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Ch. 10-B: The Orloff Diamond

Ch. 10-B: The Orloff Diamond Page of 312 Ch. 11: The Koh-I-Nur, The Great Diamond of History & Romance Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
THE ORLOFF.
115
until the story of the French grenadier is shown to be a pure fabrication, maintain that the " Orloff" glit­tered in the eye, not of Aurung-zeb's peacock, but of the idol Sri-Ranga, and that it reached Europe, not from Delhi via Persia, but from Mysore, via Madras.
Mawe, who had also confused the stories of the "Orloff" and "Moon of Mountains," in the first edition of the Treaty on Diamonds, subsequently discovered his mistake, and at p. 42 of the second edition of that work, (London, 1823), inserted the subjoined paragraph :—" In a former edition I stated that this diamond belonged to Nadir Shah, but this may be doubted, as the Asiatics rarely part with diamonds of a large size; nor do I believe that a single instance of the kind is known to have occurred."
The account given by Pallas of the "Orloff" will be noticed when we come to treat of the " Moon of Mountains."
Ch. 10-B: The Orloff Diamond Page of 312 Ch. 11: The Koh-I-Nur, The Great Diamond of History & Romance
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