
Louis Thouverez, Paris, France, c. 1785. Dial is signed
Thouverez h[orlo]jer From his highness M. {on signueu} r Duke of Orleans.
Louis Thouverez is referred to in Baille's Watchmakers and Clockmaker's
of the World, p. 313 as Master 1788-1825. Single train great wheel with
rafter frame design. The great wheel is seven inches in diameter with
crossings being of 'Y' formation. Pinwheel escapement, gridiron, compensated
1/2 second pendulum on knife-edge suspension.
Upper dial with center seconds hand. Left hand dial showing date, day of
week and its zodiacal sign. Right hand dial indicating the months, their
zodiac sign and the seasons. White marble base with putti in bacchanal scene
frieze on front and science attributions, telescope and thermometer on
sides.
The clock was made about 1790 for the Duke of Orleans who was known as
'Philipe Egalite' because of his liberal tendencies. As leader of the
liberals and a Jacobin, the Duke of Orleans voted in January 1793 for the
death of his cousin Louis XVI and subsequently followed him to the
guillotine in November 1793, just a month after the King's wife, Marie
Antoinette met the same fate. His eldest son became King of France, as Louis
Phillipe, in 1830 and, when later deposed came to England, where he died.
The Duke of Orleans was an avid collector of skeleton clocks and may have
also been the one who commissioned a large and rare clock by
Ferdinand Berthoud.




Export passport from the French Ministry of Culture.