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・ Johann Peter Beaulieu
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・ Johann Peter Gogarten
・ Johann Peter Hasenclever
・ Johann Peter Haseney
・ Johann Peter Hebel
・ Johann Peter Heuschkel
・ Johann Peter Kellner
・ Johann Peter Kirsch
・ Johann Peter Klassen
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Johann Melchior Dinglinger
・ Johann Melchior Gletle
・ Johann Melchior Goeze
・ Johann Melchior Kambly
・ Johann Melchior Molter
・ Johann Melchior Roos
・ Johann Menge
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Johann Melchior Dinglinger : ウィキペディア英語版
Johann Melchior Dinglinger

Johann Melchior Dinglinger (26 December 1664 –6 March 1731) was one of Europe's greatest goldsmiths, whose major works for the elector of Saxony, Augustus the Strong, survived in the Grünes Gewölbe (the "Green Vaults"), Dresden.〔Reopened in September 2004 in the Dresden ''Residenz'', as the ''Neues Grünes Gewölbe.〕
Dinglinger was the last goldsmith to work on the grand scale of Benvenuto Cellini and Wenzel Jamnitzer, fewer of whose large-scale works in precious materials have survived, however.〔Later masters, like Carl Fabergé, were essentially miniaturists.〕 His work carries on in a Mannerist tradition into the "Age of Rococo".
==Biography==
Dinglinger was born in Biberach an der Riß (today in Baden-Württemberg). He served his apprenticeship in Ulm, after which he refined his techniques working as a journeyman in Augsburg, Nuremberg and Vienna, three traditional centers of luxury arts. He went to Dresden in 1692, where he spent the rest of his career in the service of Augustus, by whom he was appointed court jeweller in 1698. In the workshop he established, he was assisted by his younger brothers, the enameller Georg Friedrich Dinglinger (1666–1720) and Georg Christoph Dinglinger (1668–1728), who specialized in cutting and setting jewels. The sculptor Balthasar Permoser collaborated as a modeller in Dinglinger's workshops.
Dinglinger married five times〔Antoine Pesne's portrait of his fourth wife, Susanna Guterman (1698-1726), the pendant to the portrait illustrating this article, both painted to commemorate their marriage in 1721, is also at the Hermitage Museum.〕 and had twenty-three children, of whom eleven survived to maturity. The famous house he erected in Dresden was burned in the Seven Years' War. He died in Dresden.

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