Marks used at Sèvres:
| The royal period, sometimes with a crown (1753). | Hard paste first made (1768). Republic (1792 to 1798). | Republic (1792). | Consular period (1803). |
| Imperial manufactory (1804 to 1809). | Imperial manufactory (1810 to 1814). | Louis XVIII., and the year (1814 to 1824). | Charles X. (1824 to 1829). |
| On plain ware (1829 and 1830). | On decorated ware (1829 and 1830). | Louis Philippe (August to December, 1830). | Louis Philippe (1831 to November, 1834). |
| Louis Philippe (November, 1834, to July, 1845). | Louis Philippe (1837). | Louis Philippe (1845 to 1848). | On white porcelain (1833 to present time). |
| Republic (1848 to 1851). | Napoleon III., emperor (1852). | Napoleon III., emperor (1854 and after). | Present mark—the cut shows pieces sold in the white (1861). |
CHAPTER XIV.
THE PORCELAINS OF SOUTHERN EUROPE—ITALY, SPAIN, ETC.
Florentine, or Medicean.—Is it a True Porcelain?—The House of Medici.—Marks.—Doccia Porcelain.—The Marquis Ginori.—Beccheroni.—Present Work.—Marks.—Venice.—Vezzi.—Cozzi.—Marks.—Turin.—Gioanetti.—Marks.—Nove.—Terraglia.—Marks.—Capo di Monte.—Naples.—In Relief.—Marks.—Spanish Porcelain.—Buen Retiro.—Marks.—Portugal.