<?xml version="1.0"?>
<root>
  <admin>
    <added>1592970493000</added>
    <created>1312637261000</created>
    <flag>Standard Record</flag>
    <id>object-93986</id>
    <indexed>1747159728445</indexed>
    <modified>1476809536000</modified>
    <processed>1747159409017</processed>
    <source>adlib</source>
    <stream>fitz-online</stream>
    <uid>adlib-object-93986</uid>
    <uri>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/93986</uri>
    <uuid>17b6652d-3483-38c5-8543-bea4f030ae44</uuid>
    <version>4</version>
  </admin>
  <agents>
    <link>
      <relation>person</relation>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>agent-163300</id>
      <uid>adlib-agent-163300</uid>
      <uuid>12b31187-0e64-329a-9823-fa9f514ac477</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Francis III of Lorraine (1708-65)</summary_title>
  </agents>
  <categories>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-37627</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-37627</uid>
      <uuid>254febfe-0021-3e45-89a7-d57ba40044c7</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>hard-paste porcelain</summary_title>
  </categories>
  <content>
    <motifs>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-98112</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-98112</uid>
        <uuid>32d115a4-d3ac-33b0-b126-2a3da0fdf139</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>portrait</summary_title>
    </motifs>
  </content>
  <department>
    <value>Applied Arts</value>
  </department>
  <description>
    <value>glazed hard-paste porcelain bust of Francis III of Lorraine wearing a laurel wreath, a neo-Roman breastplate, and a drape</value>
  </description>
  <description>
    <value>Glazed hard-paste porcelain.. The bust is attached to a circular socle. The sitter faces front, his head turned a quarter to his left. His hair falls down his back in curls with one tress over his right shoulder. He wears a laurel wreath, a neo-Roman scaled breastplate with a mask on the front, and a drape over his left shoulder which passes across his body and under the right arm.</value>
  </description>
  <exhibitions>
    <link>
      <catalogue>B7</catalogue>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>exhibition-1070</id>
      <uid>adlib-exhibition-1070</uid>
      <uuid>2cb713dc-899f-35df-9c15-515a05f38d48</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Plagiarism Personified? European Pottery and Porcelain Figures</summary_title>
  </exhibitions>
  <identifier>
    <accession_number>EC.4-1946</accession_number>
    <primary>1</primary>
    <type>accession number</type>
    <value>EC.4-1946</value>
  </identifier>
  <identifier>
    <priref>93986</priref>
    <type>priref</type>
    <value>93986</value>
  </identifier>
  <identifier>
    <type>uri</type>
    <uri>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/93986</uri>
    <value>https://data.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/id/object/93986</value>
  </identifier>
  <inscription>
    <location>on underside of socle</location>
    <method>painted underglaze in blue</method>
    <transcription>
      <value>a shield with two bars</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>Given by the Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum</credit_line>
  </legal>
  <lifecycle>
    <acquisition>
      <agents>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>agent-149645</id>
          <uid>adlib-agent-149645</uid>
          <uuid>10925b71-6838-30f7-a8dd-b68a2afaa14d</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>The Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum</summary_title>
      </agents>
      <date>
        <earliest>1946</earliest>
        <latest>1904</latest>
        <value>1946-04</value>
      </date>
      <method>
        <value>given</value>
      </method>
      <note>
        <value>Entry date: 1946-04</value>
      </note>
    </acquisition>
    <creation>
      <date>
        <earliest>1755</earliest>
        <from>
          <earliest>1755</earliest>
          <era>CE</era>
          <latest>1755</latest>
          <precision>circa</precision>
          <value>1755</value>
        </from>
        <latest>1760</latest>
        <range>1</range>
        <to>
          <earliest>1760</earliest>
          <era>CE</era>
          <latest>1760</latest>
          <value>1760</value>
        </to>
      </date>
      <maker>
        <link>
          <role>
            <value>factory</value>
          </role>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>agent-183254</id>
          <uid>adlib-agent-183254</uid>
          <uuid>59d2561b-9625-33db-b9bd-ba1d18fc4cf7</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>Imperial Porcelain Factory</summary_title>
      </maker>
      <maker>
        <link>
          <qualifier>probably</qualifier>
          <role>
