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LXI.
THE BANTAM.
One of Tavernier's Royal Customers—" The Queen of Borneo "—The Dutch Regalia—A Fanatical Pilgrim of Mecca—Fighting and Feasting.
HEN Tavernier was in Java in 1648 he was a frequent guest of the then reigning Rajah of Bantam, in the western part of the island. Like most Eastern potentates, this king was fond of collecting precious stones, and made several purchases from the French dealer. At one of these interviews he pro­duced a kris or dagger, which he was having em­bellished in the Turkish style. The handle was to be set all over with diamonds, for which purpose, not possessing enough in his treasury, he commissioned Tavernier to procure as many as would be required to complete the work. But the top of the hilt was already covered, and in the plaque there was one very large diamond cut in facets, which the expert tells us, as far as he could judge, " was worth at least fifteen or sixteen thousand crowns." The king informed him that he had received it as a present from the Queen of Borneo, and that he had sent it to be cut in Goa. But he himself set a much higher price on it than Tavernier thought it could be worth.
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