Victorian silver tea caddy

Victorian silver tea caddy

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An oblong Victorian silver tea caddy with bead pattern mounts and two bands of attractive brighcut engraving in the Georgian manner. The lockable hinged lid is slighted domed.

Tea drinking in England became fashionable and hugely popular among the wealthy from the late 17th century. For most of the 18th century, import duties and the East India Company's monopoly on importing tea kept the price of tea artificially high making it a very expensive commodity. This in turn established the need for airtight, lockable tea canisters and chests, not only to preserve the tea's distinctive flavours, but to protect the precious contents. Commensurate with the high value of the contents, caddies became treasured and valuable accessories in their own right often made in fine porcelain or silver, and invariably fitted with a key.

By the end of the 18th century tea canisters and chests were referred to as tea caddies. The word caddy is thought to derive from the Malay word "kati" which was a measure of tea weighing about one imperial pound.

Dimensions:

Height 85 mm / 3 "
Width 115 mm / 4 34"
Depth 95 mm / 4"
Weight 479 g (15.40 troy ozs)
Year

1860

Place

Sheffield

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