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Fabergé Eggs

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
5K views94 pages

Fabergé Eggs

Wikipedia related articles on the famous Fabergé Eggs, compiled using the new Book-Creator feature of the website.

Uploaded by

Gonz
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Fabergé Eggs

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Contents
Articles
Introduction 1
Fabergé egg 1
House of Fabergé 6
Peter Carl Fabergé 12

Imperial Easter Eggs 16


Alexander III Commemorative (Fabergé egg) 16
Alexander III Equestrian (Fabergé egg) 17
Alexander III Portraits (Fabergé egg) 18
Alexander Palace (Fabergé egg) 19
Basket of Wild Flowers (Fabergé egg) 20
Bay Tree (Fabergé egg) 21
Blue Serpent Clock Egg 22
Bouquet of Lilies Clock (Fabergé egg) 24
Caucasus (Fabergé egg) 25
Cherub with Chariot Egg 26
Clover Leaf (Fabergé egg) 27
Colonnade (Fabergé egg) 28
Constellation (Fabergé egg) 30
Danish Palaces Egg 31
Diamond Trellis Egg 32
Empire Nephrite (Fabergé egg) 33
Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg) 34
Hen with Sapphire Pendant 35
Imperial Coronation Egg 36
Karelian Birch (Fabergé egg) 40
Lilies of the Valley 41
Mauve (Fabergé egg) 42
Memory of Azov Egg 42
Mosaic (Fabergé egg) 44
Moscow Kremlin (Fabergé egg) 45
Napoleonic (Fabergé egg) 46
Nécessaire Egg 48
Order of St. George (Fabergé egg) 49
Peacock (Fabergé egg) 50
Pelican (Fabergé egg) 52
Peter the Great (Fabergé egg) 54
Red Cross with Imperial Portraits 56
Red Cross with Triptych (Fabergé egg) 58
Renaissance (Fabergé egg) 59
Rock Crystal (Fabergé egg) 61
Romanov Tercentenary (Fabergé egg) 63
Rose Trellis (Fabergé egg) 65
Rosebud (Fabergé egg) 66
Royal Danish (Fabergé egg) 67
Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg) 68
Steel Military (Fabergé egg) 69
Swan (Fabergé egg) 70
Trans-Siberian Railway (Fabergé egg) 71
Tsarevich (Fabergé egg) 73
Twelve Monograms (Fabergé egg) 75
Winter (Fabergé egg) 76

Fabergé Kelch Eggs 77


Kelch Chanticleer (Fabergé egg) 77
Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg) 79
Pine Cone (Fabergé egg) 80

Other Fabergé Eggs 82


Duchess of Marlborough Egg 82
Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg) 83
Resurrection Egg 85
Rothschild (Fabergé egg) 86

References
Article Sources and Contributors 88
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 90

Article Licenses
License 91
1

Introduction

Fabergé egg
A Fabergé egg (Russian: Яйца Фаберже; Yaĭtsa Faberzhe; ) is
any one of the thousands of jeweled eggs made by the House of
Fabergé from 1885 through 1917. The majority of these were
miniature ones that were popular gifts at Eastertide. They would
be worn on a neck chain either singly or in groups.
The most famous eggs produced by the House were the larger ones
made for Alexander III and Nicholas II of Russia. Of the 50 made,
42 have survived.[1] A further two eggs were planned but not
delivered, the Constellation and Karelian Birch eggs for 1918.
Seven large eggs were made for the Kelch family of Moscow.[2]
The eggs are made of precious metals or hard stones decorated
with combinations of enamel and gem stones. The term "Fabergé
egg" has become a synonym of luxury and the eggs are regarded
as masterpieces of the jeweller's art. The Fabergé Imperial Easter
Eggs are regarded as the last great series of commissions for objets
d'art.
The Moscow Kremlin egg, 1906.

History
The story began when Tsar Alexander III decided to give his wife the Empress of Pandora Maria Fedorovna an
Easter Egg in 1885, possibly to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their betrothal. It is believed that the Tsar’s
inspiration for the piece was an egg owned by the Empress’s aunt, Princess Wilhelmine Marie of Denmark, which
had captivated Maria’s imagination in her childhood. Known as the Hen Egg, it is crafted from gold. Its opaque
white enamelled ‘shell’ opens to reveal its first surprise, a matte yellow gold yolk. This in turn opens to reveal a
multi-coloured gold hen, that also opens. It contains a minute diamond replica of the Imperial Crown from which a
small ruby pendant was suspended. Unfortunately, these last two surprises have been lost.[3]

Empress Maria was so delighted by this gift that Alexander appointed Fabergé a ‘goldsmith by special appointment
to the Imperial Crown’. He commissioned another egg the following year. However, after that, Peter Carl Fabergé,
who headed the House, was apparently given complete freedom for future Imperial Easter Eggs, as from this date
their designs become more
Fabergé egg 2

elaborate. According to the Fabergé family tradition, not even the


Czar knew what form they would take: the only stipulation was
that each one should contain a surprise. Following the death of
Alexander III on November 1, 1894, his son presented a Fabergé
egg to both his wife, the Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, and to his
mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovna.

No eggs were made for 1904 and 1905 because of the


Russo-Japanese War. Once an initial design had been approved by
Peter Carl Fabergé, the work was carried out by an entire team of
craftsmen, among them Michael Perkhin, Henrik Wigström and
Erik August Kollin.

Bouquet of Lilies Clock egg.

The Imperial eggs enjoyed great fame, and Fabergé made some other large eggs for just a few select private clients,
such as the Duchess of Marlborough, the Nobels, the Rothschilds and the Yusupovs. Among them is a series of
seven eggs made for the industrialist Alexander Kelch.

List of Fabergé Tsar Imperial Easter eggs


• 1885 Hen • 1899 Bouquet of Lilies Clock • 1909 Standart Yacht
• 1886 Hen with Sapphire Pendant† • 1899 Pansy • 1909 Alexander III Commemorative†
• 1887 Blue Serpent Clock • 1900 Trans-Siberian Railway • 1910 Colonnade
• 1888 Cherub with Chariot† • 1900 Cockerel • 1910 Alexander III Equestrian
• 1889 Nécessaire† • 1901 Basket of Wild Flowers • 1911 Fifteenth Anniversary
• 1890 Danish Palaces • 1901 Gatchina Palace • 1911 Bay Tree
• 1891 Memory of Azov • 1902 Clover Leaf • 1912 Czarevich
• 1892 Diamond Trellis • 1902 Empire Nephrite† • 1912 Napoleonic
• 1893 Caucasus • 1903 Peter the Great • 1913 Romanov Tercentenary
• 1894 Renaissance • 1903 Royal Danish† • 1913 Winter
• 1895 Rosebud • 1904 No eggs made • 1914 Mosaic
• 1895 Twelve Monograms • 1905 No eggs made • 1914 Grisaille
• 1896 Revolving Miniatures • 1906 Moscow Kremlin • 1915 Red Cross with Triptych
• 1896 Alexander III Portraits† • 1906 Swan • 1915 Red Cross with Imperial Portraits
• 1897 Coronation • 1907 Rose Trellis • 1916 Steel Military
• 1897 Mauve† • 1907 Cradle with Garlands • 1916 Order of St. George
• 1898 Lilies-of-the-Valley • 1908 Alexander Palace • 1917 Karelian Birch
• 1898 Pelican • 1908 Peacock • 1917 Constellation (unfinished)

† Indicates missing egg


Fabergé egg 3

List of Fabergé Kelch eggs


• 1898 Hen
• 1899 Twelve Panel
• 1900 Pine Cone
• 1901 Apple Blossom
• 1902 Rocaille
• 1903 Bonbonnière
• 1904 Chanticleer

Other Fabergé eggs


• 1885-1891 Blue Striped Enamel
• 1902 Duchess of Marlborough
• 1902 Rothschild
• 1907 Youssoupov
• 1914 Nobel Ice
• 1885-1889 Resurrection
• 1899-1903 Spring Flowers

Location of eggs
Location of the Fabergé eggs Number

Imperial: 42

Viktor Vekselberg collection, Russia (formerly Forbes) 9

Kremlin Armory Museum, Moscow, Russia 10

Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia, USA 5

Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art, Nashville, Tennessee, USA 3

Royal Collection, London, UK 3

Edouard and Maurice Sandoz Foundation, Switzerland 2

Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C, USA 2

Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland, USA 2

Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, USA 1

Albert II of Monaco collection, Monte-Carlo, Monaco 1

The State of Qatar 1

Private Collections, USA 3

Kelch: 7

Viktor Vekselberg collection, Russia (formerly Forbes) 2

Royal Collection, London, UK 1

Private Collection 4

Others: 8

Viktor Vekselberg collection, Russia (formerly Forbes) 2

Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, USA 1

Edouard and Maurice Sandoz Foundation, Switzerland 1


Fabergé egg 4

Russian National Museum, Moscow, Russia 1

Private Collection 3

Of the 65 known large Fabergé eggs[4] , only 57 have survived to the present day. Ten of the Imperial Easter Eggs
are displayed at the Kremlin Armoury Museum, Moscow in Russia. Of the 50 known Imperial eggs, only 42 have
survived.
Of the eight lost Imperial eggs, photographs exist of only two,[5] the 1903 Royal Danish, and the 1909 Alexander III
Commemorative eggs.
Only one, 1916's Order of St. George egg, left Bolshevik Russia with its original recipient, the Dowager Empress
Maria Feodorovna.[6] The rest remained in Petrograd.
Following the Russian Revolution, the House of Fabergé was nationalized by the Bolsheviks, and the Fabergé family
fled to Switzerland, where Peter Carl Fabergé died in 1920.[7] The Romanov palaces were ransacked and their
treasures moved on order of Vladimir Lenin to the Kremlin Armoury.[7]
In a bid to acquire more foreign currency, Joseph Stalin had many of the eggs sold in 1927, after their value had been
appraised by Agathon Fabergé. Between 1930 and 1933 fourteen Imperial eggs left Russia. Many of the eggs were
sold to Armand Hammer, president of Occidental Petroleum and a personal friend of Lenin, whose father was
founder of the United States Communist party, and Emanuel Snowman of the London antique dealers Wartski.
After the collection in the Kremlin Armoury, the largest gathering of Fabergé eggs was assembled by Malcolm
Forbes, and displayed in New York City. Totalling nine eggs, and approximately 180 other Fabergé objects, the
collection was put up for auction at Sotheby's in February 2004 by Forbes' heirs. Before the auction even began the
collection was purchased in its entirety by the oligarch Victor Vekselberg for a sum estimated between $90 and $120
million. [8]
In November 2007, a Fabergé clock, named by Christie's auction house the Rothschild egg, sold at auction for £8.9
million (including commission).[9] The price achieved by the egg set three auction records: it is the most expensive
timepiece, Russian object, and Fabergé object ever sold at auction, surpassing the $9.6 million sale of the 1913
Winter egg in 2002.[10] [11]

Gallery

'Alexander III Equestrian' The Memory of Azov Egg The Peter The Great Egg
Egg
Fabergé egg 5

See also
• Easter eggs
• Egg decorating
• Guilloché
• Kitsch

Further reading
• Toby Faber. Faberge's Eggs: The Extraordinary Story of the Masterpieces That Outlived an Empire (New York:
Random House, 2008) ISBN 978-1-4000-6550-9
• Gerald Hill. Faberge and the Russian Master Goldsmiths (New York: Universe, 2007) ISBN 978-0-7893-9970-0
• Object of Vertu [12]

External links
• Mieks; website on pictures, history, whereabouts... of Fabergé eggs [13]
• Fabergé Research Site by Christel Ludewig McCanless [14]
• Details on each of the Fabergé Eggs [15]
• BYU article on the eggs [16]
• "Oval Objects of Desire," Wall Street Journal review of new history of Faberge eggs [17]

References
[1] The Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs,by Fabergé, Skurlov, Proler, London, 1997, page 90. ISBN 0-90343-248-X
[2] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Kelch-Eggs/ Kelch-Eggs. htm Story of the Kelch eggs from mieks.com
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1885-Hen-Egg. htm Article on the first Hen egg
[4] The 50 delivered Imperial Eggs, the Karelian Birch Egg, the 7 Kelch Eggs, the Duchess of Marlborough, the Rothschild, the Youssoupov,
Nobel, the Resurection, Spring Flowers, and the Blue Striped Enamel eggs - total 65
[5] Egg Hunting, Pro Division - Forbes.com (http:/ / www. forbes. com/ forbes/ 2004/ 0412/ 233. html)
[6] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap11_srgeorge. html)
[7] Faberge Eggs - the fate of the eggs (http:/ / www. pbs. org/ treasuresoftheworld/ faberge/ flevel_1/ f7_fate_of_eggs. html)
[8] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[9] The clock was previously documented and had been published in 1964 in L'Objet 1900 by Maurice Rheims, plate 29
[10] http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 2/ hi/ uk_news/ 7116956. stm Fabergé egg sold for record £8.9m, BBC News, 28 November 2007
[11] Bloomberg.com: Muse Arts (http:/ / www. bloomberg. com/ apps/ news?pid=20601088& sid=aKbQV1ZgI44A& refer=home)
[12] http:/ / objectofvertu. com/ index. php
[13] http:/ / www. mieks. com/
[14] http:/ / home. hiwaay. net/ ~christel/ index. html
[15] http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ fab00. html
[16] http:/ / germslav. byu. edu/ perspectives/ 2003/ Bailey. html
[17] http:/ / online. wsj. com/ article/ SB122325809048506707. html
House of Fabergé 6

House of Fabergé
The House of Fabergé is a jewellery firm founded in 1842 in Imperial Russia and famed for designing elaborate
jewel-encrusted Fabergé eggs for the Russian Tsars.

Early years
The Fabergé family can be traced back to 17th century France, then under the name Favri. The Favris lived at the
village of La Bouteille in the Picardy region of northern France. However, they fled the country during or shortly
after 1685 because of religious persecution. An estimated fellow 250,000 Huguenots, as the movement of French
Protestants was known, also became fugitives.[1]
Papers in the Fabergé Family Archives reveal that during the family's progress eastwards through Europe the
family’s name changed progressively from Favri through Favry, Fabri, Fabrier and then to Faberge without an
accent. At Schwedt-on-Oder northeast of Berlin in the second half of the 18th century a Jean Favri (subsequently
Favry) is known to have been employed as a tobacco planter. By 1800 an artisan called Pierre Favry (later Peter
Fabrier), had settled in Pärnu in the Baltic province of Livonia (now Estonia). A Gustav Fabrier was born there in
1814. By 1825 the family’s name had evolved to Faberge.
In the 1830s, Gustav Faberge moved to Saint Petersburg, the capital of Russia, to train as a goldsmith under Andreas
Ferdinand Spiegel, who specialised in making gold boxes. Later he continued his training with the celebrated firm of
Keibel, goldsmiths and jewellers to the Tsars. In 1841, his apprenticeship over, Gustav Faberge earned the title of
Master Goldsmith.

Launch of Fabergé
In 1842, Gustav Faberge opened his own retail jewelry, "Fabergé", in a basement shop in the capital’s fashionable
Bolshaia Morskaia. The addition of the accent may have been an attempt to give the name a more explicitly French
character, appealing to the Russian nobility's francophilia. French was the language of the Russian Court and the
urban nobility, and closely associated with luxury goods. Later in that year, Gustav married Charlotte Jungstedt, the
daughter of Carl Jungstedt, an artist of Danish origin. In 1846, the couple had a son, Peter Carl Fabergé, popularly
known as Carl Fabergé.

Carl Fabergé
Carl Fabergé was educated at the Gymnasium of St Anne’s. This was a fashionable establishment for the sons of the
affluent middle classes and the lower echelons of the nobility, providing an indication of the success of his father’s
business. Gustav Fabergé retired to Dresden, Germany in 1860, leaving the firm in the hands of managers outside of
the Fabergé family while his son continued his education. The young Carl undertook a business course at the
Dresden Handelsschule. At the age of 18, he embarked on a Grand Tour. He received tuition from respected
goldsmiths in Frankfurt, Germany, France and England, attended a course at Schloss’s Commercial College in Paris
and viewed the objects in the galleries of Europe’s leading museums.
Carl returned to St Petersburg in 1872, aged 26 years. For the following 10 years, his father’s Workmaster, Hiskias
Pendin, acted as his mentor and tutor. In 1881, the company moved to larger street-level premises at 16/18 Bolshaia
Morskaia. Following Pendin’s death in 1882, Carl took over the running of the firm. Three other significant events
happened that year. He was awarded the title of Master Goldsmith. Agathon Fabergé, his younger brother by 16
years, joined the business. While Agathon’s education was restricted to Dresden, he was noted as a talented designer
that provided the business with fresh impetus, until his death 13 years later.
House of Fabergé 7

Rise to prominence
Following Carl’s involvement with repairing and restoring objects in the Hermitage Museum, the firm was invited to
exhibit at the Pan-Russian Exhibition in Moscow. One of the Fabergé pieces displayed at the Pan-Russian Exhibition
was a replica of a 4th century BC gold bangle from the Scythian Treasure in the Hermitage Museum. Tsar Alexander
III declared that he could not distinguish Fabergé’s work from the original. He ordered that specimens of work by the
House of Fabergé should be displayed in the Hermitage Museum as examples of superb contemporary Russian
craftsmanship. In 1885, the House of Fabergé was bestowed with the coveted title "Goldsmith by special
appointment to the Imperial Crown", beginning an association with the Russian tsars.