            <value>modeller</value>
          </role>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>agent-163299</id>
          <uid>adlib-agent-163299</uid>
          <uuid>549fd6e6-cf85-344a-92fa-ee0632444991</uuid>
        </admin>
        <summary_title>Niedermayer, Joseph</summary_title>
      </maker>
      <note>
        <value>Francis III of Lorraine (1708-65) married the Empress Maria Theresa in 1736, but did not acquire the title of Emperor Francis I until 1745. The bust was probably modelled by  Joseph Niedermayer (chief modeller 1747-his death in 1784). The bust shows the Emperor looking much younger than he was when it was made.</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>
      <places>
        <link>
          <type>reference</type>
        </link>
        <admin>
          <id>term-106549</id>
          <uid>adlib-term-106549</uid>
          <uuid>bebefaab-bfd1-345f-9ab4-37e02f955c86</uuid>
        </admin>
        <hierarchies>
          <link>
            <type>literal</type>
          </link>
          <name>
            <value>Austria</value>
          </name>
          <summary_title>Austria</summary_title>
          <type>country</type>
        </hierarchies>
        <summary_title>Vienna</summary_title>
      </places>
    </creation>
  </lifecycle>
  <materials>
    <note>
      <value>clear</value>
    </note>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-32652</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-32652</uid>
        <uuid>82d8ae3b-f165-395c-ba93-dfa1c282b7be</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>glaze</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </materials>
  <materials>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-37627</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-37627</uid>
        <uuid>254febfe-0021-3e45-89a7-d57ba40044c7</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>hard-paste porcelain</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </materials>
  <measurements>
    <dimensions>
      <dimension>Height</dimension>
      <units>cm</units>
      <value>18.6</value>
    </dimensions>
  </measurements>
  <name>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-23035</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-23035</uid>
        <uuid>f9693b6b-2e4a-3666-acf8-973403f65fce</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>bust</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </name>
  <note>
    <type>history note</type>
    <value>H.E. Backer, 1 Elm Tree Road, St John's Wood, London NW8 from whom purchased for &#xA3;18 by the Friends of the Fitzwilliam Museum</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>Publ. no. 6 and pl. top left, no. 6</notes>
      <page>3, 6</page>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>publication-4673</id>
      <uid>adlib-publication-4673</uid>
      <uuid>59691179-9ecb-3167-8c3d-13a9c5603332</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Friends of the Fitzwilliam Thirty-Eighth Annual Report for the Year 1946</summary_title>
  </publications>
  <publications>
    <link>
      <notes>Publ. p. 18, B7</notes>
      <page>18</page>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>publication-992</id>
      <uid>adlib-publication-992</uid>
      <uuid>e26b9de8-5607-3d6e-82c1-bba7d8cb57c4</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Plagiarism Personified? European Pottery and Porcelain Figures</summary_title>
  </publications>
  <publications>
    <link>
      <notes>Publ. p. 30, fig. 4, dated to c. 1755-60</notes>
      <page>28-31</page>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>publication-200001808</id>
      <uid>adlib-publication-200001808</uid>
      <uuid>4ecd0a47-10ab-3565-b68b-295ade035470</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>Influence in Porcelain</summary_title>
  </publications>
  <school_or_style>
    <link>
      <type>reference</type>
    </link>
    <admin>
      <id>term-914</id>
      <uid>adlib-term-914</uid>
      <uuid>ded99d2c-9208-3a9c-bca5-e5d2308ec3b6</uuid>
    </admin>
    <summary_title>classicizing</summary_title>
  </school_or_style>
  <summary>
    <reference>
      <link>
        <type>reference</type>
      </link>
      <admin>
        <id>term-23035</id>
        <uid>adlib-term-23035</uid>
        <uuid>f9693b6b-2e4a-3666-acf8-973403f65fce</uuid>
      </admin>
      <summary_title>bust</summary_title>
    </reference>
  </summary>
  <summary_title>bust</summary_title>
  <techniques>
    <description>
      <value>hard-paste porcelain, moulded, and glazed; the mould lines on the socle are visible on  right and left</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>
  <title>
    <value>Bust of Francis III of Lorraine  (1708-65)</value>
  </title>
  <type>
    <base>object</base>
    <type>OBJECT</type>
  </type>
</root>
