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    Re: Empress Eugénie's ruby jewels Archived Message

    Posted by Arthur on October 14, 2014, 11:47 am, in reply to "Re: Empress Eugénie's ruby jewels"

    I have no information about the whereabouts of this tiara after 1887. Notably, I have never seen it at later auctions, or worn by any wealthy aristocrat or American socialite...


    --Previous Message--
    : There was also another small headcrown in the
    : parure, what happened to it, has it been
    : seen since it was sold in 1887 to M.
    : Guillemin ?
    :
    :
    :
    : --Previous Message--
    : In the edition of the magazine Connaissance
    : des Arts that I mentioned in the previous
    : thread, published in April 1962 in relation
    : with the forthcoming exhibition "Ten
    : centuries of French Jewellery" in the
    : Louvre Museum in Paris in May 1962, other
    : interesting pictures of French royal and
    : imperial jewels (besides the fringe tiara
    : which is very probably not the 'Russian
    : Tiara') were published:
    :
    : - this picture of the tiara of the ruby and
    : diamond parure of the Crown jewels, made in
    : 1816 by the court jeweller Ménière and his
    : son-in-law Bapst on King Louis XVIII's
    : request for Marie-Thérèse, Duchess of
    : Angoulême:
    :
    :
    :
    : The Duchess of Angoulême was the daughter of
    : King Louis XVI and Queen Marie-Antoinette,
    : the sister of the unfortunate Louis XVII,
    : the niece of Louis XVIII, and the wife of
    : her first cousin Louis-Antoine, Duke of
    : Angoulême (himself the son of her other
    : uncle, the future King Charles X). As both
    : Louis XVIII and Charles X were widowed, and
    : Louis XVIII was childless, the Duchess of
    : Angoulême acted 'de facto' as France's First
    : Lady under the 'Restoration' (the
    : monarchical regime of France between 1814
    : and 1830) and was allowed to use the Crown
    : jewels.
    :
    : The ruby parure was the first parure made
    : for the Duchess after the change of regime
    : in 1814-1815. It was slightly altered in
    : 1825, and was worn by the Duchess for
    : Charles X's coronation in Reims that year.
    : It then remained unchanged, and was known to
    : be a favourite of Empress Eugénie, who wore
    : the parure frequently (she wore it for the
    : first time for the official dinner at the
    : Tuileries Palace, on the evening of her
    : wedding day).Here is the full parure,
    : photographed in the 1880s:
    :
    :
    : http://diamantsdelacouronne.free.fr/Diamants%20de%20la%20Couronne/Parure%20de%20rubis/slides/Parure%20de%20rubis.html
    :
    : Most of the elements of the parure still
    : exist, with the exception of the belt, which
    : was dismantled. The largest necklace of the
    : parure still exists (it appeared several
    : times at auctions in the last decades). The
    : pair of bracelets is in the Louvre Museum.
    :
    : The tiara was bought at the 1887 auction by
    : a certain Mr Haas, but was soon acquired by
    : the American millionnaire Bradley Martin. It
    : was given to Martin's daughter, Cornelia,
    : Countess of Craven. The tiara was sold at
    : auction in 1961, after the Countess of
    : Craven's death. It is rumoured to be now in
    : the possession of the Niarchos family, but
    : so far we have no conclusive element to
    : proove this assertion.
    :
    : Here are two more pictures, the first one
    : during the sale of the Countess of Craven's
    : estate in 1961, and the second one during
    : the exhibition "Ten centuries of French
    : jewellery" at the Louvre Museum in May
    : 1962 (these two pictures were not published
    : in Connaissance des Arts , but I think you
    : will not mind about that... ):
    :
    :
    :
    :
    :
    : - the edition of Connaissance des Arts of
    : April 1962 also published this interesting
    : picture of a ruby and diamond floral spray
    : brooch, said to have belonged to Empress
    : Eugénie and to be, at the time of the
    : publication, in a private collection.
    :
    : I have no other information about this
    : brooch, and I do not even know if the
    : attribution to Empress Eugénie is reliable.
    : The only sure fact is that it was not part
    : of the Crown Jewels. So, if it was a jewel
    : of Empress Eugénie, it was part of her
    : private collection. None of the jewels of
    : the exiled Empress auctioned off in 1872 in
    : London matches with this jewel, but of
    : course the Empress could have kept it
    : longer, possibly until her death.
    : Anyway, it is beautiful. I would be happy to
    : see this brooch again.
    :
    :
    :
    :
    : We can also notice that Empress Eugénie had
    : other ruby and diamond jewels in her private
    : collection:
    :
    : - there is this ruby, pearl and diamond
    : necklace recently seen at the Biennale des
    : Antiquaires in Paris (possibly a wedding
    : gift):
    :
    :
    : http://members2.boardhost.com/royal-jewels/msg/1411117531.html
    :
    : - Bernard Morel publishes also this picture
    : of a ruby and diamond laurel tiara, made by
    : Bapst for Empress Eugénie:
    :
    :
    :
    :
    : That's all, folks!
    :
    :
    :
    :


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