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George IV Mahogany Jupes Table

$267,758.70List Price

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A George IV Well Figured Mahogany Circular Dining Table in the Manner of Jupe
By Robert Jupe
Located in London, GB
A George IV Well Figured Mahogany Circular Dining Table in the Manner of Jupe The top with six double moulded leaves, resting on four robust turned acanthus carved supports, with a ...
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Antique Early 19th Century English George IV Dining Room Tables

Materials

Mahogany

A George IV Mahogany Drum Table
Located in London, GB
A George IV Mahogany Drum Table The revolving top with a tooled green leather insert, fitted with short drawers above split beading, on a panelled triform pedestal, the plinth with b...
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Antique Early 18th Century English George IV Tables

Materials

Leather, Mahogany

A George IV Mahogany Drum Table
$30,208
H 28.35 in W 48.82 in D 48.82 in
A Fine George IV Mahogany Extending Table
Located in London, GB
A Fine George IV Mahogany Extending Table In the manner of Robert Jupe. The circular moulded top with additional concentric outer leaves above four tapering columns united by an und...
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Antique Mid-19th Century English George IV Dining Room Tables

Materials

Mahogany

A Fine George IV Mahogany Extending Table
$52,865
H 28.75 in W 51.97 in D 51.97 in
Antique George III Mahogany Double Pedestal Dining Table
Located in Bridgeport, CT
Fine mahogany dining table with two leaves. Rounded top ends with fluted edge. The double pedestals carved and turned with curved notched ends. The attached outswept legs with eboniz...
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Antique 19th Century George III Dining Room Tables

Materials

Mahogany

Exceptional George IV Period Gold-Gilded Mahogany Breakfast or Entrance Table
Located in North Miami, FL
This exquisite George IV period mahogany breakfast or entrance table, dating to the 1820s, showcases superb craftsmanship and timeless elegance. The table features a boldly turned a...
Category

Antique 1820s British George IV Dining Room Tables

Materials

Mahogany

Early 19th Century George III Mahogany Table with One Expanding Leaf
Located in Long Island City, NY
Early 19th century George III mahogany table with one expanding leaf, the top with reeded edge supported on two turned baluster pods with out...
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Antique 1810s Irish George III Dining Room Tables

Materials

Mahogany

Antique English George IV Inlaid Mahogany Regency Style Drop-Leaf Sofa Table
Located in CHARLESTON, SC
Fine and rare antique English George IV period inlaid mahogany Regency drop-leaf sofa table, with handsome "lyre-shaped" side supports and splay legs terminating in cast brass paw fo...
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Antique Early 19th Century English George IV Sofa Tables

Materials

Mahogany

An Irish George IV Mahogany Dining Table, in style of Mack, Williams, & Gibton
By Mack, Williams & Gibton
Located in London, GB
An Exceptional Irish George IV Mahogany Dining Table, in the manner of Mack, Williams and Gibton With circular reeded top above a turn...
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Antique Early 19th Century Irish George IV Dining Room Tables

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Mahogany

Brand New Cluster Oak Extending Jupe Round Dining Tables Seats 6-12 People
By Bevan Funnell Ltd.
Located in West Sussex, Pulborough
We are delighted to this stunning brand new cluster oak Jupe round extending dining table This table is brand new, I have seven left in the c...
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21st Century and Contemporary English Modern Dining Room Tables

Materials

Brass

George IV Centre Table Attributed to Thomas & George Seddon, circa 1830
By Thomas & George Seddon
Located in Brighton, West Sussex
A Very Fine George IV Parcel-Gilt Amboyna Centre Table Attributed to Thomas & George Seddon. English, Circa 1830. The table is of finely figured Amboyna with a circular tilt-top above a triform column with parcel-gilt scrolled supports. It is raised on a conforming plinth base with foliate carved feet and concealed castors. George Seddon was the eighth child of John Seddon of Blakelea, Lancashire. His father apprenticed him to George Clemaphon of Cripplegate to learn cabinet making. He became a master cabinet maker. (He was Master of the Joiner’s Company in 1795). In the early 1750s he was sufficiently successful to acquire London House, Aldersgate Street. It consisted of extensive workshops, where furniture was made, and showrooms to display the finished products. London House had formerly been a palace of the Bishops of London. The panelled state-rooms were ideal for the display of fashionable furniture; and the chapel and library made convenient workshops. When Seddon married, he converted the garden house and infirmary into the family home. Seddon was the biggest furniture maker of his time. His furniture store covered a two acre site in Aldersgate Street. His workshop there was described by London visitor Sophie v. La Roche in 1786: "We drove first to Mr. Seddon's, a cabinet-maker,...He employs four hundred apprentices on any work connected with the making of household furniture—joiners, carvers, gilders...
Category

Antique Early 19th Century English George IV Center Tables

Materials

Wood

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