Repeater watch

Watchmaker: Julien Le Roy French
Case maker: I. T. French

Not on view

Julien Le Roy, probably the most inventive clockmaker in eighteenth century France, was appointed clockmaker to Louis XV (1710–1774), an honor that allowed him a workshop in the Louvre. The movement of the watch strikes hours and quarters on the back of the case instead of on a bell. This type of repeater, called a dumb repeater, allowed the user to tell the time unobtrusively by counting the vibrations of the case. The style of the case, with its beautiful opaque-enameled flowers that seem to float on an engraved gold ground, was fashionable among Parisian makers of watchcases and gold boxes about the middle of the eighteenth century.

Repeater watch, Watchmaker: Julien Le Roy (French, Tours 1686–1759 Paris), Gold, enamel, French, Paris

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