Silver serving spoon from the Artisan Lottery
Length 17.5 cm.
Stamped De tre Tårne 63 for the year 1863, V. Christensen, a control mark, CP inv and the lottery's hallmark, an angel with drawing tools.
The Frederiksborg Lottery or the Lottery of Domestic Arts and Crafts to Promote the Collaboration of Arts and Crafts as it was properly called, was a lottery that was to raise money for the reconstruction of the burned-down Frederiksborg Castle. In 1859, Frederiksborg Castle burned down on a December evening and only Christian IV's church room remained. A few years earlier, Frederik VII had begun to use the castle again as his primary residence, whereby a large number of the royal family's effects were brought to the castle. These were lost in the fire. Both the Riksdag and the king himself allocated enormous sums for the reconstruction of the castle, but it was decided to hold a lottery to raise more funds. The greatest artists and factories of the time participated in this lottery with prizes. In the end, brewer CJ Jacobsen had to pay for the reconstruction, as not enough money had been collected.