Lot 171 , China, 6 large bronze gua pendant charms or amulets, Qing dynasty,

China, 6 large bronze gua pendant charms or amulets, Qing dynasty,

China, 6 large bronze 'gua' pendant charms or amulets, Qing dynasty, two with obv. Daoist curse 'Lei Ling', rev. eight trigrams, 72mm high, near VF and 75mm high, good F, three with twelve branches and animals, two rev. pictorial, 71mm, F, and the third rev, Eight Trigrams, 70mm high, F, and the last charm obv. eight characters (may I attain the degree of Chuang Yuan and first place at Court), rev. fu and a deer, 6.7cm high
Estimate £150-200


Provenance - Alfred Theodore Arber-Cooke (c.1905-1993); thence by family descent. Arber-Cooke was an antiquarian and avid collector of Asian works of art, coins and antiquities principally collecting from the 1930s to the 1970s. He amassed a good reference library on Chinese & Asian coins and wrote on several occasions (1969-70) to to the academic F.A. Turk regarding the study of coin amulets and other non-currency coinages of China. A number of the Asian numismatic reference books will be offered in our 29th March sale.

Arber-Cooke initially lived in Wimbledon, Greater London and was involved with the Surrey Archaeological Society. He wrote the book 'Old Wimbledon', with a foreword the MP Sir Arthur Fell, published in 1927. He later moved to Llandovery in Carmarthenshire, Wales, again involved with local archaeology and wrote the History of Llandovery, published in 1975.


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Sold for £650