An extremely rare oval Meissen Portrait Medallion Augustus III, Circa 1737
An extremely rare oval Meissen Portrait Medallion Augustus III, modelled in profile and looking to the left, the ‘Roman headed’ King of Poland and Elector of Saxony modelled head and shoulders, wearing official stylised ‘Roman’ vestments or toga and the order and sash of the Golden Fleece. Suspension hooks applied to the partially glazed reverse.
This portrait plaque of Augustus lll appears to have only one other known example at the Zwinger in Germany. The King wears a furlined outergarment and hairstyle of the Polish ruling class.
See:
Our thanks to Maureen Cassidy-Geiger for the following information:
“The letter dated 1748, written by the Saxon Envoy in Rome, Carlo Taparelli, Count of Lagnasco, was written to the King thanking him for two medallions of the King and Queen”
This present medallion of Augustus lll is surely the one given to Carlo Taparelli, Count of Lagnasco.
Augustus III was the only legitimate son of Augustus II of Poland, he followed his father’s example by joining the Roman Catholic Church in 1712. In 1719 he married Maria Josepha, daughter of the Holy Roman emperor Joseph I and became elector of Saxony on his father’s death in 1733. As a candidate for the Polish crown, he secured the support of the emperor Charles VI by assenting to the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713, designed to preserve the integrity of the Habsburg inheritance, and that of the Russian empress Anna by supporting Russia’s claim to Courland. Chosen king by a small minority of electors on October 5, 1733, he drove his rival, the former Polish king StanisÅ‚aw I, into exile. He was crowned in Kraków on January 17, 1734, and was generally recognised as king in Warsaw in June 1736.
Augustus gave Saxon support to Austria against Prussia in the War of the Austrian Succession (1742) and again in the Seven Years War (1756). His last years were marked by the increasing influence of the Czartoryski and Poniatowski families, and by the intervention of Catherine the Great in Polish affairs. His rule deepened the anarchism in Poland and increased the country’s dependence on its neighbours. The Russian Empire, which had assisted him in his bid to succeed his father, prevented him from installing his family on the Polish throne, supporting instead the aristocrat StanisÅ‚aw August Poniatowski. During his reign, Augustus spent little time in Poland and more interested in ease and pleasure than in affairs of state, this notable patron of the arts left the administration of Saxony and Poland to his chief adviser, Count Heinrich von Brühl, who also ran the Meissen manufactory, who in turn left Polish administration chiefly to the powerful Czartoryski family.
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