Regent Diamond Explained

Regent Diamond
Carats:140.64
Grams:28.1
Colour:White with pale blue
Cut:Cushion
Mine:Kollur Mine
Country:India
Cutter:Harris, 1704–1706
Found:1698
Original Owner:Kollur Mine
Owner:France (on display at the Louvre)
Value:~£48,000,000

The Regent Diamond is a 140.64carat diamond owned by the French state and on display in the Louvre, worth £48,000,000 . Mined in India and cut in London, it was purchased by the regent of France in the early 18th century.

History

Discovery

According to legend, the diamond was discovered by an enslaved man in the Kollur Mine near the Krishna River in India and was concealed by the slave in a leg wound, which he suffered while fleeing the 1687 siege of Golconda by the Moghul Emperor Aurangzeb. The slave then made it to the coast, where he met an English sea captain and offered him 50% of all profits made on the sale of the diamond in exchange for safe passage out of India. However, the sea captain killed the slave and sold the diamond to the eminent Indian diamond merchant Jamchand.[1] [2]

Pitt acquisition

In a letter to his London agent dated 6November 1701, Thomas Pitt, the Governor of Fort St. George, writes:

Pitt claimed he acquired the diamond from Jamchand for 48,000 pagodas in the same year, so it is sometimes also known as the Pitt Diamond.[3] [4] He dispatched the stone to London hidden in the heel of his son Robert's shoe[5] aboard the East Indiaman Loyal Cooke, which left Madras on 9October 1702. It was later cut in London by the diamond cutter Harris, between 1704 and 1706. The cutting took two years and cost about £5,000[6]

Rumours circulated that Pitt had fraudulently acquired the diamond,[7] leading satirist Alexander Pope to pen the following lines in his Moral Essays

Pitt bought the diamond for £20,400, and had it cut into a 141carat cushion brilliant.

Sale to the French Regent

After many attempts to sell it to various members of European royalty, including Louis XIV of France, it was purchased for the French Crown by the French Regent, Philippe II, Duke of Orléans, in 1717 for £135,000, at the urging of his close friend and famed memoirist Louis de Rouvroy, duc de Saint-Simon.[8] The stone was set into the crown of Louis XV for his coronation in 1722 and then into a new crown for the Coronation of Louis XVI in 1775. It was also used to adorn a hat belonging to Marie Antoinette. In 1791, its appraised value was £480,000 .

In 1792, during the revolutionary furore in Paris, "Le Régent", or the regent diamond, was stolen along with other crown jewels of France, but was later recovered. It was found in some roof timbers in an attic in Paris. The diamond was used as security or collateral on several occasions by the Directoire and later the Consulat to finance the military expenses: 1797-1798 it was pledged to the Berlin Entrepreneur Sigmund Otto Joseph von Treskow and 1798–1801 to the Dutch Banker Vandenberg in Amsterdam. In 1801 the gem was permanently redeemed by Napoleon Bonaparte.

Napoleon used it for the guard of his sword, designed by the goldsmiths Odiot, Boutet and Marie-Etienne Nitot. In 1812 it appeared on the Emperor's two-edged sword, which was a work of Nitot. Napoleon's second wife, Archduchess Marie Louise of Austria, carried the Régent back to the Austrian Empire upon his exile. Later her father returned it to the French Crown Jewels. The diamond was mounted successively on the crowns of Louis XVIII, Charles X and Napoleon III.

Today, mounted in a Greek diadem designed for Empress Eugenie, it remains in the French Royal Treasury at the Louvre. It has been on display there since 1887. Experts in the early21st century have estimated the Regent Diamond value to be near £48,000,000.[9]

Folklore

Due to numerous scandals, and the misfortune of those who have been in possession of the stone, the Regent Diamond is said to be cursed.[10] [11] [12]

See also

Notes

Bibliography

External links

48.8605°N 2.3375°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Regent Diamond - Largest D Color Diamond in the World. 6 October 2016 .
  2. Deccan Heritage, H. K. Gupta, A. Parasher and D. Balasubramanian, Indian National Science Academy, 2000, p. 144, Orient Blackswan,
  3. Brown p.15
  4. Shipley, Robert M. (1946) Diamond Glossary, pp.  315 (PDF page 23) Gemological Institute of America, USA, Vol. 5, No. 5 (Spring 1946)
  5. Book: Edward Pearce. Pitt the Elder: Man of War. 2010. Random House. 978-1-4090-8908-7. 6.
  6. Web site: Regent Diamond. Internet Stones.COM.
  7. Book: Nicholson, Colin. Writing and the Rise of Finance: Capital Satires of the Early Eighteenth Century. registration. 1994. Cambridge University Press. 978-0-521-45323-3. 149.
  8. Web site: Memoirs of the Duc de Saint-Simon on the Times of Louis XIV, and the Regency. Louis de Rouvroy duc de. Saint-Simon. 1 January 1899. Hardy, Pratt. Google Books.
  9. Web site: The Regent Diamond. Worthy.com. 21 April 2015.
  10. Web site: Matthews. Heather. Top 10 Most Notorious Cursed Diamonds. 22 October 2008. Top Tenz. 30 August 2016.
  11. Web site: Supposedly Cursed Jewels: The Regent Diamond – K.O. Jewel. K.O. Jewel.
  12. Web site: The world's most notoriously cursed diamonds. Diamonds and a Little Black Dress.