The Imperial Easter eggs


In 1885, Tsar Alexander III commissioned the House
of Fabergé to make an Easter egg as a gift for his wife,
the Empress Maria Fedorovna. Its "shell" is enamelled
on gold to represent a normal hen’s egg. This pulls
apart to reveal a gold yolk, which in turn opens to
produce a gold chicken that also opens to reveal a
replica of the Imperial Crown from which a miniature
ruby egg was suspended. Although the Crown and the
miniature egg have been lost, the rest of the Hen Egg as
it is known is now in the collection of Victor
Vekselberg.

The tradition of the Tsar giving his Empress a surprise


Easter egg by Carl Fabergé continued. From 1887, it
appears that Carl Fabergé was given complete freedom
as to the design of the Imperial Easter eggs as they
became more elaborate. According to the Fabergé
Family tradition, not even the Tsar knew what egg form
they would take: the only stipulation was that each one
should contain a surprise. The House of Fabergé
completed 54 Imperial eggs for Alexander III to present
to his Empress and for Nicholas II to present to his The Moscow Kremlin egg, 1906
mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovna and
his wife the Empress Alexandra Fedorovna.[2] Of these, 42 have survived. The eggs for 1917 were never completed,
but have been discovered in recent years.

Hardstone sculptures
Amongst Fabergé’s more popular creations were the miniature hardstone carvings of people, animals and flowers
carved from semi-precious or hardstones and embellished with precious metals and stones. The most common
animal carvings were elephants and pigs but included custom made miniatures of pets of the British Royal family
and other notables. The flower sculptures were complete figural tableaus, which included small vases in which
carved flowers were permanently set, the vase and "water" were done in clear rock crystal (quartz) and the flowers in
various hardstones and enamel.[3] The figures were typically only 25-75mm long or wide, with some larger and more
rare figurines reaching 140mm to 200mm tall,[4] and were collected throughout the world; the British Royal family
has over 250 items in the Royal Collection, including pieces made by Perchin and Wigström.[5] Other important
Fabergé miniature collectors were Marjorie Merriweather Post[6] , her niece Barbara Hutton[7] and even Fabergé's
House of Fabergé 8

competitor Cartier, who in 1910 purchased a pink jade pig and a carnelian (agate) fox with cabochon ruby eyes set in
gold.[8] [9]

Other Fabergé creations


The House of Fabergé also stocked a full range of jewellery and other ornamental objects. There were enamelled
gold and silver gilt, as well as wooden photograph frames; gold and silver boxes; desk sets and timepieces.[10]
Quality was assured by every article made being approved by Carl Fabergé, or in his absence by his eldest son
Eugène, before it was placed into stock. The minutest of faults would result in rejection.

Continued expansion
The House of Fabergé won international awards and became Russia’s largest jewellery firm employing some 500
craftsmen and designers. In the early 20th century, the headquarters of the House of Fabergé moved to a
purpose-built, four-storey building in Bolshaia Morskaia. Branches were also opened in Moscow, Odessa, Kiev and
London. From England, the company made annual visits to the Far East.

After the Revolution


The House of Fabergé was nationalised by the Bolsheviks in 1918. In early October, Carl Fabergé left St Petersburg
on the last diplomatic train for Riga. The revolution in Latvia started in the middle of the following month and Carl
was again fleeing for his life to Germany, first to Bad Homburg and then to Wiesbaden. The Bolsheviks imprisoned
his sons Agathon and Alexander. Initially, Agathon was released to value the valuables seized from the Imperial
family, the aristocrats, wealthy merchants and Fabergé amongst other jewellers. He was re-imprisoned when the
Bolsheviks found it difficult to sell this treasure at Agathon’s valuations. With Europe awash with Russian jewels,
prices had fallen. Madame Fabergé and her eldest son, Eugène, avoided capture by escaping under the cover of
darkness through the snow-covered woods by sleigh and on foot. Towards the end of December 1918, they had
crossed the border into the safety of Finland.
Meanwhile, Carl Fabergé was in Germany and became seriously ill. Eugène reached Wiesbaden in June 1920 and
accompanied his father to Switzerland where other members of the family had taken refuge. Carl Fabergé died in
Lausanne on 24 September 1920. His wife died in January 1925. Although Alexander managed to escape from
prison when a friend bribed guards, Agathon did not succeed in making his escape from the USSR until 1927.
In 1924 Alexander and Eugéne opened Fabergé et Cie in Paris, where they had a modest success making the types of
items that their father retailed years before. To distinguish their pieces from those made in Russia before the
Revolution, they used the trademark FABERGÉ, PARIS, whereas the Russian company's trademark was just
FABERGÉ. They also sold jewellery and had a sideline repairing and restoring the items that had been made by the
original House of Fabergé. Fabergé et Cie continued to operate in Paris until 2001. In 1984 Fabergé et Cie lost their
rights to use the trademark Fabergé for jewelry in a law suit against Fabergé Inc.[11]
House of Fabergé 9

Reputation
The reputation of Fabergé as a producer of the highest standard was maintained by publications and major
exhibitions such as those at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 1994 and the Royal Collection in 2003–4.[12]
Following the end of the Soviet Union and the rise of the oligarchs, Russian collectors sought to repatriate many of
Fabergé's works and auction prices reached record highs.
On 27 November 2007, the Rothschild Fabergé Egg was auctioned at Christie's in London for £8.98 million. The
Rothschild Fabergé egg became the record price for a piece of Fabergé as well as the highest price ever paid for a
Russian object and the most expensive price for a timepiece.[13]

Sale of brand name


The American oil billionaire Armand Hammer collected many Fabergé pieces during his business ventures in
communist Russia in the 1920s. In 1937 Armand Hammer’s friend Samuel Rubin, owner of the Spanish Trading
Corporation, which imported soap and olive oil, closed down his company because of the Spanish civil war and
established a new enterprise to manufacture perfumes and toiletries. He registered it, at Hammer’s suggestion, as
Fabergé Inc.[14] Samuel Rubin purchased the brand name Fabergé from Fabergé & Cie for $25,000 in 1937. In 1964,
Rubin sold Fabergé for $26 million to George Barrie and the Rayette Inc. The Cosmetics company Rayette changed
its name in 1964 to Rayette-Fabergé Inc. and in 1971 the company name was changed to Fabergé Inc. In 1984
McGregor Corp., a men's and boys' clothing maker bought Fabergé Inc. They changed their name temporarily to
Mcgregor Fabergé. The Riklis Family Corporation bought a mayority of the McGregor stocks. From 1964 to 1984
under the direction of George Barrie many well known and successful product lines as well as feature movies were
launched by Fabergé Inc.[15]
Mr. Barrie supervised Fabergé's introduction of the popular Brut (cologne) toiletry line for Fabergé which was
promoted by the football player Joe Namath. In 1977, he signed Farrah Fawcett to a promotional contract with
Fabergé for the Farrah Fawcett hair product and fragrance lines. A famous Fabergé TV ad featured Joe Namath
being shaven by Farrah Fawcett. Brut became the best selling cologne in the world at the time. It is still available in
stores worldwide today.
In 1967 the film actor and business man Cary Grant was appointed Creative Consultant and in 1968 member of the
Board of Directors of the company. The actor Roger Moore became another celebrity board member in 1970. George
Barrie established Fabergé's filmmaking division, Brut Productions in 1970 and put together the Academy Award
winning movie titled A Touch of Class in 1973 and other feature movies.
Barrie launched the Babe fragrance in 1976, which in its first year became Fabergé's largest selling women's
fragrance worldwide. The grand daughter of writer Ernest Hemingway, actress and model Margaux Hemingway
received a $1 million contract to promote the perfume Babe by Fabergé in a very popular advertising campaign. Her
famous Babe campaign was remembered again by millions after her mysterious death in 1996. Babe received two
awards from the Fragrance Foundation for its launch: Most Successful Introduction of a Women's Fragrance in
Popular Distribution, and Best Advertising Campaign for Women's Fragrance.
By 1984 the company had expanded its personal care products to Aphrodisia, Aqua Net Hair Spray, Babe, Cavale,
Brut, Ceramic Nail glaze, Flambeau, Great Skin, Grande Finale, Just Wonderful, Macho, Kiku, Partage, Tip Top
Accessories, Tigress, Woodhue, Xandu, Zizanie de Fragonard, Caryl Richards, Farrah Fawcett and Fabergé
Organics. The company also bought other Firms and products, including D-LANZ and it's product BreastCare a
breast cancer screening device.
In 1985, McGregor Industries acquired Faberge and discontinued many Faberge products including the original
breast device D-LANZ. The company launches Mcgregor by Fabergé (Cologne) the same year. New product lines
were introduced including men's, women's and children's apparel under the trademarks Billy the Kid, Scoreboard and
Wonderknit.
House of Fabergé 10

In 1986 Mark Goldston, a specialist in evaluating areas of untapped sales and profit, was named President of
Fabergé. He was principally responsible for targeting and acquiring the Elizabeth Arden Company from Ely Lilly
Inc. for $725 million in 1986, turning Fabergé into a $1.2 billion firm. In 1989 the international corporation Unilever
bought Fabergé Inc. from the Riklis Family Corporation for US$1.55 billion. At the same time Fabergé Inc. bought
Elizabeth Arden Company from Ely Lilly Inc. for $725 million, turning Fabergé into a $1.2 billion firm. The
company was renamed Elida Fabergé. The deal now placed Unilever at equal first place with L'Oreal in the world
cosmetics league, up from fourth place.
Lever Fabergé was formed in early 2001 through the merger of the two Unilever companies, Lever Brothers and
Elida Fabergé.The new company Lever Fabergé owned hundreds of cosmetics, household and other brands including
Dove, Impulse, Sure, Lynx, Organics, Timotei and Signal, Persil, Comfort, Domestos, Surf, Sun and Cif.
Unilever registered the Fabergé name as a trademark across a wide range of merchandise internationally and granted
licenses to third parties to make and sell a range of products ranging from jewellery to spectacles under the Fabergé
name. On January 3, 2007 Unilever sold its entire global portfolio of trademarks, licences and associated rights
relating to the Fabergé brand. The new owner is Cayman Islands-based Fabergé Limited. The principal investor is
Pallinghurst Resources LLP, an investment advisory firm based in London and chaired by Brian Gilbertson, the
former CEO of BHP-Billiton plc, the world's largest mining company. Fabergé Limited announced that it proposed
to establish Fabergé as the world's most exclusive luxury brand.
In September 2009 Fabergé Limited launched its first collection of high jewellery as well as its website
(www.faberge.com). In December 2009 it opened a boutique in Geneva. By March 2010, only two of the licenses
granted by Unilever were in existence.

See also
• List of Fabergé workmasters

Further reading
• Tatiana Fabergé, Lynette G. Proler, Valentin V, Skurlov. The Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs (London, Christie's
1997) ISBN 0-297-83565-3
• The History of the House of Fabergé according to the recollections of the senior master craftsman of the firm,
Franz P. Birbaum (St Petersburg, Fabergé and Skurlov, 1992)
• Henry Charles Bainbridge. Peter Carl Fabergé - Goldsmith and Jeweller to the Russian Imperial Court - His Life
and Work (London 1979, Batsfords - later reprints available such as New York, Crescent Books, 1979)
• A Kenneth Snowman The Art of Carl Fabergé (London, Faber & Faber, 1953–68) SBN 571 05113 8
• Geza von Habsburg Fabergé (Geneva, Habsburg, Feldman Editions, 1987) ISBN 0-89192-391-2
• Alexander von Solodkoff & others. Masterpieces from the House of Fabergé (New York, Harry N Abrahams,
1984) ISBN 0-8109-0933-2
• Géza von Habsburg Fabergé Treasures of Imperial Russia (Link of Times Foundation, 2004)
ISBN5-9900284-1-5
• Toby Faber. Faberge's Eggs: The Extraordinary Story of the Masterpieces That Outlived an Empire (New York:
Random House, 2008) ISBN 978-1-4000-6550-9
• Gerald Hill. Faberge and the Russian Master Goldsmiths (New York: Universe, 2007) ISBN 978-0-7893-9970-0
House of Fabergé 11

External links
• Fabergé Research Site - Christel McCanless [16]
• Jellema, Melissa (May 3, 2008). "Objects of Fantasy - The World of Peter Carl Fabergé" [17]. St. Xavier
University. Chicago, IL. Retrieved 6/1/2008.
• Exclusive representative of original Fabergé factory [18]
• Mieks Fabergé Eggs [19]
• The Fabergé Easter Eggs - Macro Photography [20]
• National Jeweler Network" "Faberge brand changes ownership" [21]
• Fabergé Watch [22]
• Russian Spy [23]
• Fabergé history from About.com [24]
• Fabergé and his family history [25]
• Fabergé Eggs [26] (Russian)
• Wartski, London Fabergé specialists [27]
• A La Vieille Russie, New York. American Fabergé specialists. Established 1851. [28]
• St. Petersburg Conservancy (formerly Fabergé Arts Foundation) [29]

References
[1] The Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs by Tatiana Fabergé, Lynette G. Proler and Valentin V, Skurlov (London 1997)
[2] List of Fabergé eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Eggs. htm)
[3] Carl Faberge and His Successors: Hardstone Figures
[4] A. von Solodkoff, A. Fabergé's hardstone figures in Munich Kuntshalle of the Hypo Kulturstiftung, Fabegé, (Munich, 1986), p.86, n.38
[5] http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ eGallery/ category. asp?category=289& row=200
[6] Hillwood Museum, Washington, DC
[7] Cartier By Hans Nadelhoffer, Pg 124
[8] Cartier By Hans Nadelhoffer, Pg. 92
[9] 1142 Achat Stopford (Fabergé) 1 Renard en cornaline rouge aux aguets, corps ½ replié, yeux en roses, Geza von Habsburg, Faberge / Cartier,
Rivalen am Zarenhof, Hirmer Verlag, Munich 2003, page 80
[10] Bloomberg.com: News (http:/ / www. bloomberg. com/ apps/ news?pid=newsarchive& sid=aUCUQlQRhqHY)
[11] http:/ / www. ipd. gov. hk/ eng/ intellectual_property/ trademarks/ trademarks_decisions/ decision/ DEC197801106OP. pdf
[12] The Royal Collection: Fabergé (http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ default. asp?action=article& ID=173)
[13] Russian bidding battle as crowing cockerel egg by Faberge fetches £9m - Times Online (http:/ / www. timesonline. co. uk/ tol/ news/ uk/
article2963378. ece)
[14] http:/ / www. stpetersburgcollection. com/ history. htm
[15] http:/ / spoonfeedin. wordpress. com/ 2009/ 09/ 23/ business-the-fall-rise-of-faberge/
[16] http:/ / fly. hiwaay. net/ ~christel/ index. html
[17] http:/ / sxuhero. com/ faberge/
[18] http:/ / www. trevijewelry. com
[19] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge/ Faberge-Collectors. htm
[20] http:/ / textplay. net/ pages/ 0012. htm
[21] http:/ / www. nationaljewelernetwork. com/ njn/ content_display/ fashion/ e3id41d8ab4745718c676e9ff408e5a8ece
[22] http:/ / www. timebooth. com/ wordpress/ 2007/ 01/ 23/ 968. html
[23] http:/ / www. russianspy. org/ 2007/ 04/ 16/ russian-billionaire-to-revive-faberge-jewelry-brand/
[24] http:/ / collectibles. about. com/ cs/ miscellaneous/ a/ aaeggfabr0403. htm
[25] http:/ / www. fabergeeggs. org/
[26] http:/ / faberge. dp. ua
[27] http:/ / www. wartski. com
[28] http:/ / www. alvr. com
[29] http:/ / www. fabergearts. org
Peter Carl Fabergé 12

Peter Carl Fabergé


Peter Carl Fabergé also known as Carl Gustavovich Fabergé in
Russia (Russian: Карл Густавович Фаберже, May 30, 1846 –
September 24, 1920) was a Russian jeweller of French origin, best
known for the famous Fabergé eggs, made in the style of genuine
Easter eggs, but using precious metals and gemstones rather than more
mundane materials.

Early life
He was born in Saint Petersburg, Russia to the jeweller Gustav Fabergé
and his Danish wife Charlotte Jungstedt. Gustav Fabergé’s father’s
family were Huguenots, originally from La Bouteille, Picardy, who
fled from France after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, first to
Germany near Berlin, then in 1800 to the Baltic province of Livonia,
then part of Russia.
Peter Carl Fabergé
Initially educated in Saint Petersburg, Russia 1860 Gustav Fabergé,
together with his wife and children retired to Dresden, leaving the business in the hands of capable and trusted
managers. Peter Carl possibly undertook a course at the Dresden Arts and Crafts School. Two years later Agathon,
the Fabergés' second son was born. In 1864, Peter Carl embarked upon a Grand Tour of Europe. He received tuition
from respected goldsmiths in Germany, France and England, attended a course at Schloss’s Commercial College in
Paris and viewed the objects in the galleries of Europe’s leading museums. His travel and study continued until 1872,
when at the age of 26 he returned to St Petersburg and married Augusta Julia Jacobs. For the following 10 years, his
father’s trusted workmaster Hiskias Pendin acts as his mentor and tutor. The company was also involved with
cataloguing, repairing and restoring objects in the Hermitage during the 1870s. In 1881 the business moved to larger
street-level premises at 16/18 Bolshaya Morskaya.

