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    Posted 2 years ago

    Mystaplers
    (16 items)

    I saw this receipt spike and the price was right, but what caught my eye was the Imperial Double Headed Eagle on the bottom of the spike. This eagle has the crown above the two heads with what appears to be what I call ceremonial ribbon. That is important because it can indicate the year this was made as Russia changed its alphabet and the design of the Imperial eagle (I think)
    Can anyone shine some light on this?

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    Comments

    1. Celiene Celiene, 2 years ago
      Russian. Receipt spike. It looks hand hammered on the top dome.
    2. Mystaplers Mystaplers, 2 years ago
      I agree It is a hammered heavy brass. I could clean it, but have decided to hold off. I am hoping the maker is known and I am able to identify him.
    3. keramikos, 2 years ago
      I transcribed that row of Cyrillic characters across the top into the Russian keyboard at Lexilogos, then pumped it into the conversion interface, and got "FABRICA":

      https://www.lexilogos.com/keyboard/russian.htm

      ???????

      https://www.lexilogos.com/keyboard/russian_conversion.htm

      ??????? FABRIKA

      I leave it to better eyes (and better understanding of Cyrillic) to figure out those bottom characters.
    4. keramikos, 2 years ago
      Ah, the CW S&T software hated the Cyrillic. :-(

      However, you can use that conversion interface to type in "FABRIKA" in the Roman alphabet window and see the Cyrillic in the other.
    5. keramikos, 2 years ago
      It's really difficult to make out the details on that double-headed eagle coat of arms. For one thing, it looks to me like the eagle heads are facing the crown. >8-0

      Anyway, there definitely appears to be a double-headed eagle and a crown, and before the modern 1993 Russian coat of arms, the last time there was a double-headed eagle and a crown was in the 1883 lesser coat of arms?:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coat_of_arms_of_Russia

      As to the Cyrillic characters below the coat of arms, I can make out only the first three.

      The first two form a preposition that is virtually unpronounceable by anybody not born and raised in a Slavic country:

      https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%D0%B2%D1%8A

      The third letter looks like a Cyrillic "L," so this receipt spike was probably made in a factory 'in' a place the name of which starts with an "L."

      Yeah, it ain't much to go on. :-(
    6. Mystaplers Mystaplers, 2 years ago
      Thank you for all of your help.
    7. flashlarue flashlarue, 2 years ago
      I think it says Made in Moscow
    8. keramikos, 2 years ago
      flashlarue, D'oh! You're so right.

      I see it now. Instead of the third character being a Cyrillic "L," it's the Cyrillic "M," and the whole string would be "MOCKBa" (Im not using actual Cyrillic, because the CW S&T software doesn't like it) which would transliterate to "MOSKVA," which is the Russian form of "Moscow."

      One more tidbit: "fabrika" derives from Latin, but it's only one of two Russian words typically used for a factory. Dunno if this will work, because even tinyurl dot com doesn't seem overly fond of Cyrillic, so I'm going to excerpt the pertinent sections:

      *snip*

      (fábrika) is commonly used for textile and clothing industry

      and mining

      (zavód) is more common in most other contexts, including food industry

      and most sectors of manufacturing industry

      *snip*

      (tinyurl dot com for the Wiktionary article about fabrika)

      https://tinyurl.com/mrxwn8s2

      So, this spindle was likely made some time between 1883 and 1918 (because of the coat of arms and the archaic spelling of "in"), and possibly made for a clothes/textile or mining operation.
    9. Mystaplers Mystaplers, 2 years ago
      You put some serious effort into this and I do appreciate it - thank you.
    10. keramikos, 2 years ago
      Mystaplers, You're welcome, FWIW.

      I suspect that I've mostly been informing myself, and not telling you anything you didn't already know about this receipt spike.

      It's problematic, and yet another difficulty is that nobody seems to know the origins of the concept:

      https://www.eater.com/2017/1/6/14184622/receipt-spike-chit-peg-restaurant-history

      https://www.natwestgroup.com/heritage/history-100/objects-by-theme/our-people-at-work/spike-file-1781.html

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