Postby blakstone » Fri Sep 14, 2012 12:20 am
No, these are not import marks. They are official assay marks used in the Southern Netherlands (a region which included modern Belgium, Luxembourg and the city of Maastricht) from 1815 until 1832 in Belgium and 1842 in Luxembourg and Maastricht.
The “hand and rod” was the assay office guarantee mark for large silver articles, with the letter “D” the code for the assay office in Liège/Luik. The “2” flanked by laurel branches was the mark for the second standard silver of .833.
Unfortunately, the maker’s mark “MJ” with an animal’s head is not recorded. However the only maker known at the time with these initials was Nicolas Mathieu Jeanne (1784-1848), known as Mathieu Jeanne, and who registered a mark “MI” in a lozenge around 1808, when the region was part of the French Empire. The insignia of his shop at 984 rue Neuvice was “the black (later golden) sheep” [mouton noir (d’or)], and the animal’s head here may well be a sheep’s. If so, this is very likely a later mark used by Jeanne, who was working until at least 1842, or perhaps that of his son Jean Mathieu, a silversmith who worked in his father’s shop along with brothers Jean Etienne (silversmith), Edouard (engraver) and Joseph (jeweler).
Hope this helps!
Ref:
Walter Van Dievoet, Geschiedenis En De Officiele Merken Van De Keurkamers Voor De Waarborg Van Goud En Zilver En Belgie Van 1794 Tot Nu (Brussels: Gemeentekrediet van Belgie, 1980), p. 118, mark #5, p. 120, mark #4, & p. 205, table G.
Walter Van Dievoet, Orfèvres de Liège du XIX Siècle (Louvain: Walter Van Dievoet, 2006), p. 59, maker #82