Carl Schumann Mark

Q: I recently picked up a Bavarian porcelain bowl with a beautiful painted scene. It has a rectangular shield-shaped mark with a crown-like top and the letter “A” beneath the crown. The shield has the letters “C” and “S” with the word “Bavaria” diagonally between them. Can tell me anything about it?

A: This mark was used from 1892-1923 by the Carl Schumann Porcelain Factory of Arzberg, Germany. Carl’s father, Christian, and his partner started the factory under the name Schumann & Riess in 1881. Carl inherited the factory after Christian died in 1884. His mother ran the factory until 1896. In 1892, when Carl turned 21, the factory was renamed Carl Schumann G.m.b.H. & Co. K.G. The company stayed in the family and was run at various times by Carl’s mother, Carl, and his son, also named Carl. The name changed slightly in 1923 to Carl Schumann A.G.. In 1990 they joined another company to become Carl Schumann Arzberg Colditz Freiberg. The factory closed in 1994.

a c s bavaria pottery mark

Carl Schumann Porcelain Factory of Arzberg, Germany

 

Usually we have already submitted all the sitemaps in the search console, if any changes on the url and url parameter then we need to edit the relative sitemap in the root of the code base and then deploy to the stage and live server after that we need to delete that specific sitemap and update the sitemap again. After 7-15 days it will show the updated sitemap data.

 

For sitemap submission we need to go to the search console then click on the sitemap on the left side menu.

Schumann Bowls

Q: I have a pair of painted china bowls given to me 50 years ago by an English cousin who said they belonged to his mother. The bottom is stamped with a lion in a shield. The word ‘Bavaria’ is above the shield and ‘Schumann’ below it. What can you tell me about the maker?

A: Your bowls were made by the Carl Schumann Porcelain Factory, which operated in Arzberg, Bavaria, Germany from 1881 to 1996. The mark on your dishes was not used until the 20th century. Schumann pieces are easy to find for sale on the Internet. Single bowls sell for $5 to $25.

 

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