Hunting Rifle by F. Weyer for the Holy Roman Empress Elisabeth Christi
Guns International #: 100848185 Seller's Inventory #: 32043
Category: Antique Revolvers - Percussion - Antique Rifles - Flintlock

Seller's Information
When emailing or calling sellers direct, please mention that you saw their listing on GunsInternational.com
Verified Seller
Seller: Joe Salter com
Company: Down East Antiques - Joe Salter
Member Since: 9/10/10
First Name: Garrick-March-Jim-Joe
Last Name: Salter
State: New Hampshire
Zip: 03031
Country: United States
Phone: (603) 732-4000
Fax: (603) 732-4200
Platinum Seller
Number of Active Listings: 1195
Total Number of Listings: 20186
Seller: FFL Dealer
Return Policy: 3 day inspection and return policy on used guns.
We have a 30 day Inspection Period and NOT a 3 day Inspection.
Payment Types Accepted: We take all major credit cards with NO CREDIT CARD FEES! Also Check or Money order.

About Us: Joe Salter has been in the Antique and Collector Weapons business for 60 years as both a collector and dealer. Our company is based in Southern New Hampshire and we have had an internet based store front for the past 20 years. We are federally licensed and deal in all types of firearms and related material.


Description:
This is a spectacular example of the gunmaker's art, built in a typically Germanic style, but in an elegantly diminutive size. The gun has a beautifully swamped, pin-fastened, octagonal barrel with a bright, .60 caliber bore and deeply grooved rifling. The barrel itself retains most of the original browned finish which has developed a subtle, speckled patina over the years, but retains its brilliant gold inlay embellishments – graceful geometric filigree surrounding the front sight and also adorning the breech, as well as the maker's name along the top flat: “FRANZ WEIER IN WIEN"; and an inset Royal Habsburg Double Eagle proof. The rear sight has both a fixed and flip-up leaf with deep relief scrollwork embellishments and also retains nearly all of the original gold finish. The lock has a bright gray patina with delicately rendered engraving depicting a hunter, accompanied by his dog and gamekeeper, taking aim at a stag. The maker's name is repeated along the bottom border of the pan: “WILHELM WEYER", with “IN WIEN" behind the hammer. The rifle was originally built as a flintlock, but was expertly converted to percussion sometime in the 19th century. The original swan-necked cock was retained, with the addition of a cupped metal hammer in place of the flint. The original frizzen was removed and replaced by a pivoting cover/safety that prevents the hammer from striking the nipple when deployed. The cover pivots on the original external frizzen spring, which was also retained, and the lock functions perfectly. The beautifully figured European walnut stock has a horn forend tip, relief carved borders running along the ramrod channel, relief carved foliate scrollwork surrounds at the trigger guard, and a sliding patchbox cover on the right side of the buttstock. The intricately pierced gold sideplate depicts a standing hunter and his horse, with cloud of smoke rising from the muzzle of his gun, and a rearing stag about to fall to the ground. The beautifully engraved, gold-finished trigger guard features a small oval vignette of a standing stag at the center of the trigger guard bow, and the equally embellished buttplate has a large central vignette of two deer, while the long tang has a small engraved portrait of a woman wearing a short-brimmed, man's hunting hat (presumably the Empress Elisabeth Christine herself). The top of the wrist has a royal coat of arms escutcheon which has been deliberately defaced (perhaps when the rifle left royal ownership), but the rear portion of the Bohemian Lion Rampant can just be made out. The original horn-tipped ramrod is still included, and is held by two gold-finished thimbles, and a gold tailpipe with deep relief engraved scrollwork design. Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Bohemia and Hungary (b. 1691 – d. 1750), was the wife of Emperor Charles VI, mother of Maria Theresa, and grandmother of Marie Antoinette. She was introduced to shooting by her husband, and was an avid hunter and target shooter; indeed, the only active sport she allowed her daughters to participate in was target shooting. A letter written by Lady Mary Wortley Montagu in 1716, mentions a visit to the summer palace at Schönbrunn during which she observed the ladies at their favorite sport, target shooting with precision guns. Lady Montagu commented that it, “...might make as good a figure as the prize shooting in the Aeneid if I could write as well as Virgil". Franz Wilhelm Weyer (also “Weier") was born in Brannau am Inn, Austria, and began his gunmaker's apprenticeship at Vienna in 1709. He became a Journeyman in 1715, and was elevated to Master Gunmaker in 1717, being named Royal Gunmaker to the Empress not long thereafter. He did not have a long career, and died ca. 1723. That would date the manufacture of this rifle to about 1720.

SOLD

Antique: Yes
Manufacturer: Weyer
Model: Hunting Rifle
Caliber Info: .60
Gauge Info: .60