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French Violin

American History Museum

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    Object Details

    Description

    This violin was made in Mirecourt, France around 1880. An oversized commercial Mirecourt violin (with 14 3/8 inch body length), this violin is listed in J. Howard Foote’s 1882 catalog under French copies of old masters. It is item #5935: “Copy of Stradivarius, extra fine quality, . . . Each $22.00.” Many violins like this were made in Mirecourt. While thousands of these violins were sold with reproduction labels of famous makers like Amati, Guarneri, Stainer and Stradivari, this instrument is clearly labeled to prevent misunderstanding of the Stradivari attribution. A second Smithsonian example is catalog #55682, described in the Foote catalog as the same quality of instrument. It is built with similar archings, outline and pearwood purfling, but bears a reproduction Guarneri label. This violin is made of a two-piece table of spruce, two-piece back of maple with medium-fine ascending figure, ribs, neck, pegbox and scroll of similar maple, and a shaded orange-brown varnish.

    Location

    Currently not on view

    Date made

    1878 - 1882

    ID Number

    MI.072846

    catalog number

    72846

    accession number

    12809

    Object Name

    violin

    Physical Description

    spruce (table material)
    maple (back material)

    Measurements

    overall: 23 3/4 in x 7 1/4 in x 3 1/2 in; 60.325 cm x 18.415 cm x 8.89 cm

    Place Made

    France: Grand Est, Mirecourt

    Related Publication

    Densmore, Frances. Handbook of the Collection of Musical Instruments in the United States National Museum.

    See more items in

    Culture and the Arts: Musical Instruments
    Music & Musical Instruments
    Violins

    Data Source

    National Museum of American History

    Metadata Usage

    CC0

    Link to Original Record

    https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a4-31aa-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

    Record ID

    nmah_605528

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