104th Auction

2021/5/22

Lot 160

Philipp Matthäus Hahn à Echterdingen

A German pocket watch of museum quality, with central second, date, months and their lengths display, moon phases in combination with duration of moonlight divided into quarter segments in red and black, and the planets associated to the days. The watch is illustrated and described in Philipp Matthäus Hahn‘s work catalogue as number HWV 5.27

Sold

estimated
32.00040.000 €
Price realized
40.000 €
specific features
Case
12k pink gold.
Dial
Enamel.
Movement
Full plate movement, open barrel, cylinder escapement with steel cylinder, large five-arm brass balance with steel balance spring, open work balance bridge with regulator scale.
Diam.62 mm
Circa1785
Ctry.German
Wt.132 g


The white enamel dial has a main chapter ring with Arabic numerals indicating the seconds. Three subsidiary dials display the date in combination with the months and their lengths, the hours and minutes with Roman and Arabic numerals, and the moon phases in combination with duration of moonlight, divided into quarter segments (left half in red, right half in black, with Arabic numerals for night time) and the planets associated to the days.
The watch is illustrated and described in "Quellen und Schriften zu Philipp Matthäus Hahn", commissioned by the Württembergisches Landesmuseum in Stuttgart, published by Christian Väterlein, Part 1 Catalogue, Stuttgart 1989, p. 494f.
Philipp Matthaeus Hahn (1739-1790), minister of the parishes Onstmettingen, Kornwestheim and Echterdingen was an avid protestant clergyman, but also one of the most eminent precision mechanics and watch- and clockmakers of the 18th century. He produced a large number of high quality pocket watches, most of them with calendar and moon phase indications. Hahn created sun dials and hall clocks as well as astronomical bracket clocks and calendar movements of exceptional mechanical quality and attractive design. Today his large observatory clock is one of the highlights of the clock museum in Furtwangen. He was the first maker in Germany to use the cylinder excapement in his pocket watches. Hahn was also very interested in the production of calculators and scales and laid the foundation for Wuerttemberg's industry of weighing machines, which still enjoys an international reputation today. His sons continued his work and signed their watches and clocks with the signature "Hahn, Hofmechanikus Stuttgart". Along with his sons Christoph Matthaeus, Johann Georg, Christian Gottfried and Immanuel, Hahn's brothers Georg David Polykarp and Egidius Stephanius Gottfried also worked temporarily in his workshop. The most notable makers in Hahn's group were Jacob Auch, Georg Matthäus Burger, Georg Joseph Sandra, Philipp Gottfried Schaudt, Johann Gottfried Ewald Sechting, Mauritius Steiner and Christoph Friedrich Strubel.
Source: "Meister der Uhrmacherkunst", Juergen Abeler, 1977