The Big Ben wrote: ↑Tue Jan 30, 2024 1:31 pm
Here's something to consider:
Miraphone as a company did not exist until 1946. Miraphone was a establishment of a variety of workshops in Europe and especially Czechoslovakia which were disrupted or destroyed in the war. Here's a detailed history from Miraphone's website:
https://www.miraphone.de/company/histor ... ition.html
As said earlier. anything stamped "Germany" would have been made before the war or post 1989. It could indeed have the "Miraphone sound" if it was constructed by a workshop which eventually became a part of Miraphone. It looks kinda neat and if it can be played in tune, it would be kind of a nice addition to one's tuba arsenal.
Not quite that long ago. Made in Germany was possible from about 1950 until 1989, but there was no legal requirement in West Germany to say "Made in West Germany." When companies did so, they were trying to distinguish themselves from cheap products made in GDR. "Made in Germany" didn't do that.
The country of origin requirements came from the USA and the UK. Items not made for either of those markets weren't required to be marked at all, and there was certainly no requirement prohibiting "Made in Germany" even at the height of the Cold War. A German court found in the early 70's that there was no legal basis to prevent companies in the GDR from saying "Made in Germany," thought most still said "Made in GDR".
So, you'll find plenty of post-war products marked "Made in Germany" no matter if they were made in East or West Germany.
Before the two Germanies became separate countries in 1949, they were one country occupied by four victorious powers after WWII. The Soviet sector was what became East Germany, while the American, British, and French sectors became West Germany. Companies making things in future West Germany often used the label "Made in Western Germany" to comply with country-of-origin laws in the English-speaking world.
This tuba cannot be dated by the fact that it is engraved "Made in Germany", but it probably means it dates from prior to the 50's when it became more common practice for companies to want to distinguish themselves from cheap and poorly made GDR products.
Miraphone was and remains a cooperative made up of traditional workshops that were displaced from Saxony and Czechoslovakia during the war and the early parts of the Soviet occupation. I expect not all of them yet felt it was commercially advantageous to label away their Saxony roots--that emerged later.
Rick "but 'Made in West Germany' definitely dates it to the period 1950-1989" Denney