"Six Cups De Sevres Table Service From King Louis-philippe"
Six cups hard porcelain agate blue background, decorated in shades of gold in the center of a radiating pendant with foliage and on the wing of a frieze of palmette leaves and golden wolf teeth. Gold thread on the edges and the reverse. Marked in blue Year 1833 (2) 1834 (2) 1847 (2), marks the Château de Saint-Cloud in red. These saucers were part of the table service of King Louis-Philippe, King of the French, the castle of Saint-Cloud. Brands of gilder million for Jean-Louis Moyez. Brands recessed molders; In 1830, the Duke of Orleans is appointed king of the French after the revolution which led the Three Glorious Charles X to abdicate. The king has nine children and he settled with his family in the old royal and imperial residences such as Trianon, Les Tuileries, Saint-Cloud or Fontainebleau and in his private residences including Neuilly, Eu, Dreux, or Bizy . Louis Philippe removes the large covered and introduces four types of Sèvres porcelain service which wealth determines the recipient: Service Offices, the Officers Service, the Bals Service, and the Service des Princes. The parts of these services then take those major services performed at Sèvres since the early nineteenth century. Some parts of the Services is present in several national museum.