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Ch. 4: Celebrated Diamonds

Ch. 4: Celebrated Diamonds Page of 448 Ch. 4: Celebrated Diamonds Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
80
THE DIAMOND
the Bold, by this story, with the Sancy diamond inven­toried among the French jewels in 1791, which weighed 33-3/4 carats. It is said also that the Sancy was sold by Baron de Sancy to James I in 1604, and that during the Civil War in England, Queen Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles I, carried it to France and pledged it with an­other to the Duke of Epernon. In 1657 Mazarin, with the Queen's consent, paid the duke and took possession of the stone. He bequeathed it with others to Louis XIV. This writer also thinks this to be the Sancy of the French Crown jewels inventoried in 1791, and which was stolen in 1792, recovered in 1794, and probably disposed of in 1796 to meet the expenses of the great campaign of that year. It was owned in Spain in 1809, and later passed into the possession of the Demidoff family of Russia.
Another account says that it was among the Spanish Crown jewels about 10 years after it left France, and that Prince Demidoff owned it from 1828 to 1865, when he sold it for £20,000. In 1867 it was exhibited at the Paris Exposition and is now owned by the Maharajah of Guttiola.
An English writer says the King of France gave it to James II of England, and that James sold it for $125,-000. It then passed into the Crown jewels of France, was stolen as heretofore described, recovered by Fouche for Napoleon, and sold by him to Prince Paul Demi­doff. It was next owned by the Earl of Westmeath and is now in the possession of the heirs of the multi­millionaire Parsee merchant, Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy. The latest rumor is that the Sancy has been presented by William Waldorf Astor to his daughter-in-law on the
Ch. 4: Celebrated Diamonds Page of 448 Ch. 4: Celebrated Diamonds
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