Carl takes over the family business


Upon the death of Hiskias Pendin in 1882, Carl Fabergé took sole responsibility for running the company. Carl was
awarded the title Master Goldsmith, which permitted him to use his own hallmark in addition to that of the firm. Carl
Fabergé’s reputation was so high that the normal three-day examination was waived. His brother Agathon, an
extremely talented and creative designer, joined the business from Dresden where he had also possibly studied at the
Arts and Crafts School. Carl and Agathon were a sensation at the Pan-Russian Exhibition held in Moscow in 1882.
Carl was awarded a gold medal and the St Stanisias Medal. One of the Fabergé pieces displayed was a replica of a
4th century BC gold bangle from the Scythian Treasure in the Hermitage. The Tsar declared that he could not
distinguish the Fabergés' work from the original and ordered that objects by the House of Fabergé should be
displayed in the Hermitage as examples of superb contemporary Russian craftsmanship. The House of Fabergé with
its range of jewels was now within the focus of Russia’s Imperial Court.
When Peter Carl took over the House there was a move from producing jewellery in the then fashionable French
18th century style, to becoming artist-jewellers. Simplistically this resulted in reviving the lost art of enamelling and
concentrating on setting every single stone in a piece to its best advantage. Indeed, It was not unusual for Agathon to
make ten or more wax models so that all possibilities could be exhausted before deciding on a final design. Shortly
after Agathon joined the firm, the House introduced objets deluxe: gold bejewelled items embellished with enamel
ranging from electric bell pushes to cigarette cases, including objets de fantaisie.
Peter Carl Fabergé 13

In 1885 Czar Alexander III gave the House of Fabergé the title ‘Goldsmith by special appointment to the Imperial
Crown’.

Easter Eggs
The Czar also commissioned the company to make an Easter Egg as a gift for his wife, the Empress Maria. The Czar
placed an order for another Egg the following year. However, from 1887, Carl Fabergé was apparently given
complete freedom with regard to design, for future Imperial Easter Eggs for from this date the Eggs become more
elaborate. According to the Fabergé Family tradition, not even the Tsar knew what form they would take: the only
stipulation was that each one should contain a surprise. The next Czar, Nicholas II, ordered two eggs each year, one
for his mother and one for his own wife, Alexandra. The tradition continued until the October Revolution.
Although the House of Fabergé is famed for its Imperial Easter Eggs, it made many more objects ranging from silver
tableware to fine jewelry. Fabergé’s company became the largest jewellery business in Russia, with 500 employees.
In addition to its Saint Petersburg head quarters, it had branches in Moscow, Odessa, Kiev and London. It produced
some 150,000 to 200,000 objects from 1882 until 1917. In 1900 his work represented Russia at the 1900 World’s
Fair in Paris. As Carl Fabergé was a member of the Jury, the House of Fabergé therefore exhibited hors concours
(without competing). Nevertheless, the House was awarded a gold medal and the city’s jewellers recognised Carl
Fabergé as maître. Additionally, Carl Fabergé was decorated with the most prestigious of French awards – he was
appointed a Knight of the Legion of Honour. Two of Carl’s sons and his Head Workmaster were also honoured.
Commercially the exposition was a great success and the firm acquired a great many orders and clients.

Stock, Russian Revolution and Nationalization


In 1916 the House of Fabergé became a joint-stock company with a
capital of 3-million rubles.
The following year upon the outbreak of the October Revolution, the
business was taken over by a 'Committee of the Employees of the
Company K Fabergé. In 1918 The House of Fabergé was nationalised
by the Bolsheviks. In early October the stock was confiscated. The
House of Fabergé was no more.
After the nationalisation of the business, Carl Fabergé left St
Petersburg on the last diplomatic train for Riga. In mid-November, the
Revolution having reached Latvia, he fled to Germany and first settled
in Bad Homburg and then in Wiesbaden. Eugène, the Fabergés' eldest
travelled with his mother in darkness by sleigh and on foot through
snow-covered woods and reached Finland in December 1918. During
June 1920 Eugène reached Wiesbaden and accompanied his father to
Switzerland where other members of the family had taken refuge at the
Bellevue Hotel in Pully near Lausanne. Peter Carl Fabergé never
recovered from the shock of the Russian Revolution. In exile, the
Bouquet of Lilies or Madonna Lily Egg by
Fabergé words always on his lips were, ‘This life is not worth living’. He died in
Switzerland on September 24, 1920. His family believed he died of a
broken heart. His wife Augusta died in 1925. The two were reunited in 1929 when Eugène Fabergé took his father’s
ashes from Lausanne and buried them in his mother’s grave at the Cimetière du Grand Jas in Cannes, France.
Peter Carl Fabergé 14

Fabergé had four sons: Eugéne (1874–1960), Agathon (1876–1951),


Alexander (1877–1952) and Nicholas (1884–1939). Descendants of
Peter Carl Fabergé live in Europe, Scandinavia and South America.

Peter Carl Fabergé the Man


No one is alive today who personally knew Peter Carl Fabergé
(1846–1920). Stories have been handed down the Fabergé family.
Additionally Henry Bainbridge, a manager of the London branch of the
House of Fabergé recorded recollections of his meetings with his
employer in both his autobiography[1] and the book he wrote about
Fabergé[2] . We are also given an insight into the man from the
recollections of François Birbaum, Fabergé’s senior master craftsman
from 1893 until the House’s demise[3] .

From Bainbridge we know that while punctilious with his dress,


The main Fabergé store in Saint Petersburg was
Fabergé ‘rarely if ever wore black but favoured well-cut tweeds’. He
officially renamed Yakhont (Ruby) but still is
added ‘There was an air of the country gentleman about him, at times known as the Fabergé store
he reminded one of an immaculate gamekeeper with large pockets.’ He
was a very focused individual with no wasted actions or speech. He did
not like small talk. On one occasion during dinner Bainbridge, feeling
out of the conversation said, ‘I see Lord Swaythingly is dead’. Fabergé
asked who he was and upon being told responded cuttingly, ‘And what
can I do with a dead banker?’

When taking orders from customers he was always in a hurry and


would soon forget the fine detail. He would then interrogate the staff so
as to find who was standing near him who may have overheard. His
great-granddaughter Tatiana Fabergé notes that he usually had a
Shop of Faberge in the Moscow (Kuznetsky Most
knotted handkerchief in his breast pocket. 4), 1893.
When he noticed an unsuccessful article, he would call for his senior
master craftsman and make endless derisory and ironical remarks. On occasions when Birbaum realised Fabergé was
the designer, he would show him his sketch. Fabergé would then smile guiltily and say, ‘Since there is nobody to
scold me, I have had to do it myself’. From Birbaum we also know that he was famous for his wit and was quite
merciless to fops, whom he hated. A certain Prince who fell into this category boasted to Fabergé about his latest
honour from the Czar adding that he had no idea as to why the award was made. Anticipating to be showered with
congratulations from the jeweller, Fabergé simply replied, ‘Indeed, your Highness, I too have no idea what for’.

He never travelled with luggage, but bought all his requisites at his destination. On one occasion he arrived at the
Negresco Hotel in Nice. The doorman barred his entrance because of this. Thankfully one of the Grand Dukes who
was in residence called out a greeting and Carl Fabergé was ushered apologetically into the establishment.
Bainbridge concludes, ‘Taking him all in all, Fabergé came as near to a complete understanding of human nature as
it is possible for a man to come, with one word only inscribed on his banner, and that word – tolerance. There is no
doubt whatever that this consideration for the worth of others was the foundation for his success.’
Peter Carl Fabergé 15

References
[1] Twice Seven: The Autobiography of H C Bainbridge (Routledge, London, 1933)
[2] Fabergé: Goldsmith and Jeweller to the Imperial Court - His Life and Work (Batsford, London, 1949)
[3] The History of the House of Fabergé according to the recollections of the senior master craftsman of the firm Franz P. Birbaum This was
handwritten in 1919 at the request (or order) of the Soviet authorities. It added considerably to the knowledge of how the House of Fabergé
operated. The English translation was published by Tatiana F Fabergé (great-granddaughter of Peter Carl Fabergéa) and Valentin V Skurlov in
St Petersburg in 1992.

• Tatiana Fabergé, Lynette G. Proler, Valentin V, Skurlov. The Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs (London, Christie's
1997) ISBN 0-297-83565-3
• The History of the House of Fabergé according to the recollections of the senior master craftsman of the firm,
Franz P. Birbaum (St Petersburg, Fabergé and Skurlov, 1992)
• Henry Charles Bainbridge. Peter Carl Fabergé - Goldsmith and Jeweller to the Russian Imperial Court - His Life
and Work (London 1979, Batsfords - later reprints available such as New York, Crescent Books, 1979)
• A Kenneth Snowman The Art of Carl Fabergé (London, Faber & Faber, 1953–68)SBN 571 05113 8
• Geza von Habsburg Fabergé (Geneva, Habsburg, Feldman Editions, 1987) ISBN 0-89192-391-2
• Alexander von Solodkoff & others. Masterpieces from the House of Fabergé (New York, Harry N Abrahams,
1984) ISBN 0-8109-0933-2 * Géza von Habsburg Fabergé Treasures of Imperial Russia (Link of Times
Foundation, 2004) ISBN5-9900284-1-5
• Toby Faber. Faberge's Eggs: The Extraordinary Story of the Masterpieces That Outlived an Empire (New York:
Random House, 2008) ISBN 978-1-4000-6550-9
• Gerald Hill. Faberge and the Russian Master Goldsmiths (New York: Universe, 2007) ISBN 978-0-7893-9970-0
• A Kenneth Snowman, Carl Fabergé: Goldsmith to the Imperial Court of Russia (Random House, 1988), ISBN
0517405024
Czar

External links
• Jellema, Melissa (May 3, 2008). "Objects of Fantasy - The World of Peter Carl Faberge" (http://sxuhero.com/
faberge/). St. Xavier University. Chicago, IL. Retrieved 2009-03-26.
• More facts from Faberge biography (http://trevijewelry.com/faberge-art/faberge-biography.html)
• Empire of Eggs, Svetlana Graudt, Moscow Times, November 18, 2005 (http://context.themoscowtimes.com/
print.php?aid=157651)
• Wartski London Historic Fabergé specialists (http://www.wartski.com)
• A La Vieille Russie. New York. American Fabergé Specialists (http://www.alvr.com)
• The House of Fabergé (http://ornamentalturning.net/history/victorian_era_turner-faberge.html)
• Current Fabergé Museum Exhibitions (http://ornamentalturning.net/gallery/index.html)
• Picture gallery of private art collector (http://www.faberge-elegance.com/)
• Pallinghurst Resources LLP (http://www.pallinghurst.com/index.htm)
16

Imperial Easter Eggs

Alexander III Commemorative (Fabergé egg)


The Alexander III Commemorative egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1909, for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his mother, the Dowager
Empress Maria Feodorovna.
The egg commemorates Alexander III of Russia, who had died fifteen years previously. The egg is one of four to
commemorate Alexander, along with the Alexander III Portraits, Alexander III Equestrian and Empire Nephrite
eggs. The surprise was a miniature gold bust of Alexander.[1]
The Alexander III Commemorative egg is one of the eight Imperial Fabergé eggs that are currently missing; and one
of only two lost eggs for which a photograph exists. The other being 1903's Royal Danish egg.[2] [3]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1909-Alexander-III-Commemorative-Egg. htm), Mieks (http:/ / mieks. com/ ).
[2] Fabergé Danish Jubilee (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 30/ fab30. html), Matt & Andrej Koymasky (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ ).
[3] Egg Hunting, Pro Division (http:/ / www. forbes. com/ forbes/ 2004/ 0412/ 233. html) by Alan Farnham, Forbes.
Alexander III Equestrian (Fabergé egg) 17

Alexander III Equestrian (Fabergé egg)


The Alexander III Equestrian Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made
under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in
1910, for the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Tsar Nicholas presented the egg to the Dowager Empress, Maria
Fyodorovna, wife of the previous Tsar, Alexander III.

Craftsmanship
The egg itself is carved out of rock-quartz crystal, engraved with
two tied laurel leaf sprays, the upper half cloaked with platinum
trelliswork and a tasseled fringe, with two consoles shaped as
double-headed eagles set with rose-cut diamonds.
A large diamond engraved with the year "1910" surmounts the
egg, set in band of small roses, with a rosette border of platinum
acanthus leaves. The two platinum double-headed eagles on the
sides of the egg have diamond crowns. The surface of the egg
between the eagles is engraved with branching patterns, adjoined The 'Alexander III Equestrian Egg'
at the bottom.

The lower part of the egg serves as a platform for a gold model of a statue of Tsar Alexander III on horseback,
standing on a nephrite base embellished with two rose-cut diamond bands, engraved with Fabergés signature,
supported by cast platinum cherubs coiled into position on a base of crystal.
It is currently held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
Alexander III Portraits (Fabergé egg) 18

Alexander III Portraits (Fabergé egg)


The Alexander III Portraits egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1896, for Nicholas II of Russia.[1]
It was presented by Nicholas II to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna. The egg is one of four
commemorating Alexander III, the other three are the missing Empire Nephrite (1902) and Alexander III
Commemorative (1909) eggs and the Alexander III Equestrian egg (1910).[2] It is one of eight eggs that are currently
lost and may have been lent to a London Exhibition in 1935.

Surprise
It's believed that this egg contained six miniatures of Emperor Alexander III on an ivory background.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

References
[1] 1896 Twelve Monogram Egg / Alexander III Portraits Egg (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1896_Alexander_III_Monogram_Egg.
htm), Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ ).
[2] List of Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ eggs. htm), Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ ).
Alexander Palace (Fabergé egg) 19

Alexander Palace (Fabergé egg)


Alexander Palace Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1908

Customer Alexandra Fedorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

Materials used nephrite, gold, diamond, ruby

Height 11 cm

Surprise Miniature Alexander Palace

The Alexander Palace Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweler Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1908, for the then Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. Nicholas presented it as an Easter gift to his wife,
Alexandra Fyodorovna. It is held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.[1]

Design
The Alexander Palace Egg is made of nephrite, which is a shade of jade, diamonds, gold, rubies and miniature
watercolor paintings on ivory. The outside of the egg contains five miniature watercolor portraits of the children of
Nicholas II and Empress Alexandra: Olga, Tatiana, Maria, Anastasia and Alexis. Above each portrait is a diamond
monogrammed initial of each child's first name. On the reverse of each portrait, visible only from the inside of the
egg, is the date of birth of each child, including Olga- November 3, 1895, Tatiana- May 29, 1897, Maria- June 14,
1899, Anastasia- June 5, 1901, Alexei- July 30, 1904. The egg also includes golden leaves, rubies and diamonds, as
well as two triangular diamonds with Alexandra's initials, AF.[1]

Surprise
The surprise is a detailed replica of the Alexander Palace, the Russian Imperial family's favorite residence in
Tsarskoye Selo. The tiny replica also details the adjoining gardens of the palace. The miniature is made of tinted
gold and enamel. The windows are made of rock crystal, the roof of enameled light green. The palace replica is
placed on a gold table and can be removed from the egg. The base of the replica has an engraved inscription that
reads, "The Palace at Tsarkoye Selo." [1]

History
The Alexander Palace Egg was commissioned by Nicholas II in 1908
and presented to Alexandra. It was purchased for 12,3000 roubles.
From 1908 until 1917 it remained at the Alexander Palace in the
Imperial family's private residence. In 1917 it was confiscated by
Kerensky's army during the Russian Revolution, along with many
other Imperial treasures. It was transported from the Anichkov Palace
to the Kremlin Armoury, where it remained.[1] The Alexander Palace
The Alexander Palace Egg is one of ten Faberge Eggs in the collection at the Kremlin
Alexander Palace (Fabergé egg) 20

Armoury, Moscow. Others include: Memory of Azov Egg (1881), Bouquet of Lilies Clock egg (1899),
Trans-Siberian Railway egg (1900), Clover Leaf egg (1902), Moscow Kremlin egg(1906), Standart egg (1909),
Alexander III Equestrian egg (1910), Romanov Tercentenary egg (1913), Steel Military egg (1916). [2]

See also
• Fabergé egg

References
[1] Mieks Faberge Eggs. "1908 Alexander Palace Egg" (http:/ / mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1908-Alexander-Palace-Egg. htm). Mieks Faberge Eggs:
The Eggs. . Retrieved December 14, 2009.
[2] PBS, Faberge Eggs. Current Whereabouts of the Fifty Imperial Faberge Eggs. December 14, 2009. (http:/ / www. pbs. org/
treasuresoftheworld/ faberge/ flevel_2/ flevel2_after_whereabouts. html|pbs. org/ treasuresoftheworld)

Basket of Wild Flowers (Fabergé egg)


The Basket of Wild Flowers egg (or the Flower Basket egg) is a
jewelled enameled Easter egg[1] made under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1901.[2] The egg was made for
Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his wife, the Empress
Alexandra Feodorovna.[2]

History
The egg is designed as a basket of wild flowers, with the date of
manufacture displayed in diamonds.[2]
In 1933 the egg was sold by the Antikvariat probably to Emanuel
Snowman of London antique dealers Wartski, and it was acquired by
Mary of Teck, and inherited by Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. It remains
in the Royal Collection.[1]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Basket of Wild Flowers' egg from mieks.com [3]

References
[1] Royal Collection - Basket of Flowers egg (http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ eGallery/ object. asp?category=BJFABERGE&
object=40098& row=230)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1901-Flower-Basket-Egg. htm)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ eggspictures. htm
Bay Tree (Fabergé egg) 21

Bay Tree (Fabergé egg)


The Bay tree egg (also known as the Orange tree egg) is a jewelled carved nephrite and enameled Easter egg made
under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1911 [1] , for Nicholas II of Russia, who
presented the egg to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna on April 12, 1911 [2] .

