Help identifying large Gothic Medieval Monastery Cabinet
Started by monsterbuck1974 · January 30, 2010 · 7 posts
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Victorian Furniture thread on victorianforum.com · started January 30, 2010 by monsterbuck1974 · 7 posts · discussion in 2010.
Looking for help on identifying this cabnet. I dont know anything about it and cant find anything that matches exactly on the net. Any help on identifying it and its possible worth would be appreciated. Thanks, Brian
Looking for help on identifying this cabnet. I dont know anything about it and cant find anything that matches exactly on the net. Any help on identifying it and its possible worth would be appreciated.
I see no one has tackled this one. Trying to find any sort of expert on Medieval furniture in the US will be a real trick. From what little I know this looks like a 15th-century form--late Medieval--and relates to a form I call a Court Cupboard. But anything in this country that is supposed to be this old must be studied with a very suspicious eye. Actually, if it was acquired in Europe, that wouldn't make it less suspicious. Very little medieval furniture survives, and a lot of it has been improved or altered over time. I'll bet that even your good photographs aren't going to help anyone come to a definitive answer. The really tricky thing is that parts of it could be medieval, assembled by a clever craftsman into a believable whole. You'd be wise to send the images to a place like the Cloisters, in NYC, the medieval wing of the Metropolitan Museum.
Hi..I agree, in the late 1800s English furniture from the 1600s and 1700s were extensively repaired with pieces from cannibalized leftovers..these were sold in England and brought to the US by the boatloads. They now have 120 years on them and look quite good at times..Looking at the condition of your backing as well as other parts it could be a later creation from the mid to late 1800s..I have a number of "early" English pieces in my collection..they all have extensive wear and evidence of age..cracks, mouse holes, later modifications..and they all appear to be reconstructed somewhere along the line.
always hard to pick details of construction from photos. English or continental 1860-80. Gothic revival. Species of oak appears to be European. Saw marks on back boards and bottom look wrong for pitsaw type of cutting. Are the hinges fastened to case with clinch nails or screws? I have handled a few cabinets of this sort that were American c. 1925 that had amazing detail and were actually for early radio sets.
The saw marks give it away as not period. Period cupboards,chests were made of "riven" (split with a froe, then hand planed into boards) wood. The link below is a dealer who specializes in this type of period furniture.
True. This isn't a period piece. There's too much evidence to the contrary. I'd agree that this is probably an early twentieth century piece. If anything, parts of and older cabinet may have been married into it, but I doubt that. It looks too purposeful and planned out to be a marriage. As far as value, the safest thing to do is do an online search for local antique appraisers. Get a two or three opinions. Most appraisers won't charge much of anything, and will be able to help put you in the right direction to sell the piece.