Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Unger Brothers Sterling Silver Pin, and a foreign language.....

In Silver > Art Nouveau Silver > Show & Tell and Fine Jewelry > Brooches > Show & Tell.
Brooches495 of 941Brooch from this weeks yard salesCannetille butterfly brooch
11
Love it
1
Like it

ttomtuckerttomtucker loves this.
kyratangokyratango loves this.
SpiritBearSpiritBear loves this.
melaniejmelaniej loves this.
IVAN49IVAN49 loves this.
vetraio50vetraio50 loves this.
auraaura loves this.
OlofZOlofZ loves this.
racer4fourracer4four loves this.
TassieDevilTassieDevil loves this.
blunderbuss2blunderbuss2 loves this.
See 10 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 9 years ago

    broots
    (5 items)

    I found this on Saturday in Central Florida and it's old, and nice. My problem is that I cannot figure out the inscription language. The piece has the date 1910 but that's all I can glean. Maybe Latin or Greek? Sure is nice to find old silver in the dirt :) Is was made by Unger Brothers which I have verified by the makers mark /w 925 Fine Sterling on the back Measures 1.75 x .75 " Any help would be great.

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Art Nouveau Silver
    See all
    FINE c1900 ART NOUVEAU STERLING SILVER OVERLAY EMERALD GREEN GLASS CABINET VASE
    FINE c1900 ART NOUVEAU STERLING SIL...
    $158
    FABULOUS ART NOUVEAU, sterling silver CRUET SET , 1907
    FABULOUS ART NOUVEAU, sterling silv...
    $142
    LOVELY ANTIQUE ART NOUVEAU STERLING SILVER FLORAL REPOUSSE PEDESTAL COMPOTE BOWL
    LOVELY ANTIQUE ART NOUVEAU STERLING...
    $92
    Antique Art Nouveau Gorham Sterling Silver Water Lilly Pitcher UNION PACIFIC
    Antique Art Nouveau Gorham Sterling...
    $338
    logo
    FINE c1900 ART NOUVEAU STERLING SILVER OVERLAY EMERALD GREEN GLASS CABINET VASE
    FINE c1900 ART NOUVEAU STERLING SIL...
    $158
    See all

    Comments

    1. Celiene Celiene, 9 years ago
      Possibly Esperanto. They use the U with the 'U' over' it. Which makes sense being in Florida.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%AC
    2. Celiene Celiene, 9 years ago
      LOL - ignore my Florida remark! I was thinking of another language!
    3. OlofZ OlofZ, 9 years ago
      Sweet, lovely find! A slavic name would be my guess, maybe Belarusian. Could be something like "Wilbiur Jubil..usiek" In the past they used the latin letters (our alphabet) instead of the modern cyrillic, with that thing over the U, breve I think it's called.
    4. OlofZ OlofZ, 9 years ago
      Or could be a slavic word for Jubilee, like "Silver Jubilee". Any slavic speaking here at CW?
    5. vetraio50 vetraio50, 9 years ago
      It's in German.
    6. vetraio50 vetraio50, 9 years ago
      The script is called Sütterlin.
    7. OlofZ OlofZ, 9 years ago
      Could be but wasn't Sütterlin developed later, like during WWII? Spelling doesn't feel German.
    8. IVAN49 IVAN49, 9 years ago
      German ``Frakturschrift`` ``Gebrochene Schrift`` or ``Gotische Schrift``handwriting (script).
      SILBER JUBILEUM in German ``Silver Jubilee``
      It was widely used. We had to learn how to write it in German high schools long time ago. Have no idea whether it`s still taught.Personally, I love it.
      http://www.math.ku.dk/~thorup/goth/goth01.gif
    9. OlofZ OlofZ, 9 years ago
      German, indeed! Thanks Vetraio and IVAN. Fun to learn something new every day on CW!
    10. vetraio50 vetraio50, 9 years ago
      The A.D.V. below the Silber Jubileum interests me.
      A silver jubilee of an organization in 1910?
      Twenty five years beforehand would be 1885.

      What is A.D.V. short for?

    11. davyd286, 9 years ago
      Are you sure those are letters and not month and date (20th)?
    12. IVAN49 IVAN49, 9 years ago
      The last letter may look look like 20 (if I understood well) but it`s letter ``V``.
      As vetraio50 said, it`s A.D.V. Possibly ``.....Deutsche Verband or Verein`` (....German Association). Things like this are almost impossible to identify unless exactly the same abbreviation is found elsewhere.

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.