literal</type>
          </link>
          <name>
            <value>Middlesex</value>
          </name>
          <summary_title>Middlesex</summary_title>
          <type>region</type>
        </hierarchies>
        <summary_title>Chelsea</summary_title>
      </places>
    </creation>
  </lifecycle>
  <materials>
    <note>
      <value>presumed lead</value>
    </note>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-107733</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-107733</uid>
        <uuid>00160189-e3ce-3796-a88b-5aa8d6c808c4</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>lead-glaze</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </materials>
  <materials>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-37637</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-37637</uid>
        <uuid>89b09133-dc0a-3a88-bd40-5aef1ad30ecb</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>soft-paste porcelain</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </materials>
  <measurements>
    <dimensions>
      <dimension>Diameter</dimension>
      <units>cm</units>
      <value>20</value>
    </dimensions>
    <dimensions>
      <dimension>Height</dimension>
      <units>cm</units>
      <value>2.8</value>
    </dimensions>
  </measurements>
  <name>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-107625</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-107625</uid>
        <uuid>e9b42e9d-4c0f-3b11-a717-64766aa69da9</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>saucer dish</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </name>
  <name>
    <value>dish</value>
  </name>
  <note>
    <type>history note</type>
    <value>Unknown before testator</value>
  </note>
  <owners>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>agent-149638</id>
      <uid>adlib-agent-149638</uid>
      <uuid>7376d833-d0a7-3be0-916e-9c892b7a24d8</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>The Fitzwilliam Museum</summary_title>
  </owners>
  <publications>
    <link>
      <notes>Cf. p. 5, no. 47, two plates from the Duke of Cambridge's service</notes>
      <page>5</page>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>publication-3581</id>
      <uid>adlib-publication-3581</uid>
      <uuid>2bd80828-2abc-333e-821a-a8db58382b9e</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>The Bowles Collection of 18th-Century English and French Porcelain</summary_title>
  </publications>
  <school_or_style>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-9010</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-9010</uid>
      <uuid>ecd03def-5d2a-3b43-bb92-76be16fbabf6</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Rococo</summary_title>
  </school_or_style>
  <subjects>
    <link>
      <relation>animal</relation>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-107302</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-107302</uid>
      <uuid>d727045b-558d-3447-887c-20aaf0d8e6f5</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>insect</summary_title>
  </subjects>
  <subjects>
    <link>
      <relation>plant</relation>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-31178</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-31178</uid>
      <uuid>1fff7cde-5cf7-35d7-931c-f1dba7699972</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>fruit</summary_title>
  </subjects>
  <subjects>
    <link>
      <type>literal</type>
    </link>
    <name>
      <value>insect</value>
    </name>
    <summary_title>insect</summary_title>
  </subjects>
  <subjects>
    <link>
      <type>literal</type>
    </link>
    <name>
      <value>fruit</value>
    </name>
    <summary_title>fruit</summary_title>
  </subjects>
  <summary>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-107625</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-107625</uid>
        <uuid>e9b42e9d-4c0f-3b11-a717-64766aa69da9</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>saucer dish</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </summary>
  <summary_title>saucer dish</summary_title>
  <techniques>
    <description>
      <value>saucer dish of soft-paste porcelain, moulded, and painted overglaze in polychrome enamels with fruit and insects</value>
    </description>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-111179</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-111179</uid>
        <uuid>be5c887b-c0ed-3d89-82b2-c3a870e72a68</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>moulding</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </techniques>
  <techniques>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-27616</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-27616</uid>
        <uuid>61e6a95d-84c8-3893-b6c8-213392262987</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>glazing (coating)</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </techniques>
  <type>
    <base>object</base>
    <type>OBJECT</type>
  </type>
</root>
