These are some of the items belonging to my great-grandparents. They were married in Randers in Denmark in 1869 and moved to England soon afterwards, so all of the items relate to that date or earlier. From this site I know about the three towers mark, although I can't read some of the dates.
The first (the oldest) belonged to the bride's father. I can see the mark for Peter Hinnerup, but presumably the P Hertz is the father of the one who is mentioned on this site with a date of 1893? And is the 56 a date mark?
This second fork belonged to the couple. I think the date is 69 and I think the mark is Simon Groth, but the same question applies about the identity of P Hertz.
(admin photo edit - images too large - link only - see Posting Requirements )
(admin edit - Please start a new topic with your other item - see Posting Requirements )
Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
Re: Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
please post photos - not links.
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Re: Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
I did post photos, and I could see them yesterday. Admin has presumably decided to remove them. If the sizes on the posting requirements were shown in pixels then I would be able to edit them down to the correct size. In inches or centimetres I have no idea what size they are when I post them. On my Ipad they're well below 7 inches.
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- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Feb 27, 2014 2:41 pm
Re: Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
OK, second attempt. To illustrate the point I was making about photo sizes, I looked up the pixel/size conversion. On my monitor with a display resolution of 100 dpi these photos are 7 inches wide. However, according to the website, if your monitor's resolution is only 75 dpi, which is common, apparently, then the pictures will be 9.33 inches wide. That's why quoting sizes in pixels would be far more sensible.
These are some of the items belonging to my great-grandparents. They were married in Randers in Denmark in 1869 and moved to England soon afterwards, so all of the items relate to that date or earlier. From this site I know about the three towers mark, although I can't read some of the dates.
The first (probably the oldest) originally belonged to the bride's father. I can see a mark that I think is Peter Hinnerup, but presumably the P Hertz is the father of the one who is mentioned on this site with a date of 1893? And is the 56 a date mark?
This second belonged to the couple. I think the date is 69 and I think the mark is Simon Groth (?), but the same question applies about the identity of P Hertz.
These are some of the items belonging to my great-grandparents. They were married in Randers in Denmark in 1869 and moved to England soon afterwards, so all of the items relate to that date or earlier. From this site I know about the three towers mark, although I can't read some of the dates.
The first (probably the oldest) originally belonged to the bride's father. I can see a mark that I think is Peter Hinnerup, but presumably the P Hertz is the father of the one who is mentioned on this site with a date of 1893? And is the 56 a date mark?
This second belonged to the couple. I think the date is 69 and I think the mark is Simon Groth (?), but the same question applies about the identity of P Hertz.
Re: Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
its 1869 and 1856
Peter Hertz born 1811 in Copenhagen work from age of 14.
1830-33 as silversmith in Copenhagen, Hamburg and Bremen. Citien ship 29/10-1834 etc etc
Exhibit on world expo in London 1862
Founder of the Heretz dynasty
Dies 1885
Peter Hertz born 1811 in Copenhagen work from age of 14.
1830-33 as silversmith in Copenhagen, Hamburg and Bremen. Citien ship 29/10-1834 etc etc
Exhibit on world expo in London 1862
Founder of the Heretz dynasty
Dies 1885
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- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Feb 27, 2014 2:41 pm
Re: Danish Mid-19th Century Silver
Thanks for the information.