There are a number of vases in the Harrach book 'From Neuwelt to the Whole World' Mergl J. 2012 which have a gold band device with little white dots around it. Those I've spotted easily seem to date to c.1876/7 (pages245 and 225 for examples).
In addition there is a vase plate 274 page245 which is a Beinglas vase (looks much whiter than yours in the photograph not cream, though it is described as ' Lightly yellow-toned opaque glass, mould blown'.
It has a similar gold band with white dots device around the rim and also has what to my eye looks to be similar enamelling style, large- leaf flora quite 'loose and splashy' for want of a better description, and similar colour palette to yours - different design of the enamelled picture though and different shaped vase.
The label to the plate states it dates to 1878 prod. no. 358/l 12" and is marked on the base:
'a brown inscription 358/l 12" / V 198'
Unfortunately no photograph of the base shown.
Description of the enamelling reads:
'Painted in enamels in vivid colours and in gold, partly polished - two ostriches flying out of tropical vegetation, with passion flowers rendered underneath'.
The gilded band dot design might be a device used by a number of companies as it's not that distinctive I suppose but it perhaps gives a time frame as Christine said, of late 19th?