Bronze seal or stamp*, engraved "Justice of the Peace of the Canton of St-Julien - Côte d'Or", with the Allegory of the Republic holding the lictor's fasces and Phrygian cap, blackened wooden handle, from the 19th century.
This seal is in good overall condition.
Please note: a repair on the seal, scratches on the handle, wear and tear on the seal, see photos.
Collectible object whose oldest examples date back to four millennia before our era. The seal was first used to affix the personal mark of a person to guarantee the contents of a box or an envelope, the authenticity of a document. The term seal was also used. The small personal seal has in fact been used in Europe since the Middle Ages. It can be a ring mounted with a hard stone intaglio, or a gold bezel engraved in hollow (signet rings are no different!). But more numerous are the seals with handles, formed from a hard stone engraved in intaglio: carnelian, garnet, sapphire, rock crystal, agate; some are even antique intaglios. These small seals are sometimes jewels that are hung from a chain or the chatelaine; like boxes, they are often a gift item. These seals are of varying sizes: we find tiny ones set on pretty chiseled gold mounts, others of 1.5 to 2 cm in diameter mounted on a handle of gold, pomponne, chiseled silver, mother-of-pearl, hard stone, wood...