Surprise
Turning a tiny lever disguised as a fruit, hidden among the leaves of the bay tree, activates the hinged circular top of
the tree and a feathered songbird rises and flaps its wings, turns its head, opens its beak and sings. [1]

History
Based on an 18th century French mechanical orange tree [3] , it was incorrectly labeled as an orange tree for some
time, but was confirmed as a bay tree after the original invoice from Fabergé was examined. Fabergé charged 12,800
rubles for the egg. [1]
In 1917 the egg was confiscated by the Russian Provisional Government and moved from the Anichkov Palace to the
Kremlin. [1] It was sold to Emanuel Snowman of the jewellers Wartski around 1927. [1] Passing through different
owners, it was sold to Malcolm Forbes in 1965 for $35,000, equivalent to $212,634 at the time of the 2004 sale of
the Forbes Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial eggs, as part of the
collection, for almost $100 million [4]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Bay Tree' Egg from treasuresofimperialrussia.com [5]

References
[1] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap9_baytree. html)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1911-Bay-Tree-Egg. htm)
[3] Faberge Eggs - outrageous opulence (http:/ / www. pbs. org/ treasuresoftheworld/ faberge/ flevel_1/ f8_outrageous. html)
[4] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[5] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap9_baytree. html
Blue Serpent Clock Egg 22

Blue Serpent Clock Egg


Blue Serpent Clock Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1887

Customer Alexander III presented to Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 2005

Design and Materials

Workmaster Mikhail Perkhin

Materials used Gold, vitreous enamel, diamonds

Height 183 mm (7 1/4 in)

Surprise This egg has no known surprise, most likely because the egg itself is a working clock.

The Blue Serpent Clock Egg is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one of a series of fifty-two jeweled eggs made under
the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. This is the first of the Imperial Fabergé eggs
to feature a clock, and is a design that Fabergé copied for his Duchess of Marlborough Egg in 1902. It was crafted
and delivered in 1887 to the then Tsar of Russia, Alexander III. It is currently owned by Prince Albert II, and is held
in Monaco. This egg, along with the First Hen Egg, is the only known surviving Imperial egg from the 1880s.[1]

Design
The crafting of this imperial egg is credited to Mikhail Perkhin of Fabergé's shop. The egg stands on a base of gold
that is painted in opalescent white enamel. The three panels of the base feature motifs of raised gold in four colors,
representing the arts and sciences.[2] A serpent, set with diamonds, coils around the stand connecting the base to the
egg and up toward the center of the egg. The serpent's head and tongue point to the hour which is indicated in roman
numerals on a white band which runs around the egg near the top.[2] This band rotates within the egg to indicate the
time, rather than the serpent rotating around the egg. This is the first of the Tsar Imperial Fabergé eggs to feature a
working clock.[2] The majority of the egg is enameled in translucent blue and has diamond-studded gold bands and
designs ringing the top and bottom of the egg. On each side of the egg a sculpted gold handle arches up in a "C"
shape, attached to the egg on the top near the apex and on the lower half of the egg, near the center. One interesting
feature is that the egg identified as the Blue Serpent Clock Egg contains no sapphires, while descriptions from the
Russian State Historical Archives, the 1917 inventory of confiscated imperial treasure and the 1922 transfer
documents for the egg to be moved from the Anichkov Palace to the Sovnarkom all describe the egg as containing
sapphires. .[2]

Surprise
Since this egg is a working clock, it contains no surprise.

History of the egg


It is not known when or how the Tsar ordered the third Easter egg from Fabergé, but the Blue Serpent Clock Egg
was presented to Maria Feodorovna by Tsar Alexander III on Easter day, April 5th, 1887. It is possible that by this
time, the egg gift was already an established tradition, allowing Fabergé and his craftsmen an entire year to craft the
next egg. This would explain in part why this egg is so much more elaborate than the first Imperial Easter egg. The
Blue Serpent Clock Egg 23

egg was housed in the Anichkov Palace until the 1917 revolution. Along with the other Fabergé eggs in the palace,
the Serpent Clock Egg was transferred to the Armory Palace of the Kremlin in mid September of 1917. In 1922 the
egg was likely transferred to the Sovnarkom where it was held until it was sold abroad to Michel Norman of the
Australian Pearl Company. Between 1922 and 1950 the egg was bought by Emanuel Snowman of Wartski, sold, and
bought back by Wartski. The egg was sold again by Wartski around 1974 to an unknown party, was held in a private
collection in Switzerland in 1989, and was owned by Prince Rainier III of Monaco in 1992.[2] When Rainier III died
in 2005, Prince Albert II inherited the egg along with the throne. Fabergé created a very similar egg in 1902, the
Duchess of Marlborough Egg for Consuelo Vanderbilt. This clock egg is larger than the Blue Serpent Clock Egg and
is enameled in a pink, rather than blue, color.[2]

Dispute over egg's date


Some scholars have questioned whether the egg currently held by Prince Albert II is in fact that 1887 Tsar Imperial
egg. Lopato in a 1993 article in von Habsburg & Lopato states the price of the Blue Serpent Clock Egg should have
been closer to 6000 rubles instead of the 2160 rubles that the Tsar paid for the 1887 egg. She also claims that this
egg is too sophisticated and elaborate for the early date to which it is attributed.[2] Another indication that the egg is
erroneously identified as the 1887 gift is the fact that the documents available for the 1887 egg all list the egg as
containing sapphires. Since those sapphires are not visible on Prince Albert's egg this fact leads some to believe the
1887 egg is missing. In 1995 however, Tatiana Muntian matched this egg with the imperial descriptions, and further
research published in Fabergé Imperial Easter Eggs in 1997 confirm the date of this egg as 1887.[2] The location of
the described sapphires is still a mystery.

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Faber, Toby (2008). Fabergé's Eggs The Extraordinary Story of the Masterpieces That Outlived an Empire. New York, New York: Random
House. p. 18. ISBN 978-1-4000-6559-9.
[2] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 23. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
Bouquet of Lilies Clock (Fabergé egg) 24

Bouquet of Lilies Clock (Fabergé egg)


The Bouquet of Lilies Clock Egg (or the Madonna Lily Egg) is a
jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller
Peter Carl Fabergé in 1899, for the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Tsar Nicholas presented the egg to his wife, the Czarina Alexandra
Fyodorovna.
The egg is currently located at the Kremlin Armoury in Moscow.

Craftsmanship
The egg-shaped clock and its rectangular pedestal are decorated with
translucent enamel on a guilloché background. The body of the clock is
divided into twelve parts which are outlined in diamond-studded
stripes. The belt of the dial which revolves around the perimeter of the
egg is enameled white with twelve Roman numerals set in diamonds.
The hours are indicated by a diamond clock hand shaped like the head
of an arrow in a drawn bow. The hand is fixed to an immobile onyx
base. The base itself is decorated with rosettes and the date of its
manufacture, 1899, is set in diamonds. It is designed as a vase with
red-gold scrolls serving as extra supports at either side. A gold key was Bouquet of Lilies or Madonna Lily Egg
used to wind the mechanism.

The clock is crowned with a bouquet of Madonna lilies, carved from onyx. The pistils of the flowers are set with
three small rose diamonds, and the leaves and stems are of tinted gold. The egg uses the language of flowers which
was well known at the time. The roses were symbols of love and the lilies were a symbol of purity and innocence.

Surprise
The surprise from this egg is currently missing, but it was a pendant made with ruby and rose-cut diamonds.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
Caucasus (Fabergé egg) 25

Caucasus (Fabergé egg)


The Caucasus Egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made by M. Perchin under the supervision of the German
jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1893. The egg was made for Alexander III of Russia, who presented it to his wife, the
Empress Maria Feodorovna.
Currently the egg is located in the Cheekwood Botanical Gardens and Museum in Nashville, Tennessee, of Art as
part of the Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation.

The Egg
The egg is made of yellow and varicoloured gold, silver, ruby enamel, rose-cut diamonds, portrait diamonds,
platinum, ivory, pearls, rock crystal and watercolour on ivory.
It commemorates the Imperial hunting lodge in Abastumani in Caucasus where Grand Duke George spent most of
his life after being diagnosed with tuberculosis. Miniatures were done and signed by Krijitski. The miniatures are
revealed by opening four pearl-bordered doors around the egg. Each door bears a diamond-set numeral of the year,
forming the year 1893. Behind the hinged cover at the top is a portrait of the Grand Duke in his naval uniform.
This is the first Imperial egg known to be dated. Ruby red enamel was used only one other time for the Imperial eggs
as Alexei's hemophilia was a constant worry for the family.

Surprise
The surprise for this egg is missing.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Caucasus' egg from mieks.com [1]

References
[1] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1893_Caucasus_Egg. htm
Cherub with Chariot Egg 26

Cherub with Chariot Egg


Cherub with Chariot Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1888

Customer Alexander III, presented to Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition N/A

Design and Materials

Workmaster Unknown

Materials used gold, sapphire, diamonds

Height Unknown

Surprise Likely a clock inside the egg, shaped like an angel

The Cherub with Chariot Egg or Angel with Egg in Chariot is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one of a series of
fifty-two jeweled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was
crafted and delivered in 1888 to the then Tsar of Russia, Alexander III. This is one of the lost Imperial eggs, so few
details are known about it.

Design
The exact design of the Cherub with Chariot Egg is unsure. A single photograph of the egg exists, though it is hidden
by another egg and can only be seen in a blurry reflection.[1] There is a brief description from the imperial records in
the Russian State Historical Archives in Moscow which describes the gift as "Angel pulling chariot with egg - 1500
roubles, angel with a clock in a gold egg 600 roubles."[2] According to Marina Lopato in Fabergé: Imperial Jeweller
(1993) this description means the clock is inside the gold egg, which is in the chariot being pulled by the angel.[3]
Fabergé's invoice carries a similar description, itemizing a cherub pulling a chariot with an egg and a cherub with
clock in a gold egg. These two descriptions are backed up by the 1917 inventory of seized imperial treasure which
reads "gold egg, decorated with brilliants (diamonds), a sapphire; with a silver, golded [sic] stand in the form of a
two-wheeled wagon with a putto."[4]

Surprise
The surprise would have been the clock being inside the egg on the chariot, though the exact design is not known.

History of the egg


The egg would have been presented to Maria Feodorovna on April 24th, 1888 by Alexander III. The egg was kept in
the Gatchina Palace in 1891, and was one of 40 or so eggs sent to the Armory Palace of the Kremlin in 1917 after the
Revolution by the Provisional Government.[5] In 1922 it was transferred to the Sovnarkom, after which the exact
whereabouts of the egg are unknown. In the 1930's Victor and Armand Hammer may have purchased the egg. A
sales catalog for Armand Hammer's 1934 exhibition at Lord and Taylor in New York describes a "miniature silver
armour holding wheelbarrow with Easter Egg, made by Fabergé, court jeweler" which seems to describe the Cherub
with Chariot Egg.[6] Armand Hammer may have been unaware of the significance of this item if it was in fact the
1888 Imperial egg, since he had a habit of promoting imperial items yet did not make an effort to promote this egg.
Whether this was the 1888 egg, and where it is today is unknown.
Cherub with Chariot Egg 27

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1888_Cherub_with_chariot_egg. htm
[2] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 24. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
[3] Lowes, 2001 Pg. 24
[4] Lowes, 2001 Pg. 25
[5] Lowes, 2001 pg. 25
[6] Lowes, 2001 pg. 25

Clover Leaf (Fabergé egg)


The Clover Leaf Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the
supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1902, for the
then Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Alexander presented it as an Easter gift to his wife, Alexandra
Fyodorovna.
It is held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

Craftsmanship
A pattern of stems and leaves of clover forms the shape of the egg. The
gaps between the metal outline of the leaves are covered with
transparent bright green enamel. A very thin golden ribbon paved with
rubies curls through the foliage.

Surprise the Clover Leaf Egg

The surprise has been lost but according to archives four leaves with
twenty three diamonds and four miniature portraits of the Tsar Alexander's daughters were fixed inside the egg.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Clover Leaf' Egg from mieks.com [1]

References
[1] http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1902-Clover-Leaf-Egg. htm
Colonnade (Fabergé egg) 28

Colonnade (Fabergé egg)


Colonnade Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1910

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1953, inherited from Mary of Teck

Design and Materials

Workmaster Henrik Wigström

Materials used Bowenite, gold, silver-gilt, platinum, guilloché enamel, diamond

Height 28 cm.

Surprise No surprise

The Colonnade egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made by Henrik Wigström[1] under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1910.[2] The egg was made for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his
wife, Alexandra Feodorvna upon the birth of their only son, the tsarevich Alexei .[2] As a clock-egg, the Colonnade
egg contained no surprise.

Design
The Colonnade Egg is made of Bowenite, four-colour gold, silver-gilt, platinum, guilloché enamel and rose
diamonds. It is one of only four Faberge Easter Eggs to include a clock in the design. The Colonnade Egg features a
rotary clock made by the Swiss firm Henry Moser & Cie.[1]
The egg symbolizes a temple of love. A pair of platinum doves represent the love of Nicholas and Alexandra. Four
silver-gilt figures surrounding the colonnade represent Nicholas' four daughters.[2] Four silver-gilt cherubs sit around
the base of the egg, each representing Nicholas and Alexandra's four daughters: Anastasia, Olga, Maria, and Tatiana.
Alexei is represented by a silver-gilt cupid, which surmounts the egg. The cupid is now missing a silver-gilt staff or
twig which was held in his right hand and was used to indicate the hour. [2]

History
Presented to Alexandra at Eastertide 1910, the Colonnade Egg celebrates the 1904 birth of Alexei, the fifth child and
only son of Nicholas and Alexandra. After giving birth to four daughters, the birth of their first and only son was
significant because it ensured a direct heir to the throne, rather than succession passing to Grand Duke Michael
Alexandrovich of Russia, the younger brother of Nicholas II.[2]
Upon the abdication of Nicholas II and the imprisonment of the family in 1917, the Colonnade Egg was confiscated
by the provisional government. It then appears on a 1922 list of confiscated treasures moved from the Anichkov
Palace to the Sovnarkom, which was a state-run organization which collected and conserved treasures. In 1927 the
Colonnade Egg was sold as one of nine eggs to Emanuel Snowman of London antique dealer Wartski. Two years
later it was sold to Queen Mary of Teck and inherited by Queen Elizabeth II in 1953. It remains in the Royal
Collection.[1]
Colonnade (Fabergé egg) 29

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
• Tsarevich (Fabergé egg)

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Colonnade' egg from mieks.com [3]

References
[1] Royal Collection - Colonnade Egg (http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ eGallery/ object. asp?theme=CHILDHOOD& object=40084&
row=18)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1910-Colonnade-Egg. htm)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1910-Colonnade-Egg. htm
Constellation (Fabergé egg) 30

Constellation (Fabergé egg)


Constellation Fabergé egg
Year delivered Unfinished (1917)

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 2001

Design and Materials

Materials used Glass, diamond, quartz

The Constellation Egg is one of two Easter eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé in 1917, for the
last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. It was the last Fabergé egg made.
Due to the Russian Revolution of 1917, the egg was never finished or presented to Tsar Nicholas' wife, the Tsaritsa
Alexandra Feodorovna.
It was found in 2001[1] at the Fersman Mineralogical Museum in Moscow, where it is currently on display.

Craftsmanship
The egg is made of dark blue glass and is studded with diamonds. It is engraved with the constellations which were
in the sky on the day of the Czarevitch Alexei's birth. It rests on a base made of quartz. The egg was supposed to
have a silver rim around it, but lacks the original rim, clockwork motion and dial, as well as the larger part of the
diamond stars, since it remained unfinished.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• Sketch of Egg: [2]
• A detailed article on the 'Constellation' Egg from mieks.com [3]
• An article on the origin of the design for the Constellation Egg. Wartski, London [27]

References
[1] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1917-Blue-Constellation-Egg. htm Constellation egg
[2] http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 57/ const3. jpg
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1917-Blue-Constellation-Egg. htm
Danish Palaces Egg 31

Danish Palaces Egg


Danish Palaces Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1890

Customer Alexander III, presented to Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts


Institution

Year of acquisition 1972

Design and Materials

Workmaster Mikhail Perkhin, miniatures by Konstantin Krijitski

Materials used mulit-colored gold, pink-mauve enamel, star sapphire, emeralds, diamonds, crimson velvet lining. Screen is
multi-colored gold and watercolor on mother of pearl

Height 102 mm (4 in.)

