Hundreds of antiques sold from New Forest's Exbury House
Woolley & WallisHundreds of antiques from Exbury House, the Hampshire home of the Rothschild family, have gone under the hammer.
The 220 lots included a micromosaic table - made made by an Italian artist who produced furniture for Napoleon - which sold for £200,000.
Auctioneers Woolley and Wallis in Salisbury said the sale was prompted by a redecoration programme at the stately home in the New Forest.
The total sale, including buyer's premium, fetched almost £1.4m.
Woolley & WallisThe metre-wide mosaic table, attributed to Giacomo Rafaelli, who counted Napoleon among his clients, stood in the central hall at Exbury and had been expected to fetch about £100,000.
Furniture, art and clocks specialist Mark Yuan-Richards said before the sale: "This is a remarkably fine piece of furniture with a long and important provenance.
"It is over a century since the table last appeared on the market. It is certain to appeal to collectors of Rafaelli's work across the globe."
Also among the lots was a 19th-century Italian parade shield, which was expected to fetch between £800 and £1,200, but sold for £60,000, and a pair of gold fireplace ornaments, estimated at £8,000 to £12,000, which sold for £62,500.
Exbury House was bought by Lionel de Rothschild in 1919 and the surrounding gardens, next to the Beaulieu River, have been open to the public since 1950.
Woolley & Wallace
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