96th Auction

2017/11/18

Lot 396

Bazile-Charles Le Roy - Horloger de S.A.I. et R. Madame à Paris, Case No. 2960, Movement No. 3082, 51 mm, 56 g, circa 1800
A very fine and rare gold and enamel "Montre Médaillon à Tact" studded with large gemstones, diamonds and pearls; a presentation pocket watch from the King of Westphalia with concealed dedication engraving "Donnée par le Roi". This is an extremely rare timepiece with acrostic jewellery, where the chosen gemstones spell out the words "HEURES D'AMOUR".
Case: 20k gold, enamel, gemstones, pearls, signed on the back cover. Case maker's punch mark "PBT" (Pierre- Benjamin Tavernier) Dial: gold plate with a small eccentric engine-turned dial with Roman numerals. Movm.: "Lepine" calibre, keywind, going barrel, cylinder escapement, three-arm brass balance.
"Forme Collier" case by Tavernier. Front and back with lavish radial engine-turned case decoration, translucent powder-blue enamelling, revolving front lid with applied diamond-studded arrow pointer "sous émail" indicating the hours. Engine-turned case band with lustrous, varicoloured gemstone touch studs, diamonds and pearls set in gold.
The French names of the gemstones used for the watch are Hessonite, Emeraude, Uvite, Rhodolite, Emeraude, Saphire, Diamant, Améthyste, Morganite, Opale, Uvite and Rhodolite - their initial letters spell the secret message "HEURES D'AMOUR".
At the time of French Empress Marie-Louise, the famous jeweller Chaumet in Paris created a book of fine gemstones and "rewrote" the alphabet with their initials, so that they could be used to spell out  names, poetic words or messages of love.
"Montre Médaillon à Tact"
Breguet was the first maker to come up with the design for this kind of watch - he sold the first one early in 1799 to Madame Betancourt, the wife of his best friend. He continued producing the watches in different variations, some with quite large touch pieces (like this watch) and some with small ones. The price for these watches that Breguet created for the wealthiest of his customers was between 10,000 and 15,000 francs. This was a truly enormous sum of money in the early 19th century, nevertheless the watches were highly sought after at the time. One of the reasons for their popularity was that at the time it was considered quite unseemly to read the time in public; these expensive pieces made it possible to tell the time without taking the watch out of one’s pocket. Breguet remained almost the only one to create this kind of watch; only Le Roy Horloger de S.A.I et R. Madame à Paris (Bazile-Charles Le Roy (1765-1839)) and very few others followed in his footsteps. Le Roy created a number of timepieces of this type - the most elaborate one for the Prince of Hesse, which had 17k diamond buttons for reading the time in the dark and is now owned by the Patek Philippe Museum in Geneva. The watch was made around 1810; it bears the number 3191 and is decorated with engine-turned pattern and enamel. It was created for Prince Emile Maximilian Leopold August of Hesse and by Rhine (1790-1856), who intended to give it away as a gift. The dome is engraved with an engraved and enamelled dedication: "Donné par Emile" (a gift from Emile). Our similar watch bears the concealed engraving Donné par le Roi (presented by the king). This probably refers to Napoleon’s brother Jerome Bonaparte, who - among other titles he bore - was King of Westphalia.
Bazile-Charles Le Roy (1765-1839) was an ingenious watchmaker who created high quality pocket watches and naval chronometers. He was among the first in France to ever use the lever escapement in his watches. He created some watches in the style of Lepine early in his career, but soon drew his inspiration from Breguet and his bridge calibers.
In 1805 Bazile-Charles Le Roy was appointed "maker to Madame Mère de l'Empereur". In a close relationship with Napoleon and his family, Bazile-Charles produced clocks and watches of supreme quality; among them were traditional clocks as well as decimal clocks, Montres à tact or timepieces with sonnerie.
At the time when the French Revolution ended, the house Le Roy was known as one of the leading makers of pendulum and travel clocks in Paris; the majority of the clocks was produced for the officers of Napoleon’s campaigns. Bazile-Charles Le Roy was soon appointed "maker to the imperial court" of Napoleon I, who had just been crowned in the cathedral of Notre-Dame in Paris; also, of course "maker to Madame Mère de l'Empereur" (Napoleon’s mother), "maker to the King of Westphalia" (Jérôme Bonaparte, Napoleon’s brother), and even "maker to Princess Pauline" (Napoleon’s sister).
The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore owns a "Montre Médaillon à Tact" decorated with red enamel and studded with diamonds and pearls. It was made between 1805 and 1809 for Napoleon’s mother Maria Letizia Bonaparte (1750-1836), who had lost her sight. The watch was made by Bazile-Charles Le Roy (1765-1839) and is signed "LE ROY Hgr. DE S.A. Ile ET Rle. MADAME A PARIS 2691". The case number is 2896.

Sold

estimated
30.00060.000 €
Price realized
59.600 €