Marie
Antoinette's pearls up for auction
Thu
Sep 27, 2007 1:18pm EDT
By Mike Collett-White
LONDON
(Reuters) - A set of pearls once belonging to Marie Antoinette and taken to Britain
by a friend for safekeeping will go on sale in December, and are expected to fetch
up to $800,000.
Now
part of a diamond, ruby and pearl necklace, France's last queen gave a bag of
pearls and diamonds to Lady Sutherland, the British ambassador's wife, before
she fled revolutionary France in 1792, a year before Marie Antoinette's death.
"Lady
Sutherland was wife of the ambassador and friends with the queen, and they had
children of the same age," said Raymond Sancroft-Baker, senior director of
Christie's jewelry in London.
"When
you are in a dire situation, there are not many people you can trust and the key
was to give the jewels to someone with diplomatic immunity," he told Reuters.
Marie
Antoinette, legendary for her extravagance, did not know her fate at the time,
he said, and would have hoped to be reunited with her treasures one day.
"Hope
springs eternal," added Sancroft-Baker.
According
to Christie's, Sutherland arranged for clothes and linen to be sent to the queen
while she was in prison.
"This
was reportedly the last gesture of kindness shown to the doomed queen," the
auctioneer said in a statement
Marie
Antoinette was executed by guillotine in October 1793.
The
diamonds were made into a necklace, while the pearls were mounted later for the
occasion of the marriage of Sutherland's grandson in 1849.
Christie's
did not specify which of Sutherland's descendants was selling the necklace.
"The
owner said it just sits in the bank the whole time, and there comes a time for
everything," Sancroft-Baker said.
He
hoped the pearls, which have never been offered at auction before and remained
in the same family for over 200 years, would be made available for the public
to see.
"The
Louvre might be interested, for example," he said, adding that the story
behind the necklace made it one of the most important sales he had overseen at
Christie's.
"It's
right up there in the top 10 we've ever sold, because its provenance is rock solid,
as far as we can be aware. There are documents to go with it and contemporary
supporting evidence."
The
necklace will go under the hammer at the Magnificent Jewelry sale in London on
December 12, and is expected to make between 350,000 and 400,000 pounds ($700-800,000).