Royal Crown Derby
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Royal Crown Derby
Summary
Royal Crown Derby is a business[1]. It ranks in the top 4% of business entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (73 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- Royal Crown Derby's field of work was porcelain[3].
- Royal Crown Derby is in the country of United Kingdom[4].
- Royal Crown Derby's instance of is recorded as business[5].
- Royal Crown Derby's instance of is recorded as porcelain factory[6].
- Royal Crown Derby's founder is recorded as Andrew Planche[7].
- Royal Crown Derby is owned by Andrew Planche[8].
- Royal Crown Derby is owned by Joseph Wright of Derby[9].
- Royal Crown Derby is owned by William Duesbury[10].
- Royal Crown Derby's headquarters location is recorded as City of Derby[11].
- Royal Crown Derby's Commons category is recorded as Royal Crown Derby Porcelain Company[12].
- 1748 marks the founding of Royal Crown Derby[13].
- Royal Crown Derby's product or material produced is recorded as porcelain[14].
- Royal Crown Derby's Commons Creator page is recorded as Derby[15].
- Royal Crown Derby's has works in the collection is recorded as Metropolitan Museum of Art[16].
Body
Founding
Royal Crown Derby's founder is recorded as Andrew Planche[7]. 1748 marks the founding of it[13].
Operations
Royal Crown Derby's headquarters location is recorded as City of Derby[11].
Industry
Royal Crown Derby's field of work was porcelain[3].
Ownership
Owners include Andrew Planche[8], an artist[17], 1727–1809[18], of France[19]; Joseph Wright of Derby[9], a painter[20], 1734–1797[21], of Kingdom of Great Britain[22], specialised in painting[23]; and William Duesbury[10], an entrepreneur[24], 1725–1786[25], of Kingdom of Great Britain[26]. Royal Crown Derby's product or material produced is recorded as porcelain[14].
Why It Matters
Royal Crown Derby ranks in the top 4% of business entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (73 views/month).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 13 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[27] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[28]