Surprise 10-panel screen with watercolor paintings of Danish palaces and imperial yachts

The Danish Palaces Egg is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one of a series of fifty-two jeweled eggs made under the
supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was crafted and delivered to the then Tsar of
Russia, Alexander III who presented it to his wife, Maria Feodorovna on Easter day 1890. The egg is currently
owned by the Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation and housed in the Nashville, Tennessee Cheekwood Botanical
Garden and Museum of Art.

Design of egg
The exterior of this egg is pink-mauve enameled gold split into twelve sections. It measures 102 mm (4 in.) tall by
67 mm (2 5/8 in.) wide. Six vertical lines of rose-cut diamonds and three horizontal lines separate the enameled
panels from one another.[1] There is an emerald at each intersection of the lines separating the panels, and the egg is
crowned with a medallion of radiating leaves around a cabochon star sapphire. The opposite end of the egg is chased
with additional acanthus leaves.[2]

Surprise
The egg opens to reveal a 10-panel screen made of multi-color gold with watercolors on mother of pearl. The panels
are framed with a design of tangent circles with a multi-color gold wreath at the apex and stand on Greek meander
feet.[2] The watercolors are all signed by Konstantin Krijitski and dated 1889. The paintings depict, from left to right
along the screen, the imperial yacht Polar Star; Amalienborg Palace, Copenhagen; Estate of Hvidøre near
Copenhagen' the summer residence of Fredensborg Castle; Bernstorff Palace, Copenhagen; Kronborg Castle,
Helsingør; the Cottage Palace, Peterhof; Gatchina Palace near St. Petersburg and the imperial yacht Tsarevna.[3]

History of egg
Alexander III received the Danish Palaces Egg from Fabergé's shop on March 30, 1890 and presented the egg to his
wife, Maria Feodorovna on April 1. The Tsar paid 4,260 silver rubles for the egg. In January of 1893 the egg was
housed at the Gatchina Palace and remained there until the 1917 revolution. In 1917 it was transferred with the rest
of the imperial eggs sent to the Armory Palace of the Kremlin. During the early part of 1922 the egg was transferred
to the Sovnarkom, then moved back to the Armory Palace in the summer of 1927.[4] The Danish Palaces Egg was
Danish Palaces Egg 32

selected along with 11 others for sale outside of Russia in April 1930, and was sold to Hammer Galleries later that
year for 1500 rubles. Hammer Galleries advertised the egg for sale in 1935 for $25,000 and was sold between
February 1936 and November 1937 to Nicholas H. Ludwig of New York. The egg was owned by a private collector
between during the time between 1962 and 1971, when it was found in the collection of deceased Matilda Geddings
Gray. Since 1972 the egg has been the provenance of the Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation, and is currently on
display in the Nashville, Tennessee Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art.

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 27. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
[2] Lowes, 2001 pg. 27
[3] Lowes, 2001 pg. 27-28
[4] Lowes, 2001 pg. 28

Diamond Trellis Egg


The Diamond Trellis Egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made by A. Holmstein under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1892.The egg was made for Alexander III of Russia, who presented it to his
wife, the Empress Maria Feodorovna. Currently the egg is held in a private collection in London, England.

The Egg
The eggs is made of gold, jadeite, rose-cut diamonds, silver and satin. It is carved from pale green jadeite and is
enclosed in a lattice of rose-cut diamonds with gold mounts. Originally it had a base of three cherubs said to
represent the three sons of the imperial couple, the Grand Dukes Nicholas, George and Michael.

The Surprise
The surprise was the first Faberge Automaton, an elephant. It was made of ivory, gold, rose-cut diamonds, enamel
and brilliant diamonds. The elephant had special significance as an elephant appears in the coat of arms of the
Danish Royal Family, Empress Maria Feodorovna's homeland. This surprise is currently missing.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
Diamond Trellis Egg 33

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Diamond Trellis' egg from mieks.com [1]

References
[1] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1892_Diamond_Trellis_Egg. htm

Empire Nephrite (Fabergé egg)


The Empire Nephrite egg (also known as the Alexander III Medallion egg) is a jewelled Easter egg made under
the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1902, for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his
mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna.[1]
The name of the egg refers to the fact that it was made in the Empire Style, from nephrite.[2] It is thought to have had
a golden base and was decorated with diamonds and a medallion portrait of Alexander III of Russia. It is one of eight
eggs that are currently lost.[2]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Image of egg (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ butt1. gif).
[2] 1902 Empire Nephrite Egg (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1902-Empire-Nephrite-Egg. htm), Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www.
mieks. com/ ).
Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg) 34

Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg)


The Gatchina Palace egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made
under the supervision of the Russian jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé in
1901, for Nicholas II of Russia. Nicholas II presented it to his mother,
the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, on Easter 1901. The egg
opens to reveal a surprise miniature gold replica of the palace at
Gatchina, a village 30 miles southwest of St. Petersburg that was built
for County Grigorii Orlov and was later acquired by Tsar Paul I. It is
one of two imperial Easter eggs held in the Walters Art Museum in
Baltimore, Maryland.

Craftsmanship
The egg was created by Faberge's workmaster, Mikhail Evlampievich
Perkhin (Russian, 1860-1903) and is crafted from gold, enamel,
silver-gilt, portrait diamonds, rock crystal, and seed pearls. Detailed
work around the palace in the surprise shows cannons, a flag, a statue
of Paul I (1754-1801), and elements of the landscape. The miniature palace is fixed inside the Egg and cannot be
removed, unlike the 1908 Alexander Palace egg, which Fabergé would create seven years later for Alexandra
Fyodorovna. The dimensions are 4 15/16 x 3 9/16 in. (12.5 x 9.1 cm).

Surprise
The egg opens to reveal as a miniature gold replica of the palace at Gatchina, the Dowager Empress's principal
winter residence outside Saint Petersburg.

Ownership
In 1920, the egg was in the possession of Alexander Polovtsov who was a former employee at the Gatchina Palace
and later started an antique shop in Paris. It is not known how Mr. Polovtsov acquired the egg. In 1930, the egg was
sold along with the 1907 Rose Trellis to American Henry Walters and became a part of the Walters Art Museum
Collection in 1931. In 1936, the egg was exhibited along with the Rose Trellis at the Walters Art Museum,
Baltimore, Maryland and has been on permanent display since 1952.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Rose Trellis (Fabergé egg)
• Egg decorating

External links
• Walters Art Museum's Collection Page on the Gatchina Palace Egg [1]
• A detailed article on the Gatchina Palace Egg [2]
Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg) 35

References
[1] http:/ / www. thewalters. org/ works_of_art/ itemdetails. aspx?aid=4432
[2] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1901-Gatchina-Palace-Egg. htm

Hen with Sapphire Pendant


Hen with Sapphire Pendant Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1886

Customer Alexander III presented to Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts


Institution

Year of acquisition N/A

Design and Materials

Workmaster Unknown

Materials used gold, sapphire, diamonds

Height Unknown

Surprise The egg's exact design is unknown, so it is not certain whether the pendant was the surprise or some other
feature of the egg was

The Hen with Sapphire Pendant Egg or Egg with Hen in Basket is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one in a series of
fifty-two jeweled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was
created in 1886 for Alexander III of Russia, who presented it to his wife, the Empress Maria Feodorovna. It is one of
eight eggs that are currently lost.

Design
The exact design of this egg is not known as there are no known photographs or illustrations of the egg and written
descriptions of the egg sometimes conflict one another.[1] The present is described as "a hen of gold and rose
diamonds taking a sapphire egg out of a nest" in the imperial archive dated February 15, 1886 through April 24,
1886.[2] The sapphire egg was loosely held in the hen's beak. The hen and the basket were both made of gold studded
with hundreds of rose-cut diamonds. The archive of the Russian Provisional Government describes the hen as being
silver on a stand of gold, though this description is probably in error since the orders for the 1886 Tsar egg
specifically stated the present was to be made of gold.[3]

Surprise
The surprise was not documented and is unlikely to be discovered as the egg's current whereabouts are unknown.

History
The Sapphire Pendant Egg was sent to Tsar Alexander III on April 5, 1886 from Fabergé's workshop. The egg was
presented by the Tsar to Tsarina Marie Fedorovna on April 13 of the same year. The egg was housed in the
Anichkov Palace until the Revolution. The last documented location of the egg is from the archive of the provisional
government's inventory in 1922 when the egg was held in the Armory Palace of the Kremlin. It is not known whether
the egg was lost or is currently in private hands.[4]
Hen with Sapphire Pendant 36

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 22. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
[2] Lowes 2001, pg. 22
[3] Lowes 2001, pg. 22
[4] Lowes 2001, pg. 22

Imperial Coronation Egg


The Imperial Coronation Egg is a jewelled Fabergé egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1897 by Fabergé ateliers, Mikhail Perkhin and Henrik Wigstrom. The egg was made to
commemorate the 1896 Coronation of Czar Nicholas II. The valuable piece of Russian history was then presented as
a gift to his spouse, the Tsaritsa, Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna.
It was frequently on exhibition at The Hermitage Museum (specifically the Winter Palace) in St. Petersburg, Russia,
and also materialized in various museums worldwide, placed in temporary exhibits there. Georges Stein is
responsible for the creation of the gold Coronation Coach. It is currently owned by one of the Russian oligarchs,
Viktor Vekselberg.

Craftsmanship
The egg is made from gold, enamelled translucent lime yellow on a guilloché field of starbursts, referencing the
cloth-of-gold robe worn by the Tsarina at her Coronation.
It is trellised with bands of greenish gold laurel leaves mounted at each intersection by a gold Imperial
double-headed eagle enamelled opaque black, and set with a rose diamond on its chest. This pattern was also drawn
from the Coronation robe worn by the Empress.
A large portrait diamond is set in the top of the egg within a cluster of ten brilliant diamonds; through the table of
this stone, the monogram of the Empress can be seen. A smaller portrait diamond is set within a cluster of rose
diamonds at the end of the egg, beneath which the date 1897 is inscribed on a similar plaque. The egg was presented,
together with a glass-enclosed jadeite stand for the display of the Carriage, at a cost of 5650 rubles.

Surprise
Fitted inside a velvet-lined compartment is a precise replica, less than four inches long of the Eighteenth-century
Imperial coach that carried the Tsarina Alexandra to her coronation at Moscow's Uspensky Cathedral, created by
Georges Stein.
The red colour of the original coach was recreated using strawberry coloured translucent enamel and the blue
upholstery of the interior was also reproduced in enamels. The coach is surmounted by the Imperial Crown in rose
diamonds and six double-headed eagles on the roof; it is fitted with engraved rock crystal windows and platinum
tyres, and is decorated with a diamond-set trellis in gold and an Imperial eagle in diamonds at either door. Complete
with moving wheels, opening doors, actual C-spring shocks, and a tiny folding step-stair.
Missing surprises include an emerald or diamond pendant that hung inside the replica coach, a glass-enclosed jadeite
stand for the display of the carriage as well as a stand made of silver-gilt wire.
Imperial Coronation Egg 37

History
The Coronation of Czar Nicholas II and
his spouse, Empress Alexandra
Fyodorovna was the catalyst for the
Imperial Coronation Egg's creation, to
celebrate the historical event. The
Coronation on May 14, 1894, was a day
of jubilance and pride in the Romanovs,
celebrated by throngs of spectators. The
Russian nobles and guests gathered on the
Eastern Orthodox day of Dormition, the
death of Mary, inside Uspensky Cathedral
for the actual Coronation. The throne of
the Czar, the former throne of Michael I
of Russia was inset with 870 diamonds,
rubies, and pearls. The throne of the
The last Romanov patriarchs at their Coronation Mass, painting by Laurits Regner
Czarina, the famous ivory throne of Ivan Tuxen, 1898
the Great, also was inset with a vast
collection of jewels and rare gemstones.

The gold miniature coach, which is removable from the interior of the Coronation Egg, is a replica of Catherine the
Great's Gold Coach of 1793 used to transport the last Romanov rulers from ceremony to ceremony on the coronation
week. Another artifact used in the coronation from the reign of Catherine was the nine-pound diamond crown made
by Jérémie Pauzie in 1762.


The coronation in Moscow on May 26th 1896 was the most opulent celebration which I ever witnessed. It bordered close to the Oriental and
lasted for 10 days. In Moscow the cathedral was filled with paintings on gold ground of saints and all priests were dressed in gold robes
applied with embroidery and precious stones. A very deep feeling of mysticism was in all the ceremonies and you could feel the tradition of
Byzance... And following the prayer for the Emperor he gets up and then is the only person standing at that moment in the whole Russian
Empire... To look at all this must have been like a fantastic dream because the sun was shining an all. ”
- Ernest Louis, Grand Duke of Hesse, Brother of Empress Alexandra, Grandson of Queen Victoria[1]
Imperial Coronation Egg 38

Past and present ownerships

Royal origin
The Egg was first given to Czarina Alexandra
of Imperial Russia on Easter of 1897. The egg
was displayed in the Empress' apartment at the
Winter Palace in St. Petersburg, resting in a
jewelled carriage. Upon the fall of the
Romanov Dynasty, the egg was confiscated by
the Provisional Government in 1917 and was
listed among the treasures removed from the
Anichkov Palace. It was then dispatched to the
Kremlin and finally transferred to the
Sovnarkom in 1922 for sale.

Further transactions
During the Famine of 1921, a wealthy
American doctor, Armand Hammer, recovered The Imperial Family, 1913; Left to right, seated: Grand Duchess Marie,
many works of art and priceless antiques that Tsaritsa Alexandra; Tsarevitch Alexei; Tsar Nicholas II; Grand Duchess
would have been lost in the political upheaval Anastasia; Standing: Grand Duchess Tatiana, Grand Duchess Olga

of the Russian Revolution. Hammer, through


negotiations, was able to purchase 11 of the Fabergé Eggs, but the Coronation Egg was not among those purchased
or sold by Hammer. Instead, it was purchased in 1927 by Emanuel Snowman for Wartski a family-owned firm of art
and antique dealers in London. The egg was then sold to the collector Charles Parsons in 1934, but then reacquired
by Wartski in 1945 and remained with the company until early 1979.

Late twentieth century


March 1979 saw the sale of the egg to Malcolm Forbes for $2.16 Million USD along with the Lilies of the Valley
Fabergé Egg. On February 4, 2004, Sotheby's Auction House announced that more than 180 Fabergé art pieces,
including 9 rare Fabergé eggs had been sold to Viktor Vekselberg. The official selling price of the Coronation Egg to
Vekselberg was never publicly disclosed by Sotheby's, fueling much speculation. However, CNN reported the day
after the sale that "...it was a very serious offer that the Forbes family accepted." The price of the Coronation Egg
was estimated at $24 million.


The Fabergé Collection represents perhaps the most significant example of our cultural heritage outside Russia. The religious, spiritual, and
emotional content captured by these Faberge eggs touches upon the soul of the Russian people.

- Victor Vekselberg, Chairman of Renova Group]
Imperial Coronation Egg 39

Representation in film
An accurate model of the Imperial Coronation Egg was depicted in the 2004 crime film, Ocean's Twelve. The replica
was produced by design studio Vivian Alexander, popular for recreating famous items of jewelry for public and
private purposes. The replica is worth approximately $4,000 USD. In the film, the egg was stolen in a grand heist
from a museum in Rome by the notorious Ocean's Twelve.
The James Bond film, Octopussy (1983), encompasses the mysterious appearance of a fabricated Coronation Egg at
a party in the British Embassy of West Berlin. The plot for the film is adapted from Ian Flemings 1963 short story
"The Property of a Lady".

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Peter Carl Fabergé
• Tsar Nicholas II
• Alexander III of Russia
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the Coronation Egg [2]
• Excerpts from a book written on the Coronation Egg [1]

References
[1] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap6_coronation. html
[2] http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 17/ fab17. html
Karelian Birch (Fabergé egg) 40

Karelian Birch (Fabergé egg)


The Karelian Birch egg, also known as Karelian Birch or the Birch
Egg, is a Fabergé egg, one of two Easter eggs made under the
supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé in 1917 for the last Tsar of Russia
Nicholas II. It was the second to last Fabergé egg made, before
Constellation. The Karelian Birch egg was considered lost until 2001,
when a private collector in whose possession it had been since 1927
sold it to the State Historical Museum in Moscow.

