A MID 19TH CENTURY GERMAN PRESENTATION SILVER TEA SERVICE, PRESENTED BY AUGUSTUS VON OLDENBURG, GRAND DUKE OF OLDENBURG TO CLARA LASIUS, AS REWARD FOR SERVICES TO THE DUKE AS GOVERNESS OF HIS DAUGHTER, PRINCESS FRIEDERIKE VON OLDENBURG, PRESENTED FOLLOWING CLARA LASIUS’S RETIREMENT ON THE COMING OF AGE OF PRINCESS FRIEDERIKE IN 1840, comprising teapot, sugar bowl, milk jug, tea strainer, sugar tongs and twelve teaspoons, the sugar bowl fitted to hold the teaspoons when in use. All items except the sugar bowl and milk jug with maker’s mark “Muller” and fineness mark “12” (indicating .750 fine silver), and all items, except the sugar tongs, additionally engraved with “CL” monogram (for Clara Lasius), total weight 1,250 grams, the set contained in its original custom-made, green silk lined, brass mounted mahogany traveling “campaign” box, with fitted green baize line compartments to house each piece, and complete with original lock and key.
The tea service is accompanied by two original manuscript letters from Clara Lasius’s nephew, the German and Swiss architect Dr. Georg Lasius (Oldenburg 1835 - Zurich 1928), and his son in law Julius. Georg confirming in his letter that the tea service was presented to Clara Lasius by Augustus, Grand Duke of Oldenburg and Julius’s letter confirming that the tea service was a Lasius family heirloom, handed down through generations of the family.Clara Lasius (1797-1877) was born into a prominent Oldenburg family, being the daughter of Georg Siegmund Otto Lasius (1752-1833), the Oldenburg mineralogist, geologist and engineer, and sister of the Oldenburg architect Otto Lasius (1797-1888).
Clara Lasius, during her career as a governess, in addition to being employed by the Grand Duke of Oldenburg, also traveled widely and was governess to a number of other prominent European families, including the Prince of Pless.
Clara’s father, Georg Siegmund Otto Lasius, first saw service with the Engineering Corps of the Electorate of Braunschweig-Luneberg in 1770, afterwards saw service in the Engineering Corps of the states of Hanover and Westphalia and ended his career in the service of the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg from 1813 to his death in 1833. Georg Lasius was the author of the monumental, two volume “Observations on the Harz Mountains” along with numerous other treatises. His extensive collection of minerals and rock samples was purchased in 1821 by the Imperial Russian Institute in St Petersburg.
Dr Georg Lasius, the nephew of Clara Lasius and the author of the letter of provenance dated 8th April 1899, was the son of the Oldenburg architect Otto Lasius and grandson of the Oldenburg engineer Georg Siegmund Otto Lasius. Dr Georg Lasius worked extensively during his career as an architect in Germany, France and Switzerland and was awarded an honorary Doctorate by the University of Zurich in 1905.
August von Oldenburg, Grand Duke of Oldenburg (1783-1853, reigned 1829-1853), was a member of one of Europe’s most extensive regal dynasties, with branches that rule or have ruled Denmark, Iceland, Greece, Norway, Russia, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Schleswig Holstein, as well as Oldenburg. During the 19th century, Queen Victoria, then head of state of the United Kingdom, also ruled over the British Empire, the population of which, some 400 million people, constituted 23% of the world’s population at that time. Previous employment in the service of the Grand Duke of Oldenburg and the dynastic connections between Oldenburg and the wider world enabling Clara to pursue her career as a governess in various countries and states in Europe.George Washington’s great-grandfather, John Washington, a Royalist, fled to the Americas together with his brother Lawrence and a cousin, James Washington, following the Royalist defeat and the victory of Oliver Cromwell in the English civil war of 1646-1660, James Washington later left the American colonies and returned to Europe, eventually settling in Germany. Maximilian Emanuel von Washington’s father, Jacobus von Washington, a descendant of James Washington, was elevated by the Maximilian, Elector of Bavaria, to the position of hereditary knight as a reward for his services as a military adviser and by time he died in 1848 he had risen to the position of Grand Chamberlain and Commander-in-Chief of the Bavarian army.