Quantity





Please Close This Window to return to the previous page, and see other items.
Antique Russian 1920s Brass Samovar Original Stamps Made At The Tula Factory #33
$349.95
This antique Russian Samovar was made in Tula city in USSR/Russia (See picture of the stamp) in 1920s. The samovar is made out of brass. All the parts of samovar are original. The samovar has two original stamps of Tula factory, one on the front, another one on the top cover. This samovar is heating water using coal, it is not newer electric version. The samovar is in excellent antique condition. The pictures are a part of description; you will receive exact samovar what you see on the pictures. It weighs 13 lbs, 19 inches high, 9.5 inches diameter. Great for collection or home decoration. The first mention of samovar (Russian teapot) production in Russia can be found in documents dating from the mid-18th Century. A mere half a Century later the samovar (Russian teapot), glowing hot and polished to a sparkle, was an indispensable feature of every day life. The samovar (Russian teapot) was central to any gathering, like a hot domestic sun that Russian life revolved around. The heart of the samovar (Russian teapot) is the fire-tube in the form of the jug soldered into the body. Charcoal, thrown into the tube heats the water. Samovars (Russian teapot) varied in capacity, ranging from 3 to 30 liters. The largest, manufactured in Tula in 1922, had a capacity of 250 liters, took 40 minutes to boil and kept hot nearly two days. Production of samovars (Russian teapot) was first launched in central Russian City of Tula (South of Moscow). At present time factories in Russia are producing new electric samovars (Russian teapot). Some of them are pieces of real art. Those types of new Russian samovars are hand painted by very good artists and absolutely beautiful.