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AN ECUADOREAN SILVER AND SILVER-GILT 'FOLKLORE' FIGURAL SET

Currency:USD Category:Everything Else / Other Start Price:NA Estimated At:1,200.00 - 1,600.00 USD
AN ECUADOREAN SILVER AND SILVER-GILT 'FOLKLORE' FIGURAL SET
Circa 1920 The Inca Empire versus the Spanish conqueror Pizarro; the king as Atahualpha, queen as Pacha, bishops as 'chasqui,' knights as llamas, rooks as the Equator monument, pawns as Indians, the king 2 3/4 inches high, the pawn 1 1/4 inches high. SEE: Phillips New Bond Street: Chess and Related Items, November 1994, lot 122; Phillips New York: The Laurence I. Wood Collection, November 6th, 1996, lot 79; and Phillips New Bond Street: The Ernst Boehlen Collection, November 9th, 1998, lot 106. NOTE: See Victor Keats, The Illustrated Guide to World Chess Sets, figure 273. Atahualpha was the last Inca ruler who was put to death by the Spanish conqueror, Pizzaro. Pacha was the mother of Atahualpha and is shown with mantle draped over the left shoulder and carrying a bowl on her head. The bishop is portrayed as a runner. The Incas used a series of relay runners to carry mail from the coast to the highlands, a distance of 245 miles, which could be covered in a single day. The obelisk shaped Equator monument marks the spot, north of Quinto, where the French scientists, Louis Godin and La Condamine, fixed the zero latitude of the globe in 1744. $1,200-1,600