ROPSHA SERVICE FOR THE WINTER PALACE. - Lot 182

Lot 182
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Estimation :
3000 - 5000 EUR
ROPSHA SERVICE FOR THE WINTER PALACE. - Lot 182
ROPSHA SERVICE FOR THE WINTER PALACE. Imperial Manufactory, St. Petersburg, Nicholas II period. Set of two hard porcelain dessert plates, with central decoration of a gold rosette bordered by a frieze of gold palmettes on a blue background. Age wear, missing gilding, but overall good condition. Green marks on reverse: HII (Nicolas II) under imperial crown dated (18)98 and (19)07. Diameter: 21.5 cm, 22.5 cm. History: This service was commissioned during the reign of Emperor Nicholas I by the Minister of the Imperial Court, Prince P. Volkonsky (1770-1882), for the Winter Palace. It was designed for 60 people and included table and dessert services, for a total of 1,500 pieces. This number was later increased by successive additions to the service. The 1830 inventory of the palace storerooms already included this service and named it "Service ministériel", comprising 100 dinner plates, 60 soup plates, oval and round dishes, salad bowls, saucers on stands, bottle holders, ice buckets, sugar bowls and cups. In 1857, the service was increased to 80 place settings, and in the second half of the 19th century a tea service was added. After 1853, part of the service, including a dessert service, vases and candelabras, was transferred to the Ropsha Palace near Péterhof, and it was at this time that it became known as the "Ropsha Service". Subsequently, under previous reigns, this service was often added to. This led to the creation of restocking pieces, such as these two plates from the time of Russia's last tsar, Emperor Nicholas II.
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