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British
Sterling Silver Hallmarks
Many people contact us to ask about the silver
hallmarks that are located on their sterling silver flatware, tea
sets, and hollowware. This page is built to try and explain some of
these markings.
Great link to details on various metals like
sterling, silverplate, stainless, brass and pewter.
A silver hallmark is nothing more than an indication
of metal content and its purity or quality. It may or may not
include the manufacturer’s mark or location of origin. A
manufacturer’s mark or “maker’s mark” alone are not necessarily
considered hallmarks.
The word hallmark is derived from London’s
Goldsmiths’ Hall of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, the
originator of Britain’s first hallmarks, which still maintains a
record of all British Sterling Silver Hallmarks. Depending on country of
origin, hallmarks can also include symbols for place of origin.
Sterling silver hallmark etching and engraving have been in use
in England and France since the 14th century. Most other
European countries also use hallmarks. The United States has never
used hallmarks per se.
British Sterling Silver Hallmarks
The British system of hallmarking is somewhat
complex, but relatively easy to follow once the system is
deciphered. British Sterling Silver Hallmarks include a fineness or purity mark, an
assay office mark, a date letter, and usually but not always, a
maker’s mark.
Many people contact us to ask about the silver
hallmarks that are located on their sterling silver flatware, tea
sets, and hollowware. This page is built to try and explain some of
these markings.
Great link to details on various metals like
sterling, silverplate, stainless, brass and pewter.
A silver hallmark is nothing more than an indication
of metal content and its purity or quality. It may or may not
include the manufacturer’s mark or location of origin. A
manufacturer’s mark or “maker’s mark” alone are not necessarily
considered hallmarks.
The word hallmark is derived from London’s
Goldsmiths’ Hall of the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, the
originator of Britain’s first hallmarks, which still maintains a
record of all British Sterling Silver Hallmarks. Depending on country of
origin, hallmarks can also include symbols for place of origin.
Sterling silver hallmark etching and engraving have been in use
in England and France since the 14th century. Most other
European countries also use hallmarks. The United States has never
used hallmarks per se.
British Sterling Silver Hallmarks
The British system of hallmarking is somewhat
complex, but relatively easy to follow once the system is
deciphered. British Sterling Silver Hallmarks include a fineness or purity mark, an
assay office mark, a date letter, and usually but not always, a
maker’s mark.
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The assay mark -- the famous lion. This silver
hallmark testifies that the piece has been tested as sterling
silver, i.e., an alloy that is 92.5% pure silver. Prior to 1831,
this was the mark of the lion passant guardant -- (in
heraldic terms, the lion walking to the left with its head turned
to look at the spectator). After 1831, the head was turned from
full face to profile (the lion passant).
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The town mark. This is the mark of the city where
the assay office was situated. The first assay office was in
London, its mark of a leopard's head (wearing a crown until 1831)
is still in use today. Edinburgh and Dublin, the capitals of
Scotland and Ireland, were soon granted assay offices, and
provincial English cities such as York, Chester, Norwich and many
others soon followed. Sheffield and Birmingham, which both began
assaying silver in 1773, are the only cities outside of London
whose assay offices are still working. Their town marks of an
anchor (Birmingham) and a crown (Sheffield) are the most
frequently found after London's leopard's head.
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The date letter. Each year, which runs from May
till April, is allocated a different letter. A cycle of 20 letters
is used (omitting J, V, W, X, Y, and Z) so there are five cycles
in a century. Each cycle has its own style of letter and/or its
uniquely shaped shield. The original purpose of this letter was
not to record the year in which the piece was assayed, but to
identify the Assay Master (who was appointed annually in May) so
that he could be called to account if he passed lower grade silver
as sterling. To be pedantically correct, the date of silver should
include two years, for example 1783-4, but in practice we usually
use only the first of the years that the letter spanned, e.g.,
1783.
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The maker's mark. This consists of his or her two
initials (except in the Britannia period from 1695 to 1720 when
the marks was the first two letters of his name). Early makers
often used an emblem with or without their initials.
On
English silver, the lion passant (walking lion) is the symbol for
sterling silver (925). If your piece has the Lion Passant or the
number 925 then it is, in all probability, Sterling Silver. If it
has the numbers ‘900’, ‘850’,’800’ or similar, then this would be
the silver content (per thousand) of the silver alloy used.
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