Notes
Previously in the collection of Madame C.......this pair of watches was
sold in Paris at the Hotel Drouot on 3 February 1949, lot 64.
Swiss were good salesmen and they explained to the Chinese that
since China was so far away from Switzerland, it would be best to
purchase the watches in pairs so that when one needed to be sent
back to the maker for repair or overhaul, they could use the other
one in the meantime. Therefore, whether they were simple silver
watches or more prestigious executions, Chinese Market watches
were always sold in pairs.
As for a good many objects of art of Chinese origin most of the
prestigious Chinese Market watches that can now be found in the
West were brought back by soldiers following two major military
operations. The first event was in 1858 and led to the Occupation of
Peking on October 13th, 1860, after the Victory of Pa-Li Liao
(Palikao) on September 21st of that year and the sack of the
Summer Palace. At that time, the Summer Palace or "Yuan Ming
Yuan ", originally built by Jesuits at the beginning of the 18th
century, was entirely stripped of its treasures in revenge for the
tortures inflicted on Europeans. Later, other valuable objects were
looted by the troops of the international expeditionary force sent to
crush the Boxers revolt. These troops, under the commandment of
the German General Von Waldersee, were made up of French,
English, Germans, Italians, Austrians, Russians, Americans, and
Japanese. After the storming of Tien-Tsin, on July 14th, 1900, allied
troops entered Peking freeing the foreign legations and put to flight
the Empress 'l 's ' Eu-Hi. It is during these events, that the largest
number of objects were taken out of China.
It is therefore not surprising that it is rare today to find Chinese
Market watches as pairs given that the majority of such watches
brought back to the West following these events were divided up
after the roofings. Furthermore, the few Chinese Market watches
that did manage to return safely to Europe as pairs, were later split
up for inheritance purposes.