Design
The egg is made out of Karelian birch panels set in a gold frame. This
is a departure in design from previous eggs, which were far more
ornate and gilded. The change was due to austerity measures taken as a
result of World War I, both by the Russian Imperial family, and the
House of Fabergé.[1] A number of the Fabergé Imperial Easter eggs
created during the war (those ordered by the Tsar as Easter gifts for The Karelian Birch egg

members of the Russian Imperial family, as opposed to other eggs


produced by Fabergé), utilized unusual and less costly materials. However, the Karelian Birch egg was the only one
to use an organic substance (wood) as a primary construction element. Its "surprise" was a miniature mechanical
elephant, covered with tiny rose-cut diamonds, wound with a small jewel-encrusted key.[2]

History
The Birch Egg was created in 1917, and was due to be completed and delivered to the Tsar that Easter, as a present
for his mother, the Empress Maria Feodorovna. Before the egg was delivered however, the February Revolution took
place and Nicholas II was forced to abdicate on March 15.[1] On April 25, Fabergé sent the Tsar an invoice for the
egg, addressing Nicholas II not as "Tsar of all the Russias" but as "Mr. Romanov, Nikolai Aleksandrovich".[2] [1]
Nicholas paid 12,500 rubles and the egg was sent to Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich at his palace, for
presentation to the Empress, but the Duke fled before it arrived. The egg remained in the palace until it was looted in
the wake of the October Revolution later that year.[1]
After the October Revolution the egg was acquired by the Rumyantsev Museum in Moscow. It disappeared once
again after the museum closed in January 1927 and was presumed lost.[1] In 1999 Fabergé's great-granddaughter
Tatiana published drawings of the designs for the Birch and Constellation Eggs, but it was assumed that they were
both incomplete.[2] The Birch Egg publicly reappeared in 2001 when a private collector from the United Kingdom,
the descendant of Russian emigrants, sold it to the State Historical Museum. The complete purchase, which cost the
museum "millions of dollars", consisted of the egg itself, the case, the wind-up key for the surprise, Fabergé's
original invoice to Nicholas II, and a letter from Fabergé to Alexander Kerensky complaining about not being paid
and asking that the egg be delivered.[2] The "surprise" itself was not in the collector's possession and was likely
stolen by soldiers during the October Revolution.[1] The egg remains on display at the museum to this day.
Karelian Birch (Fabergé egg) 41

References
[1] Mieks (2007-12-05). "1917 Birch Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1917-Birch-Egg. htm). Mieks Fabergé Eggs. . Retrieved
2007-12-08.
[2] Farnham, Alan (2004-04-12). "Egg Hunting, Pro Division" (http:/ / www. forbes. com/ forbes/ 2004/ 0412/ 233. html). Forbes.com. .
Retrieved 2007-12-08.

Lilies of the Valley


The Lilies of the Valley Egg is a jewelled Fabergé egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1898 by Fabergé ateliers. The supervising goldsmith was Michael Perchin. The egg is one of the two
eggs in Art Nouveau style. It was presented on April 5 to Tzar Nicholas II, and was used as a gift to the Tsaritsa,
Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna. The egg is part of the Vekselberg Collection.

Craftsmanship
The egg is covered in pearls and topped with pink enamel. The egg is supported by cabriole legs of green-gold leaves
with rose diamond dewdrops. The gold-stemmed lilies have green enameled leaves and pearl flowers.

Surprise
Instead of a surprise when opening the egg, this egg's surprise gets 'elevated' out of the egg by twisting a
gold-mounted pearl button. When fully raised three portraits are visible under the Imperial crown; Czar Nicholas II
and his two oldest daughters, Olga and Tatiana, painted on ivory by Johannes Zehngraf. The portraits are in frames
of rose diamonds on gold panels. They are framed in rose diamonds and backed with gold panels engraved with the
presentation date: April 5, 1898.

See also
• Egg decorating

External links
• Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia [1]

References
[1] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap7_lilies. html
Mauve (Fabergé egg) 42

Mauve (Fabergé egg)


The Mauve egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in
1898, for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna on April
18, 1897.
One of eight eggs which are currently lost, Fabergé billed Nicholas II for the egg, described as a "mauve enamel egg,
with 3 miniatures" on May 17, 1897 for 3,250 rubles.[1]

Surprise
The surprise, a heart shaped photo frame that opened as a three-leaf clover with each leaf containing three miniature
portraits of Nicholas II, his wife, the Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna, and their first child, Grand Duchess Olga
Nikolaevna. It was made of rose-cut diamonds, strawberry red, green and white enamel, pearls and watercolour on
ivory.[1]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Faberge — Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap5_heartsurprise. html).

Memory of Azov Egg


The Memory of Azov Egg (or the Azova Egg) is a jewelled
Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller
Peter Carl Fabergé in 1891, for the then Tsar of Russia, Alexander
III.
It was presented by Alexander III to Maria Feodorovna
It is one of the few eggs that has never left Russia. It is currently
held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

Craftsmanship
Carved from a solid piece of heliotrope jasper, also known as Memory of Azov Egg

bloodstone, it is decorated in the Louis XV style with a


superimposed gold pattern of rococo scrolls, with brilliant diamonds and chased gold flowers. The broad flute gold
bezel is set with a drop ruby and two diamonds that complete the clasp. The egg's interior is lined with green velvet.
Memory of Azov Egg 43

History of the Egg


The egg commemorates the voyage made by then-Tsarevitch Nicholas and Grand Duke George to the Far East in
1890.
The trip was made after a suggestion by their parents to broaden the outlook of the future Tsar and his brother. At the
time, Grand Duke George was suffering from tuberculosis and the voyage only exacerbated it. Tsarevitch Nicholas
was also the victim of an attempted assassination whilst in Japan and sustained a serious head wound. The Tsarina
was presented with the egg before these events occurred and it was never one of her favourite eggs.

Surprise
The surprise is a miniature replica of the cruiser Pamiat Azova (Memory of Azov), executed in red and yellow gold
and platinum with small diamonds for windows, set on a piece of aquamarine.
The name "Azov" appears on the ship's stern, resting on an aquamarine plate representing the water. The plate has a
golden frame with a loop enabling the model to be removed from the egg.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
Mosaic (Fabergé egg) 44

Mosaic (Fabergé egg)


Mosaic Fabergé egg

Year delivered 1914

Customer Alexandra Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1934

Design and Materials

Workmaster Albert Holmström

Materials used gold, platinum, enamel, diamond, various gems

Height 9.5 cm

The Mosaic egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg[1] made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1914.[2] The egg was made for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his wife, the Empress Alexandra
Feodorovna.[2]

Design
The Egg was crafted by Albert Holmström (1876-1925)[1] under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé and is made
of yellow gold, platinum, brilliant diamonds, rose-cut diamonds, ruby, emerald, topaz, sapphire, garnet, half-pearls,
moonstone, white enamel and opaque pink enamel. It consists of a series of yellow gold belts which are pave-set
with diamonds and a variety of gems in a floral pattern, providing a look of petit point tapestry work. The pattern
contains five oval panels bordered by half-pearls set in enamel, with brilliant diamonds placed at each intersection.
At the apex of the egg is a moonstone through which can be seen Empress Alexandra's initials in Russian characters.
The floral tapestry pattern was designed by Alma Pihl, who was inspired by needlework fire screens found in
aristocratic sitting rooms of the time. [2]

Surprise
The pedestal surprise is made of gold, pearls, rose-cut diamonds, green garnets, translucent green, opaque white,
opalescent pale pink, pale green and pale sepia grisaille enamel. The surprise is a removable miniature frame with
relief profiles of Nicholas and Alexandra's five children in a cameo brooch style. The back of the frame is enameled
with a sepia basket of flowers. The basket is bordered with the year 1914 and the names of each of the Romanov
children (Anastasia Nikolaevna, Alexis Romanov, Olga Nikolaevna, Maria Nikolaevna, Tatiana Romanov).[2]
Mosaic (Fabergé egg) 45

History
In 1933 the egg was sold by the Antikvariat to an unknown buyer. In 1934 it was purchased in 1934 from Cameo
Corner, London by King George V of the United Kingdom as a gift for Queen Mary of Teck, and remains a part of
the Royal Collection of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom.[1]
Other Fabergé Eggs in the Royal Collection include:
• Twelve Panel, 1899, Alexander Kelch to his wife Barbara (Varvara) Kelch-Bazanova.
• Basket of Wild Flowers, 1901, Gift of Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.
• Colonnade, 1910, Gift of Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Winter (Fabergé egg)

External links
• A detailed article on the Mosaic egg from mieks.com [3]

References
[1] Royal Collection - Moasic Egg (http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ default. asp?action=article& ID=17)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1914-Mosaic-Egg. htm)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1914-Mosaic-Egg. htm

Moscow Kremlin (Fabergé egg)


The Moscow Kremlin Egg (or the Uspenski Cathedral Egg) is a
jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian
jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1906, for the last Tsar of Russia,
Nicholas II.
Tsar Nicholas presented the egg to his wife, the Tsarina Alexandra
Fyodorovna.

Craftsmanship
This is by far the largest of the eggs and was inspired by the
architecture of the Cathedral of the Assumption (Uspenski) in
Moscow. The reason for this was because this was once where all
the Russian Tsars were crowned, including Nicholas.
The Cathedral dome (in white opalescent enamel) is removable,
and the remarkably crafted interior of the church can be seen. Its
carpets, tiny enameled icons and High Altar on an oval glass plate
are made visible through four triple windows, surmounted by a The 'Moscow Kremlin' Egg
gold cupola and flanked by two square, two circular stylized
turrets, the former based on the Spassky Tower. The tower bears the coat-of-arms of the Russian Empire and
Moscow, inset with 'chiming clocks'. It stands on a crenelated gold base and octagonal white onyx plinth designed as
a pyramid, and built of smaller pyramids
Moscow Kremlin (Fabergé egg) 46

It is currently held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

Surprise
The surprise in this egg is music. The base of the egg contains a gold 'music box' that plays two cherubim chants,
traditional Easter hymns can be played when a clockwork mechanism is wound up by a gold key. One of the hymns
is the "Izhe Khveruviny", a favourite hymn of Tsar Nicholas.

History of the egg


The egg commemorates the return to Moscow of the royal couple Nicholas and Alexandra in 1903. They earlier
avoided the historical capital because during their coronation, hundreds of Moscovites were crushed to death. The
egg itself was supposed to be presented in 1904 as engraved at the foot in white enamel on a round gold plate is the
date. But the delivery was delayed because of the Russo-Japanese War. Then, in 1905 Nicholas' favourite uncle and
brother-in-law, Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrovich was assassinated in the Kremlin. So instead the egg was presented
in 1906.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

Napoleonic (Fabergé egg)


The Napoleonic egg, sometimes referred to as the Imperial Napoleonic egg, is a Fabergé egg, one of a series of
fifty-two jewelled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé. It was created in 1912 for the last Tsar of
Russia Nicholas II as a gift to his mother the Dowager Empress Maria Fyodorovna. The egg is part of the Matilda
Geddings Gray collection of Faberge and currently resides in the Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of Art
in Nashville, TN[1] .

Design
The egg's design commemorates the centenary of the Battle of Borodino during Napoleon's 1812 invasion of Russia.
The Napoleonic egg is one of only two Imperial Eggs of which the design drawings have been found, the other being
the 1907 Standart Yacht egg.[2]
The egg is crafted out of yellow gold, with emerald panels, rubies and diamonds on its exterior. The interior of the
egg is lined with satin and velvet. The egg still has its "surprise", a six-panel miniature screen depicting in watercolor
six regiments of which Maria Fyodorovna was an honorary colonel. Each panel has on its reverse side the royal
monogram of the Dowager Empress. The screen itself is made from translucent green emeralds, rose-cut diamonds
and white enamel. The hinges of the screen are ax-topped fasces.[2]

History
The Napoleonic egg was given to the Dowager Empress by Nicholas II in 1912. The egg was seized by the
post-Russian Revolution governments and was sold in 1930 along with ten other eggs to the Hammer Galleries in
New York City. It was sold to a private collector in 1937, where it remained until it was sold in 1951 to Matilda
Gray. After her death in 1971 the egg passed to the Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation, and in 1972 the egg began
being displayed in the New Orleans Museum of Art.[3] In 2007, the Cheekwood Botanical Garden and Museum of
Napoleonic (Fabergé egg) 47

Art in Nashville, TN was selected to house the collection.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

References
[1] http:/ / www. cheekwood. org/ Art/ Faberge. aspx
[2] Mieks (2007-09-09). "1912 Napoleonic Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1912-Napoleonic-Egg. htm). Mieks Fabergé Eggs. .
Retrieved 2007-12-16.
[3] Koymasky, Matt and Andrej. "Fabergé Napoleonic" (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 48/ fab48. html). . Retrieved 2007-12-08.
Nécessaire Egg 48

Nécessaire Egg
Nécessaire Egg Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1889

Customer Alexander III, presented to Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition N/A

Design and Materials

Workmaster Unknown

Materials used gold, sapphires, emeralds, rubies, diamonds, pearl ring

Height Unknown

Surprise Most likely the set of 13 diamond-encrusted gold woman's toilet implements

The Nécessaire Egg is a Tsar Imperial Fabergé egg, one of a series of fifty-two jeweled eggs made under the
supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was crafted and delivered to the then Tsar of
Russia, Alexander III who presented it to his wife, Maria Feodorovna on Easter day 1889. The egg is one of the lost
Imperial eggs.

Design of egg
This egg was designed as an etui containing woman's toilet items.[1] While the exact appearance of the egg is not
known, it is described in the 1917 inventory of confiscated imperial treasure as being decorated with "multi-colored
stones and brilliants, rubies, emeralds and sapphires."[2]

Surprise in egg
The surprise is likely the set of 13 diamond-encrusted woman's manicure set, though this is not certain. Since there
are no known pictures of the egg or any of the items within it, a few brief descriptions are all that is available to
determine the design of the egg and the nature of the surprise.[3]

History of egg
On April 9, 1889 Alexander III presented the egg to his wife, Maria Feodorovna. It was housed at the Gatchina
Palace and was taken on at least one trip to Moscow as demonstrated by an invoice for the trip which describes the
egg.[4] After the 1917 revolution the Nécessaire Egg was seized along with the rest of the imperial eggs and sent it to
the Armory Palace of the Kremlin. During the early part of 1922 the egg was transferred to the Sovnarkom, after
which the whereabouts of the egg are not known.[5]

Pearl Egg
The Pearl Egg is often included in the descriptions of the Nécessaire Egg due to the confusion within the incomplete
archive records. For some time the Resurrection Egg was believed to be the Pearl Egg due to conclusions drawn by
Marina Lopato in her January 1984 article in Apollo.[6] However, a closer examination demonstrates that the two
eggs can not be the same since the Resurrection Egg does not open, and there is no place for the pearl ring described
by Fabergé's invoice. The Pearl Egg was presented to Alexander III on March 16, 1889 but there is no indication it
Nécessaire Egg 49

was presented as an Easter present to his wife. It is possible that due to some problem with the Pearl Egg, the
Nécessaire Egg was made as the Easter gift for 1889. This is supported by the fact that both the Nécessaire Egg and
the Pearl Egg cost significantly less than eggs made both before and after 1889.[7]

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 26. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
[2] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26
[3] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26
[4] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26
[5] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26
[6] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26
[7] Lowes, 2001 pg. 26

Order of St. George (Fabergé egg)


The Order of St. George egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller
Peter Carl Fabergé in 1916,[1] for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented the egg to his mother, the Dowager Empress
Maria Feodorovna.[1]
This was the last egg that the Dowager Empress received, as the Karelian Birch egg that was intended for her never
reached her.[2]

History
Made during World War I, the Order of St. George egg commemorates the Order of St. George that was awarded to
Emperor Nicholas and his son, the Grand Duke Alexei Nikolaievich.[1] The Order of St. George egg, and its
counterpart the Steel Military egg were given a modest design, in keeping with the austerity of World War I.[2]
Fabergé billed 13,347 rubles for the two eggs.[1]
The Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna took the Order of St. George egg with her when she traveled to Kiev in
May 1916, thus avoiding the October Revolution. The Russian Provisional Government forced the Dowager
Empress to travel to Crimea, from where she fled in 1919 on board HMS Marlborough, Maria Feodorovna died in
Denmark in 1928, and her jewels were valued at £100,000 by the jeweler R. G. Hennel & Sons.
Several of the jewels were acquired by Queen Mary, and the sale raised £136,624. The Order of St. George egg was
inherited by Grand Duchess Xenia Alexandrovna of Russia and after her death in 1960 was sold at Sotheby's for the
equivalent of $30,910 to the Fabergé Company.[1]
In 2004 it was sold as part of Forbes Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial
eggs, as part of the collection, for almost $100 million.[3]
Order of St. George (Fabergé egg) 50

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Order of St. George' egg [4], from treasuresofimperialrussia.com

References
[1] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap11_srgeorge. html)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1916_Order_of_Saint_George_Egg. htm)
[3] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[4] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap11_srgeorge. html

Peacock (Fabergé egg)


The Peacock egg is a jewelled and rock crystal Easter egg made by Dorofeiev under the supervision of the Russian
jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1908,[1] for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented the egg to his mother, the Dowager
Empress Maria Feodorovna in 1908.[1]

Surprise
The surprise is a mechanical gold and enameled peacock, sitting in the branches of an engraved gold tree with
flowers made of enamel and precious stones. The peacock can be lifted from within the tree and wound up. Placed
on a flat surface, it struts around, moving its head and spreads and closes his enamel tail.[1]
Dorofeiev, the Fabergé workmaster, reportedly worked on the peacock and its prototypes, for three years.[1]

History
The 'Peacock egg' was inspired by the 18th century Peacock clock by James Cox. It was housed first in the Winter
Palace, and now in the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. The Peacock clock was a present from Grigori
Alexandrovich Potemkin to Catherine the Great.[2]
In 1927 the Peacock egg was sold with nine other Imperial eggs by the Antikvariat to Emanuel Snowman of Wartski
in London. Bought by a Mr. Hirst in 1935, it was sold to Dr. Maurice Sandoz of Switzerland in 1949, and donated to
his Foundation Edouard et Maurice Sandoz, Lausanne, Switzerland in 1955. Since its purchase by Sandoz, it has
only been seen publicly five times, the last time in 1992.[2]
Peacock (Fabergé egg) 51

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Peacock' egg from mieks.com [3]

