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Ch. 6: The Diamond

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PRECIOUS STONES.
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not very large in comparison with many stones now known, measuring some 5/8 inch on the edges of the girdle, and it would probably weigh about 30 carats; but it is of great interest as being the first stone cut by De Berquem. Some of the traditions concerning it have been given when dealing with the history of cutting.
The Sancy, with which Charles the Bold's Diamond has often been confused, is a stone of 53f carats. It is said to have belonged to a French nobleman called De Sancy, from whom it passed to either our Queen Elizabeth or Henrietta Maria; it finally passed back to France to the possession of Louis XIV., but was stolen at the time of the Bevolution and not recovered. After being amongst the Spanish regalia, it passed in 1828 to Prince Demidoff, and it is now owned by the Maharaja of Patiala. It is cut as a double rosette.
Three other stones whose history is obscure and inter­woven are the Great Mogul, the Koh-i-noor, and the Orloff. The Mogul was seen by Tavernier in 1665, during his visit to India, amongst the jewels of Aurungzebe, when it was weighed and drawn by him. It is supposed to have been found in the mines of Kollur, and to have weighed 560 to 787-1/2 carats in the rough ; it was cut into a high-crowned rose by Borghis of Venice, the finished weight being 280 carats. King records that Aurungzebe was so enraged at the diminution in size, that instead of paying his jeweller for cutting the stone, he fined him 10,000 rupees. What came of the Great Mogul is not definitely known, but it has been supposed that it was divided into three stones, of which the Koh-i-noor and the Orloff are two. It has also been stated that the Mogul was taken by Nadir Shah at
Ch. 6: The Diamond Page of 311 Ch. 6: The Diamond
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