Highly collectable Elizabeth I silver West Country
seal top spoon of extremely good form and patina. Made by Steven More of Totnes
in circa 1585. Signs of gilding are still visible on the seal, which is joined
to the stem by a lap join. The top of the seal has the date 1652 pinpricked in
the centre with the initials M P pinpricked above and M D beneath the date.
Maker :- Steven More
Condition :-Excellent condition with a very
good patina. The latter half of the maker's mark is very clear on the base of
the back of the stem but the cinquefoil in the bowl is lightly struck and only
partially visible
Hallmarked :- West Country 1585
Size :- 6.6 inches (16.8 cm)
long
Weight :- 1.14ozt (35.3 g)
It is intriguing to surmise why the date
pinpricked on the top of the seal is some sixty years later than the
approximate date that the spoon was made. It may well have been a marriage or
an anniversary. Steven More was buried in Totnes on July 24th 1613. He was
admitted to freedom at Exeter in 1560-3 and was still there when his son was
baptised in 1572. However, More had migrated to Totnes by 1574 when his second
son was baptised there. See "West Country Silver Spoons and their
Marks" by Timothy Kent. The earliest recorded English seal top spoon was
circa 1525 but the majority of these spoons were made in the 17th century and
their popularity faded out by the end of that century. The seal top finials
were never intended to be used as a seal.