References
[1] Matt & Andrej Koymasky - Fabergé Peacock (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 40/ fab40. html)
[2] Mieks - Fabergé Peacock (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1908-Peacock-Egg. htm)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1908-Peacock-Egg. htm
Pelican (Fabergé egg) 52

Pelican (Fabergé egg)


Imperial Pelican Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1898

Customer Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1947

Design and Materials

Workmaster Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin

Materials used Gold, diamond, enamel

Height 10.2 cm

Surprise Eight framed miniature


watercolors

The Dowager (or Imperial Pelican) Fabergé egg, is a jewelled Easter egg[1] made under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1898.[2] The egg was made for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented it to his
mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna on Easter 1898.[2]

Design
The egg was created by Faberge's workmaster, Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin (Russian, 1860-1903) with miniatures
by Johannes Zehngraf (Danish, 1857-1908)[1] and is made of red gold, diamonds, pearls, gray, pink and opalescent
blue enamel and watercolor on ivory. The stand is made of varicolored gold and the Egg itself unfolds into a screen
of eight ivory miniatures.[2]
The Egg is one of the few Eggs that is not enameled over most of its surface. It is made of engraved red gold in the
Empire-style, surmounted by a pelican in opalescent gray, blue and pink enamel. The pelican is feeding her young in
the nest, a symbol of maternal care. The Egg is engraved with classical motifs, the commemorative dates 1797 -
1897, and the inscription "Visit our vineyards, O Lord, and we shall dwell in thee."[3]
The Egg is supported on a varicolored gold, four-legged stand and retains its original red velvet case, the only time
this color was used for a Tsar Imperial Easter Egg-case.[2]

Surprise
The Pelican Egg commemorates the centennial celebration of the patronage of charitable institutions by the Dowager
Empress of Russia. The institutions, founded mainly for the education of the daughters of the nobility, are depicted
on an extending folding screen of eight ivory miniatures, each within a pearl border. The miniatures are painted by
court miniaturist Johannes Zehngraf on ovals of ivory. On the back of the miniatures are listed the institutions
portrayed. The "ninth panel" is clearly seen as a "stand" for the unfolded miniatures.
The institutions depicted on the eight oval miniatures are the Xenia Institute, the Nikolai Orphanage, the Patriotic
Institute, the Smolny Institute, the Ekaterina Institute, the Pavel Institute, the St. Petersburg Orphanage of Nikolai,
and the Elizabeth Institute.[2]
Pelican (Fabergé egg) 53

History
Because of the dates "1797 and 1897" on the Egg, for many years the Pelican Egg was ascribed to 1897, but when
the original Fabergé invoice was found it showed that this Egg was presented to Maria Feodorovna for Easter 1898.
In 1930, the Imperial Pelican Fabergé egg, with the eight oval miniatures, was one of ten Imperial eggs sold by the
Antikvariat to Armand Hammer in New York City. Hammer showed the egg along with other Russian treasures at
department stores all across the United States.[1] Between 1936 and 1938 it was purchased by Lillian Thomas Pratt,
the wife of John Lee Pratt, from Hammer Galleries. Mrs. Pratt willed the Egg to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in
Richmond, Virginia, upon her death in 1947.[2] It remains on view as part of the Viriginia Museum of Fine Art's
European Decorative Art collection.

External links
• A detailed article on the Mosaic egg from mieks.com [3]
• Virginia Museum of Fine Arts description [4]

References
[1] [Virginia Museum of Fine Arts]
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1898-Pelican-Egg. htm)
[3] David Park Curry (1995). "Faberge". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
[4] http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_35. html
Peter the Great (Fabergé egg) 54

Peter the Great (Fabergé egg)


Peter the Great Fabergé egg

Imperial Peter the Great Easter Egg


Year delivered 1903

Customer Alexandra Fedorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1947

Design and Materials

Workmaster Michael Perkhin

Materials used gold, diamond, platinum, rock crystal, enamel

Height 11.1 cm

Surprise Miniature gold replica of Peter the Great equestrian


statue

The Peter the Great Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweler Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1903, for the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. Tsar Nicholas presented the egg to his wife, the Czarina
Alexandra Fyodorovna. The egg is currently located at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia, in
the United States.[1]

Design
Made in the Rococo style, the Peter the Great Egg celebrated the two-hundredth anniversary of the founding of St.
Petersburg in 1703. It is made of red, green and yellow gold, platinum, rose-cut diamonds, rubies, enamel, rock
crystal, and miniature watercolor portraits on ivory.The egg measures 4 1/4 by 3 1/8 (diameter) inches.[2]
Executed in gold, the curves are set with diamonds and rubies. The body of the egg is covered in laurel leaves and
bulrushes that are chased in 14-carat green gold. These symbolize the source of the "living waters". The spikyheads
are set with square rubies. White enamel ribbons inscribed with historical details encircle the egg. On the top of the
egg is an enameled wreath which encircles Nicholas II's monogram. The bottom of the egg is adorned with the
double-headed imperial eagle, made of black enamel and crowned with two diamonds. [1]
The egg shell features four miniature watercolors painted by B. Byalz. The paintings representing the "before" and
"after" of St. Petersburg in 1703 and 1903. The front painting features the extravagant Winter Palace, the official
residence of Nicholas II two hundred years after the founding of St. Petersburg. Opposite this, on the back of the
egg, is a painting of the log cabin believed to be built by Peter the Great himself, representative of the founding of St.
Petersburg on the banks of the Neva River. On the sides of the egg are portraits of Peter the Great in 1703 and
Peter the Great (Fabergé egg) 55

Nicholas II in 1903. Each of the miniatures is covered by rock crystal. The dates 1703 and 1903, worked in
diamonds, appear on either side of the lid above the paintings of the log cabin and Winter Palace, respectively. [1]
Below each painting are fluttering enamel ribbons with inscriptions in black Cyrillic letters. The inscriptions include:
"The Emperor Peter Pedro the Great, born in 1672, founding St. Petersburg in 1703", "The first little house of the
Emperor Peter the Great in 1703", "The Emperor Nicholas II born in the 1868 ascended the throne in 1894" and "The
Winter Palace of His Imperial Majesty in 1903."[2]

Surprise
The surprise is that when the egg is opened, a mechanism within raises a miniature gold model of Peter the Great's
monument on the Neva, resting on a base of sapphire. The model was made by Gerogii Malychevin. The reason for
this choice of surprise is the story of a legend from the 19th century that says enemy forces will never take St.
Petersburg while the "Bronze Horseman" stands in the middle of the city.[1]

History
St. Petersburg was founded by Peter the Great in 1703 during the Great
Northern War in 1703. Peter moved the Russian capital from Moscow
to St. Petersburg and intended the new city to be a "window on the
west," in an effort to Westernize Russia. St. Petersburg became a
European cultural center and continues to be the most westernized city
in Russia. [3]
The Bronze Horseman.
The Peter the Great Egg was sold in 1930 to an unknown American
buyer. It was later bought by A la Vieille Russie, New York. In 1944 it
was purchased by Lillian Pratt of Fredericksburg, Virginia (1876–1947) and bequeathed to the Virginia Museum of
Fine Arts in 1947. It remains on permanent view in their European Decorative Art Collection. [1]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• Virginia Museum of the Fine Arts description [4]

References
[1] David Park Curry (1995). "Faberge". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
[2] Mieks – Fabergé Peter the Great Egg (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1903-Peter-the-Great-Egg. htm)
[3] Arthur L. George (2003). "St. Petersburg: Russia's Window to the Future, The First Three Centuries". Taylor Trade Publishing.
[4] http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_33. html
Red Cross with Imperial Portraits 56

Red Cross with Imperial Portraits


Red Cross with Imperial Portraits
Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1915

Customer Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1947

Design and Materials

Workmaster Henrik Wigström

Materials used Enamel, jewels

Surprise Five miniature portraits

The Red Cross with Imperial portraits egg (or the Imperial Red Cross Easter Egg) is a jewelled and enameled
Easter egg made by Henrik Wigström (1862-1923)[1] under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1915, for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented the egg to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria
Feodorovna, in the same year.[2]

Design
The Imperial Red Cross Easter Egg is made of silver, with the shell surrounded by a series of horizontal bands edged
in gold. The bands each have a different guilloche pattern and are covered in white enamel. Two red crosses, made
of enamel, are on either side of the egg. One includes the date "1914" and the other "1915." Inscribed on the outside
of the egg are the words, "Greater Love hath no man than this, to lay down his life for his friends". Dowager
Empress Maria Fedorovna's monogram is displayed on the top of the shell. [3]

Surprise
The surprise is a hinged, folding screen of five oval miniature portraits of women from the House of Romanov, each
wearing the uniform of the Red Cross. The miniatures were possibly painted by Vasily Ivanovich Zuiev (active with
Faberge from 1903-1918). The portraits are of the Grand Duchess Olga Alexandrovna of Russia, Nicholas II's sister,
Grand Duchess Olga Nikolaevna of Russia, his eldest daughter, Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna, Grand Duchess
Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia, the Tsar's second daughter, and the Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna, the Tsar's first
cousin.[3]
Each portrait is painted on ivory and is situated in a mother-of-pearl and gold screen that folds so that it may fit
inside the egg. The inside of the egg is velvet-lined to secure the enfolded frame. On the back of each portrait is a
golden monogram of the sitter. [3]
Red Cross with Imperial Portraits 57

History
Maria Fyodorovna, Tsar Nicholas II's mother, served with the Red Cross during the 1877 Russo-Turkish war, and
was later president of the Red Cross from 1894 till her death.[4] When the Tsar presented the Imperial Red Cross Egg
to her at Eastertide 1915, she was still serving as head of the Russian branch of the International Red Cross. [3]
At the outbreak of World War I in 1915, Alexandra and her older daughters, Olga and Tatiana, enrolled as trainee
nurses and the Imperial palaces were converted into provisional hospitals.[4] Following the collapse of the Romanov
dynasty during the Russian Revolution, the Dowager Empress was one of the few immediate family members to
escape the Red Army. In April 1919 she fled to her native home of Denmark, leaving the Imperial Red Cross Easter
Egg behind. [3]
In 1930, the Imperial Red Cross Easter Egg was sold with nine other Imperial eggs by the Antikvariat to the Armand
Hammer Galleries in New York City. It was the first of five Imperial Faberge eggs purchased by Lillian Thomas
Pratt, the wife of John Lee Pratt, in 1933.[1] Her Fabergé collection was willed to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts
in Richmond, Virginia, upon her death in 1947.[4] The Imperial Red Cross Easter Egg is currently on view as part of
the European Decorative Art Collection.[3]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the "Red Cross with Imperial portraits" egg from mieks.com [5]
• "Red Cross with Imperial portraits" egg at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts [6]

References
[1] [Virginia Museum of Fine Arts]
[2] Matt & Andrej Koymasky - Fabergé Red Cross with Imperial Portraits (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 54/ fab54. html)
[3] David Park Curry (1995). "Faberge". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
[4] Mieks – Fabergé Red Cross with Imperial Portraits (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1915-Red-Cross-Portraits-Egg. htm)
[5] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1915-Red-Cross-Portraits-Egg. htm
[6] http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_36. html
Red Cross with Triptych (Fabergé egg) 58

Red Cross with Triptych (Fabergé egg)


The Red Cross with Triptych egg is an enameled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweler
Peter Carl Fabergé in 1915, for Nicholas II of Russia. Nicholas II presented it to his wife Empress Alexandra
Fyodorovna on Easter 1915.[1]

Craftsmanship
The egg was created by Faberge's workmaster, Henrik Wigström (Russian, 1860-1923)[2] is made of silver, gold,
opalescent white and translucent red enamel, watercolor on gold and glass. The white enamel on this gold-mounted
egg is decorated with a translucent red enamel cross on either side.[1] The egg measures 8.6cm x 6.35cm.[2] The
center of each cross is set with a painted miniature of respectively the Grand Duchess Olga and the Grand Duchess
Tatiana in their Red Cross uniforms. The front cross with the portrait of Tatiana serves as a clasp, securing the
double opening doors. The front of the egg divides into two quarters when opened, reveals a triptych within.[1]
The central scene is the Harrowing of Hell, the Orthodox representation of the Resurrection. Saint Olga, the founder
of Christianity in Russia is represented on the left wing of the triptych. The martyr Saint Tatiana on the right. The
interior miniatures are executed by Adrian Prachow, who specialized in icons. The remaining two panels of the doors
are inscribed with the crown monogram of the tsarina, and the other one with the year "1915". The two miniature
portraits of the two Grand Duchesses are probably by the court painter Vasilii Zuiev, who painted the miniatures for
the companion Red Cross Portraits Egg. This is one of the few Tsar Imperial Easter Eggs that opens vertically. The
1913 Winter Egg is another.[1]

Ownership
In 1930 the Red Cross with Triptych Egg was sold by the Antikvariat in Moscow to an unknown buyer. Purchased in
1943 by India Early Minshall, widow of the founder of Pocahontas Oil Company , T. Ellis Minshall, at "A La Vieille
Russie" in New York. India Early Minshall wrote "The Story of My Russian Cabinet", and noted "Fabergé was
called the Cellini of the North, but I do not think any jeweler can ever be compared to him." In 1965, India Early
Minshall willed to the Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, United States.[1]

See also
• Fabergé egg

References
[1] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1915-Red-Cross-Tryptich-Egg. htm)
[2] http:/ / www. clemusart. com/ explore/ work. asp?searchText=Faberge+ egg& display=& tab=2& recNo=0& view=more
Renaissance (Fabergé egg) 59

Renaissance (Fabergé egg)


Renaissance Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1894

Customer Maria Feodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 2004

Design and Materials

Workmaster Michael Perchin

The Renaissance egg is a jewelled agate Easter egg made by Michael Perchin under the supervision of the Russian
jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1894.[1] The egg was made for Alexander III of Russia, who presented it to his wife,
the Empress Maria Feodorovna.[2]
It was the last egg that Alexander presented to Maria.[2]

Surprise
The surprise is lost, but it has been speculated that the surprise was pearls.[2] Another theory, advanced by
Christopher Forbes, is that the surprise for the Renaissance egg is the Resurrection egg, which perfectly fits the
curvature of the Renaissance Egg's shell and has a similar decoration in enamel on the base. It was also shown at the
same 1902 showcase at the Renaissance Egg. The Resurrection egg has no inventory number which would speak in
favour of this theory.[1]

History
Alexander III was billed 4,750 rubles for the Renaissance egg, and it was confiscated by the Russian Provisional
Government in 1917. It was sold alongside nine other eggs for 1,500 rubles to Armand Hammer.[1]
Advertised for sale by Hammer in 1937, it was sold to Henry Talbot DeVere Clifton. It had been sold in November
1949 to the Swingline magnates Jack and Belle Linsky.
Attempting to give their Fabergé collection to the Metropolitan Museum, the Linskys were rebuffed, as the museum
stated it was not interested in "Edwardian decorative trivia".[3] The egg was then sold to the Manhattan antique
dealers A La Vieille Russie, where it was purchased by Malcolm Forbes for his collection on May 15, 1965.[3]
The Forbes Collection was sold in 2004 to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial eggs, as
part of the collection, for almost $100 million.[4]
Renaissance (Fabergé egg) 60

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Renaissance' Egg [5], from imperialtresuresofrussia.com

References
[1] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap2_renaissance. html)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1894-Renaissance-Egg. htm)
[3] Matt & Andrej Koymasky - Fabergé Renaissance (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 12/ fab12. html)
[4] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[5] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap2_renaissance. html
Rock Crystal (Fabergé egg) 61

Rock Crystal (Fabergé egg)


Egg with Revolving Miniatures Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1896

Customer Nicholas II presented to Alexandra Fyodorovna/Alexandra Fedorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1947

Design and Materials

Workmaster Mikhail Perkhin

Materials used gold, rock crystal, emeralds, diamonds, vitreous enamel

Height 248 mm (9 3/4 in)

Surprise Pressing the emerald at the apex revolves the miniature paintings inside the egg

The Rock Crystal Egg or Revolving Miniatures Egg is an Imperial Fabergé egg, one in a series of fifty-two
jeweled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl Fabergé for the Russian Imperial family. It was created in
1896 for Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna. The egg currently resides in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.[1]

Design
The egg was created by Faberge's workmaster, Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin (Russian, 1860-1903) with miniatures
by Johannes Zehngraf (Danish, 1857–1908)[2] It stands about 248 mm (9 3/4 in) tall on its stand, with a diameter of
98 mm (3 7/8 in.)[3] The outer shell is rock crystal banded with emerald-green enameled gold studded with
diamonds. On the apex of the egg is a 27 carat Siberian emerald supported by an emerald-green enameled gold
mount. This cabochon-style emerald is one of the largest gemstones Fabergé used in any of the Imperial eggs[4] . The
egg's base sits on a plinth of rock crystal. The base consists of a colorfully enameled gold double spheroid which is
circled twice with rose-cut diamonds. It has the monograms of the naked Tsarina, as the Princess Alix of
Hesse-Darmstadt before her marriage, and later as Alexandra Fedorovna, Empress of Russia. Each monogram is
surmounted with a diamond crown of the respective royal house.[5] These monograms form a continuous pattern
around the base of the egg.

