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  2. Porzellanfabrik Walküre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porzellanfabrik_Walküre

    The founder of the porcelain factory, Siegmund Paul Meyer, moved from Nuremberg to Bayreuth in 1890 to work as an accountant for the pottery and oven manufacturer Seiler. . Six years later he bought the well-running Georg Bauer porcelain and glass shop at Kulmbacher Straße [] 20 and set up his own business with a porcelain painting and retail store.

  3. Porcelain manufacturing companies in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porcelain_manufacturing...

    Limoges porcelain: Limoges: France: Limoges maintains the position it established in the 19th century as the premier manufacturing city of porcelain in France. 1771: Naples porcelain: Naples: Italy "Naples Royal Porcelain Manufactory" (Real fabbrica delle porcellane di Napoli). Also called the Real Fabbrica Ferdinandea. Until 1806. 1774 ...

  4. Hutschenreuther family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hutschenreuther_family

    The Hutschenreuther porcelain business was founded in 1814 by Carolus Magnus Hutschenreuther (1794–1845) in Hohenberg an der Eger, Bavaria, Germany. He had previously worked at the Wallendorf porcelain manufactory in Lichte (Wallendorf). After his death in 1845, the factory was headed by his widow, Johanna Hutschenreuther, and her two sons.

  5. List of porcelain manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_porcelain...

    Plymouth Porcelain; Rockingham Pottery; Royal Crown Derby, (1750/57–present) Royal Doulton, (1815–2009 acquired by Fiskars) Royal Worcester, (1751–2008 acquired by Portmeirion Pottery) Spode, (1767–2008 acquired by Portmeirion Pottery) Saint James's Factory (or "Girl-in-a-Swing", 1750s) Swansea porcelain; Vauxhall porcelain; Wedgwood ...

  6. Carolus Magnus Hutschenreuther - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolus_Magnus_Hutschenreuther

    Carolus Magnus Hutschenreuther was born in Lichte (Wallendorf), Thuringia, the 15th child of Johann Heinrich Hutschenreuther, a porcelain painter and owner of the Wallendorf Porcelain Manufactory. He earned his living selling porcelain items such as pipe-bowls and so-called Turkish cups in eastern Bavaria and especially in the spa towns of Bohemia.

  7. Arzberg porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arzberg_porcelain

    Hutschenreuther AG, holder of the Arzberg trademark since 1972, was dissolved in 2000 and the trademark was taken over by SKV-Porzellan-Union GmbH, founded in 1993 by the porcelain companies Schirnding, Kronester and Johann Seltmann Vohenstrauß. In 2004, SKV-Porzellan-Union GmbH was renamed Arzberg-Porzellan GmbH. In 2003, the company had ...

  8. Wallendorfer Porzellan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallendorfer_Porzellan

    Wallendorfer Porzellan or Wallendorf Porcelain is a porcelain manufacturing company which has been in operation since 1764 in Lichte (Wallendorf) in the Thuringian Highlands. Wallendorf is one of the oldest porcelain trademarks in Germany and the whole of Europe.

  9. French porcelain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_porcelain

    But by the 1760s, kaolin had been discovered near Limoges, and the relocated royal-owned Sèvres factory took the lead in European porcelain design as rococo turned into what is broadly known as the Louis XVI style and then the Empire style. French styles were soon being imitated in porcelain in Germany, England, and as far afield as Russia.