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Ch. 10: Remarkable Diamonds

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THE BOOK OF DIAMONDS
secret. It is said that he offered to give the diamond to the mariner, in return for his liberty. The English skipper, pro­fessing to accept the slave's proposal, took him on board his ship and, having obtained possession of the jewel, flung the slave into the sea. The English sea captain sold it for one thousand pounds sterling, not to Governor Pitt, but in all probability to Jamchund, at that time the leading diamond merchant in the East. Jamchund sold it to Mr. Thomas Pitt, Governor of Fort St. George, Madras, East Coast of India for twenty thousand four hundred pounds sterling. The Governor was the grandfather of William Pitt, first Earl of Chatham. While it remained in posses­sion of Thomas Pitt he never slept two nights running un­der the same roof. At last he was relieved of further anxiety by the negotiations, in consequence of which the "Pitt" became the "Regent", passing from the English owner into the hands of the Duke of Orleans, Regent of France, in 1717 for 135,000 pounds.
The first name was given it because it was owned for some years by Governor Pitt; the latter because it was bought by the Duke of Orleans while he was Regent of France during the minority of Louis XV.
It was sent to England and cut into a brilliant. In the process it was reduced from 410 to 136-3/4 carats. The cut­ting required two years. It cost 27,000 thalers, and 10,000 thalers worth of diamond dust were used in the operation. The pieces ground off were worth 48,000 thalers. During the reign of terror of 1792 it disappeared with the rest of the crown diamonds, but was found again later. Under
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Ch. 10: Remarkable Diamonds Page of 153 Ch. 10: Remarkable Diamonds
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