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I need help identifying a maker's mark on a sterling silver tastevin (wine taster's cup), 3.25" diameter, with no ornamentation except the serpent shaped handle/thumb rest and the engraving "V (solid 5-point star) MAQUIGNAU (solid 5-point star) 1807 (solid 5-point star)" on the outer rim where the serpent's tail comes to a point. On the bottom are four marks: a rooster (1708-1809) French standard/title mark; the body is facing right and head is facing left and the number "1" is next to its right foot (the viewer's left); the guarantee mark is a (1708 - 1809) "middle" size head with the numeral 9 on the left and numeral 5 on the right. The maker's mark appears three times with the initials TG above a starburst nside a lozenge or diamond shape. Maybe it appears three times because none of them is complete.
Hello and welcome to the forum
I believe these marks are spurious for the following reasons:
-Concordance of the marks. You have a silver standard mark used in Paris for 950 standard silver from 1798-1809 (not 1709). You have a guarantee mark for the provinces for the same time period of a man in a circular reserve for the département of Vienne. There is no concordance between these 2 marks.
-Placement of the marks. Tastevins should be marked on the rim of the cup, close to the handle.
-Missing mark. The thumb piece should be marked with a silver standard mark.
-Fantasy maker’s mark. The maker’s mark in a lozenge-shaped reserve is too large. Being stamped 3 times is meant to give the impression of a maître abonné from the Ancien régime.
The engraving of a name and date are a personalization.
As I've written on this forum before, French tastevins are an endless source of fakery and reproductions. I'm open to any further research, but right now I think yours is a fake.
Yikes! I just took another look at the silver standard mark of the standing cock in an octagonal reserve. The “1” should be on the right, not the left. Definitely a spurious mark.
On the post about the 1 being on the left of the rooster, doesn't that simply mean it's non-Paris? That's what I've seen elsewhere, or is that information wrong?
Thanks for your responses. Disappointed to learn the marks are fake, making the silver piece unauthenticated, but I'm curious as to why someone would have done this. It's a lovely piece otherwise. Thanks again. You were all helpful.
Heidi
I have to say that I'm not as certain as others that this is fake. The assay office and guarantee marks look perfectly genuine to me; as noted, the "1" was indeed on the left in the provincial rooster mark of the period. The "95" in the medium guarantee mark of this period indicated the Seine-Inferieure (now Seine-Maritime) department, which had two assay offices, in Rouen and Le Havre (there may or may not be a small pellet in the mark under the "5" indicating the Le Havre office). Also - and my memory might fail me here - I think the precise marking places on pieces was not mandated until 1838.
That said, the maker's mark does not appear in Claude-Gerard Les Orfevres de la Normandie, which has a pretty comprehensive survey of early 19th century marks of the region. Still, this can't be taken as definitive as the record of a small provincial maker might well have been lost.
It has been pointed out to me that I have made an error; department 95 at the period was Vienne, which had one assay office in Poitiers (until a second was opened in Chatellerault 1824 to accommodate the many cutlers who worked there and whose silver-bladed fruit and dessert knives are a particular fascination of mine). Seine-Inferieure was department 86 at the time, and was not 95 until the 1809 cycle of marks. (A rather embarrassing mistake, as I have for some time been working on a comprehensive list of 19th century French assay offices, their marks and dates of operation. Mea maxima culpa.)
Again, sadly, the standard reference for the Poitou-Charentes region, Elie Pailloux's Orfevres et Poincons XVII - XVIII - XIX: Poitou, Angoumois, Aunis, Saintonge does not show this maker's mark. Being familiar with silver knives of the region, I do know that crudely-cut, unrecorded maker's punches such as this are not uncommon in the early 19th century Poitou-Charentes.