Meerschaum From Greece

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topd

Lifer
Mar 23, 2012
1,745
10
Emerson, Arkansas
I won this on eBay from a guy in Kefalonia, Greece. This is how it arrived...
IMG_1836-1.jpg

And after clean-up...
IMG_1838-1.jpg


IMG_1839-1.jpg


IMG_1842-1.jpg

I'm thinking it's from the 19th century or a little later. Any thoughts on what the little knob under the pipe is?

I have an idea... But it's only a theory.

 

photoman13

Lifer
Mar 30, 2012
2,825
2
Topd you really have a good eye for meer. I second that Storient should make an article that maybe Kevin would let you post here talking about the different kinds of meerschaum. I feel like it could only help your business as well. Maybe even help Kevin's as well.

 

assaad

Can't Leave
Apr 4, 2011
340
2
TopD, I might be a smart ass who doesn't really know what he is talking about but I would say that the foot on your pipe is just for style. There are a few theories on why they were placed on clays, from hanging on specialized racks to placing on tables when smoking, but on your pipe I would say it is to emulate a clay. Like a belge (a french shape named after the Belgian style of clay rather than the English - English had the foot and the Belgian didn't) the cutty is a shape made to emulate old clays. The cutty (which you have) emulates English clays.
And, that is a gorgeous pipe! I wouldn't care if it arrived covered in cow dung (I kind of would but nevertheless) I would cherish it!

 

crk69

Part of the Furniture Now
Jun 30, 2012
751
1
Awesome looking piece of history there Top.. maybe the button is for sitting?? congrats....

 

topd

Lifer
Mar 23, 2012
1,745
10
Emerson, Arkansas
Assaad, I think you are close. Sailors on wailing ships and such would cut a small hole near their

hammock, in a pole or beam and stick the little button in it so the pipe wouldn't roll around during

the night. I read that about old meerschaums and clays many years ago. I can only assume that it's true.

 

assaad

Can't Leave
Apr 4, 2011
340
2
TopD, I wonder if the many uses of the foot on pipes were just inventive uses that arose from something left over from the manufacturing process. I think that in mass producing the pipes they may have sometimes used molds that produced 2 pipes at once that were joined by the heel and then the spur was left when they were cut apart. I'm not sure though. I found this dissertation on clay pipes excavated in Jamaica. Scroll down to about pages 60-82 for images of bowl styles. I didn't know that there was such a large assortment of styles produced.

 
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