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PRECIOUS STONES              27
England in 1775. It is said to have been sold by lottery for £30,000, and later bought by Rundell & Bridge for £6000. It was afterwards sold to Ali Pasha, of Egypt, for £30,000. Since then all track of it has been lost. By some the weight is given as eighty-one and one-half carats, but Mawe, who saw it before it was sold to Ali Pasha, gives the weight as forty-nine carats. (Plate XVII.)
The " Nassak," or " Nassac," was so named because it was formerly held for a long time in a temple at Nassak. After passing through various hands, jeweller Emanuel, of London, acquired it in 1831. It was sold soon after to the Marquis of Westminster for £7200 and is still owned by that family. It weighed originally eighty-nine and one-half carats (Plate XVII.), but was recut to seventy-eight and five-eighths carats. (Plate XIX.)
The " Eugenie" is a fine brilliant of unknown origin. It weighs fifty-one carats, and was presented by Catherine II., of Russia, to her favorite, Potemkin. It remained in that family until Napoleon III. bought it for his bride Eugenie. After her dethronement it was sold to the Gaikwar of Baroda, India. (Plate XVII.)
One of the finest brilliants known is the " White Saxon Brilliant." It weighs forty-eight and three-fourths carats, and was bought by Augustus the Strong for one million thalers.
The " Dresden Green Diamond" is of fine quality and flaw­less. The color is a bright apple-green. It has been in the possession of the Saxon crown since 1753, and is now in the Griine Gewolbe, or " Green Vaults," of Dresden. Augus­tus the Strong paid sixty thousand thalers for it. The weight is variously given as thirty-one and one-fourth and forty-eight carats. Dr. Max Bauer states that the correct weight is forty carats. (Plate XVI.)
The " Polar Star," a stone of great purity and brilliancy, was purchased for a large sum by the Emperor Paul, of