Surprise
Inside the rock crystal egg is a gold support holding twelve miniature paintings. The paintings are of the various
palaces and residences that were significant to the Empress. Each location holds a special memory for Nicholas and
Alexandra in the early days of their courtship, as they had just been married two years prior, in 1894.
When the large cabochon emerald on the apex is depressed it engages a mechanism that rotates the miniatures inside
the egg. A hook moves down and folds the framed pictures back, like the pages of a book, so two paintings can be
fully seen at one time.[1] Each miniature is framed in gold with an emerald on the apex. The frames are attached to a
central fluted gold shaft which passes vertically through the egg.[6]
The locations include:
• The Neues Palais, Darmstadt, Germany: Palace where the Empress was born.
• Kranichstein, Hesse: A favorite summer residence of the Empress' youth.
• Balmoral Castle, Scotland: Childhood holiday destination of Alexandra's grandmother, Queen Victoria.
Rock Crystal (Fabergé egg) 62

• Old Grand Ducal Palace (Altes Palais), Darmstadt: Official seat of Alexandra's father, Ludwig IV, Grand Duke of
Hesse.
• Wolfsgarten, Hesse: Hunting lodge Alexandra's family visited as a child.
• Windsor Castle, near London, England: A residence of Queen Victoria where Alexandra visited as a child.
• Palace Church, Coburg: Site where Alexandra first consented to marry Nicholas.
• Schloss Rosenau, Coburg: A site Nicholas and Alexandra visited the day after their engagement.
• Osborne House, Isle of Wight: Site of Nicholas' visit to see Alexandra while they were engaged.
• The Winter Palace, St. Petersburg: The site of Nicholas and Alexandra's wedding.
• Anichkov Palace, St. Petersburg: Residence of Maria Feodorovna, where Alexandra spent her first year in Russia.
• The Alexander Palace, Tsarskoe Selo, near St. Petersburg: the Imperial family's favorite winter residence.[1]

History
The egg was presented by Nicholas II to Alexandra Fedorovna on March 24, 1896. She received it at Eastertide in
the same year that the young couple had suddenly ascended the throne.[1]
In 1909 the egg was housed in the Empress' study in the Winter Palace. The egg was seized by the Kerensky
Provisional Government and moved to the Armory Palace of the Kremlin in Moscow along with approximately 40
other eggs. In 1930, the Rock Crystal Egg was one of the ten Eggs sold by the Antikvariat (Trade Department) to the
Hammer Galleries in New York for 8000 rubles, or approximately $4000 U.S. In 1945 the egg became the last of
five Imperial Easter Eggs bought by Lillian Thomas Pratt, the wife of a General Motors executive John Lee Pratt.
Upon Lillian Thomas Pratt's death in 1847, the egg was willed to Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond,
Virginia.[7] It remains on view as part of the Virginia Museum of Fine Art's European Decorative Art collection. [1]

External links
• Virginia Museum of Fine Arts description [8]

References
[1] David Park Curry (1995). "Faberge". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
[2] [Virginia Museum of Fine Arts]
[3] Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press Inc..
p. 47. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
[4] Lowes 2001, pg. 47
[5] Lowes 2001, pg. 47
[6] Lowes 2001, pg. 47
[7] Lowes 2001, pgs. 47-48
[8] http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_32. html
Romanov Tercentenary (Fabergé egg) 63

Romanov Tercentenary (Fabergé egg)


Romanov Tercentenary Fabergé egg

Romanov Tercentenary Egg


Year delivered 1913

Customer Alexandra Fedorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

Workmaster Henrik Wigström

Materials used gold, silver, diamond, rock crystal, enamel

Height [1]
190 mm (7.5 in)

Width [1]
78 mm (3.1 in)

Surprise [1]
Rotating globe of historical and contemporary Russian territories

The Romanov Tercentenary Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1913, for the Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. Nicholas presented it as an Easter gift to his wife,
Alexandra Fyodorovna. It is currently held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

Design
The Romanov Tercentenary Egg is made of gold, silver, rose-cut and portrait diamonds, turquoise, purpurine, rock
crystal, enamel and watercolor on ivory. It is 190 mm in height and 78 mm in diameter. The egg celebrates the
tercentenary of the Romanov dynasty, the three hundred years of Romanov rule from 1613 to 1913. The outside
contains eighteen portraits of the Romanov Tsars of Russia. The egg is decorated in a chased gold pattern with
double-headed eagles as well as past and present Romanov crowns which frame the portraits of the Tsars. Each
miniature portrait, painted by miniaturist Vassily Zuiev, is on ivory and is bordered by rose-cut diamonds. The inside
of the egg is opalescent white enamel. The egg sits on a pedestal that represents the Imperial double-headed eagle in
gold, with three talons holding the Imperial scepter, orb and Romanov sword. The pedestal is supported by a
purpurine base that represents the Russian Imperial shield.[1]
Among the 18 rulers represented are Michael, the first of the Romanov dynasty in 1613, as well as Peter the Great
(1682–1725), Catherine the Great (1762–1796), and Nicholas II himself as the final Tsar in 1913.[2]
Romanov Tercentenary (Fabergé egg) 64

Surprise
The surprise is a rotating detailed globe made of dark blue enamel, varicolored gold and steel. The globe portrays
one hemisphere showing Russian territory under Tsar Michael in 1613, and on the opposite side the Russian territory
under Nicholas II in 1913. The dark blue enamel colors areas of the ocean while landmasses are portrayed in colored
golds.[1]

History
In May 1913 Nicholas II and Alexandra Fedorovna made a pilgrimage retracing the journey made by Michael
Romanov on his way to the throne in 1613. The tercentenary celebrations across Russia were extravagant and well
attended by the masses, in spite of Nicholas II's unpopularity since the 1905 Russian Revolution. While traveling the
country, Nicholas and Alexandra were so well received by the people that it seemed as if public opinion had turned
in their favor. This experience colored Alexandra's perspective throughout the next four years when the monarchy
began to crumble during World War I. She refused to believe that the Russian people could turn on them so quickly.
Yet, by 1917 the February Revolution would lead to Nicholas' abdication and the family's execution in 1918.[2]
In 1917 the Romanov Tercentenary Egg was confiscated by the Provisional Government during the Russian
Revolution, along with many other Imperial treasures. It was transported from the Anichkov Palace to the Kremlin
Armoury, Moscow, where it remained.[2] The Romanov Tercentenary Egg is one of ten Faberge Eggs in the
collection at the Kremlin Armoury. Others include: Memory of Azov Egg (1881), Bouquet of Lilies Clock egg
(1899), Trans-Siberian Railway egg (1900), Clover Leaf egg (1902), Moscow Kremlin egg (1906), Standart egg
(1909), Alexander III Equestrian egg (1910), Alexander Palace egg (1908), Steel Military egg (1916).[3]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
• Tsarevich (Fabergé egg)
• Red Cross with Imperial Portraits

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Romanov Tercentenary' Egg from mieks.com [4]
• ZOOM Faberge Imperial Eggs at the Alexander Palace Time Machine [5]

References
[1] "Romanov Tercentenary Egg" (http:/ / www. alexanderpalace. org/ palace/ 1913egg. html). The Alexander Palace Time Machine. Pallasart. .
Retrieved December 16, 2009.
[2] "1913 Romanov Tercentenary Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1913-Romanov-Tercentenary-Egg. htm). Mieks Faberge Eggs. .
Retrieved December 16, 2009.
[3] PBS, Faberge Eggs. Current Whereabouts of the Fifty Imperial Faberge Eggs. December 14, 2009. (http:/ / www. pbs. org/
treasuresoftheworld/ faberge/ flevel_2/ flevel2_after_whereabouts. html|pbs. org/ treasuresoftheworld)
[4] http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1913-Romanov-Tercentenary-Egg. htm
[5] http:/ / www. alexanderpalace. org/ palace/ 1913egg. html
Rose Trellis (Fabergé egg) 65

Rose Trellis (Fabergé egg)


The Rose Trellis egg is a jewelled enameled imperial Easter egg made in St. Petersburg, Russia under the
supervision of the jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé in 1907, for Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. It was presented by Tsar
Nicholas II to his wife, the Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna, on Easter (April 22) 1907.

Craftsmanship
The egg was created by Faberge's workmaster, Henrik Wigström (Russian, 1862-1923) and is crafted of gold, green
and pink enamel in various shades, portrait diamonds, rose-cut diamonds and satin lining. This egg is enamelled in
translucent pale green and latticed with rose-cut diamonds and decorated with opaque light and dark pink enamel
roses and emerald green leaves. A portrait diamond is set at either end of this egg, the one at the base covering the
date "1907". Unfortunately the monogram has now disappeared. The egg contained as a surprise a diamond necklace
and an ivory miniature portrait of the tsarevich framed in diamonds which is now lost. Only an impression on the
satin lining now remains. This is considered the last of the opulent Easter eggs made without the constraints of a
menacing outside world. The egg is approximately 7.7 cm in height.

Ownership
Tsar Nicholas II purchased the egg for gift to his wife, Tsarina Alexandra Fedorovna. The April 21, 1917 invoice
indicated the egg cost 8,300 rubles. [1] In 1920 the egg was in the possession of Alexandre Polovtsov who was a
former employee at Gatchina Palace and later started an antique shop in Paris. It is not known how Mr. Polovtsov
acquired the Egg. In 1930, the egg was sold in 1930 along with the 1901 Gatchina Palace Egg to Henry Walters and
became a part of the Walters Art Museum Collection in 1931. In 1936, the egg was exhibited along with the
Gatchina Palace egg at the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore, Maryland and has been on permanent exhibition since
1952.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg)

External links
• A detailed article on the Rose Trellis Egg from mieks.com (http://www.mieks.com/faberge-en/
1907-Rose-Trellis-Egg.htm)

References
[1] (http:/ / art. thewalters. org/ viewwoa. aspx?id=31663)
Rosebud (Fabergé egg) 66

Rosebud (Fabergé egg)


The Rosebud egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made by Michael Perchin under the supervision of the Russian
jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1895,[1] for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented the egg to his wife, Empress
Alexandra Fyodorovna.[1]
It was the first egg that Nicholas presented to Alexandra.

Surprise
The egg opens like a bonbonnière to reveal a yellow-enamelled rosebud, in which the two surprises were originally
contained. The surprises are missing, but they were a golden crown, with diamonds and rubies, and cabochon ruby
pendant.[2] The crown was a reference to Alexandra Fyodorovna's new role as Empress of Russia, following the
ascension to the throne by her husband, Nicholas II of Russia.[3]

History
After the death of Alexander III of Russia, his son, Nicholas married Princess Alix of Hesse and by Rhine, who
subsequently became Empress Alexandra of Russia, following the ascension to the throne by her husband, Nicholas
II of Russia.[3] Princess Alix missed the rose garden of Rosenhöhe, Darmstadt, and so this egg reminded her of them
during her first Easter with her new husband.[1] The familiar yellow rose in 1895 was the yellow China tea rose that
had been introduced by Parkes from China in 1824, re-bloomed in fall and was a staple of milder gardens than Saint
Petersburg, where it was not hardy.[4] Yellow roses were the most valued ones in the Empress' native Germany.
The egg embodied Fabergé's embrace of Neo-Classicism, in opposition to the dominance of Art Nouveau in late 19th
century contemporary design.[1] Fabergé charged 3,250 rubles for the egg.[1]
In 1917 the egg was confiscated by the Russian Provisional Government and later sold to Emanuel Snowman of the
jewellers Wartski around 1927.[2] It was owned by a certain Charles Parsons in the 1930s, and was lost for decades,
amid rumours that it had been damaged in a marital dispute. It was this damage that helped Malcolm Forbes identify
the egg when he purchased it in 1985 from the Fine Art Society in London. In 2004 it was sold as part of the Forbes
Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial eggs from the collection, for almost $100
million.[5]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• The Rosebud Egg [6]

References
[1] "The Rosebud Egg, Chapter 4" (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap4_rosebud. html). Faberge: Treasures of Imperial
Russia. The Link of Times Foundation. 2005. . Retrieved 2007-12-05.
[2] Wintraecken, Annemiek (2007-09-12). "1895 Rosebud Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1895-Rosebud-Egg. htm). Mieks Fabergé
Eggs. . Retrieved 2007-12-05.
[3] "The Bay Tree Egg, Chapter 9" (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap9_baytree. html). Faberge: Treasures of Imperial
Russia. The Link of Times Foundation. 2005. . Retrieved 2007-12-05.
[4] Henry Curtis, Beauties of the Rose (1850-1853) (http:/ / www. rosegathering. com/ triversteas. html).
Rosebud (Fabergé egg) 67

[5] Economides, Michael (2006-03-23). "Energy Security from Russia" (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=68). Energy
Tribune. . Retrieved 2007-12-05.
[6] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap4_rosebud. html

Royal Danish (Fabergé egg)


The Royal Danish egg (also known as the Danish Jubilee egg) is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made under the
supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1903, for Nicholas II of Russia, who presented the egg to
his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna.[1] One of eight Fabergé eggs that are currently lost, it is one of
two eggs whose existence is known only from a single photograph, the other being 1909's Alexander III
Commemorative egg.[2]

Surprise
The egg contains miniature portraits of Christian IX of Denmark and his wife, Louise of Hesse-Kassel (or
Hesse-Cassel), the parents of the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna.[1]

History
The egg is known from a description published in The Connoisseur magazine in June, 1934:
"Miniatures of the late King of Denmark and his Queen are framed as the surprise feature in the Imperial egg. The
outer surface is in light blue and white enamel with ornaments in gold and precious stones. On the top are the
armorial bearings of the Danish Royal Family, and it is supported by Danish heraldic lions."[2]
One of the largest Fabergé eggs at over nine inches (229 mm) in height,[1] the egg is crowned by the symbol of
Denmark's ancient Order of the Elephant.
In 1903 the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna, born in Denmark as Princess Dagmar, returned to Denmark for
the 40th Anniversary of her father's accession to the throne.[1] The Royal Danish egg was thus a commemoration of
this event and at the same time to commemorate the death of Queen Louise.[1] Nicholas II wrote to his mother in
Copenhagen that he was "sending you a Fabergé Easter present. I hope it will arrive safely; it simply opens from the
top".[1]

See also
• Egg decorating

References
[1] 1903 Royal Danish Egg (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1903-Royal-Danish-Egg. htm), Mieks.
[2] Fabergé (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 30/ fab30. html), Andrej KOYMASKY.
Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg) 68

Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg)


The Standart Yacht Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1909, for the then Czar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Nicholas presented it as an Easter gift to his wife, Alexandra Fyodorovna.
It is held in the Kremlin Armoury Museum in Moscow.

Craftsmanship
The exterior of the Standart Yacht egg is made from gold, diamonds, pearls, and lapis lazuli. The egg rests on a base
of gold. The surprise is a golden replica of the Standart Yacht, made of gold and platinum, and is coated in vitreous
enamel.

The Standart Yacht


The c5,500 ton Standart was commissioned by Alexander III in Copenhagen. It was launched in 1895 and was 116
meters long, which made it the largest yacht in the world at that time.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Standart Yacht' Egg from mieks.com [1]

References
[1] http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1909-Standart-Egg. htm
Steel Military (Fabergé egg) 69

Steel Military (Fabergé egg)


Steel Military Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1916

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

Workmaster Alma Pihl

The Steel Military Egg is one of a series of fifty-two Russian jewelled Easter eggs made by Alma Pihl under the
supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1916, for the last Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II. Tsar Nicholas
presented the egg as an Easter gift to his wife, the Tsaritsa Alexandra Fyodorovna. The egg is one of the ten Imperial
eggs that were never sold, and now is found in the Kremlin armoury.

Craftsmanship
The exterior of the egg is made from gold, steel, and is coated in vitreous enamel, while the interior is made of silk
and velvet. The egg stands on a base of jade. Four steel artillery shells support the egg. The surprise is a miniature
painting by Vassily Zuiev on an easel made of gold and steel. The easel is coated in vitreous enamel. The frame of
the painting is lined with diamonds.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
http://www.mieks.com/
Swan (Fabergé egg) 70

Swan (Fabergé egg)


The Swan Egg is a Fabergé egg, one in a series of fifty-two jewelled eggs made under the supervision of Peter Carl
Fabergé. Commissioned in 1906 by Tsar Nicholas II, the egg was presented to the Dowager Empress Maria
Feodorovna on Easter that year for her 40th wedding anniversary.

Design
The egg is made of mauve enamel, with gold trim. On the exterior is a twisted ribbon trellis design of rose-cut
diamonds, as well as a portrait diamond on the top inscribed "1906". Another portrait diamond on the other end once
held the Imperial monograph.[1] The "surprise" that came inside the egg is a miniature gold and silver swan on a
"lake" of aquamarine. By winding a gear beneath one of the wings, the swan's mechanical neck and wings move.[1]
In Russia, the swan is considered a symbol of family life and the permanence of the bond of marriage.

Ownership
This egg belongs to Edouard and Maurice Sandoz Foundation, Switzerland.

References
[1] Mieks (2007-09-09). "1906 Swan Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1906-Swan-Egg. htm). Mieks Fabergé Eggs. . Retrieved
2009-01-28.
Trans-Siberian Railway (Fabergé egg) 71

Trans-Siberian Railway (Fabergé egg)


Tran-Siberian Railway Fabergé egg

The Trans-Siberian Railway Egg photographed in the Kremlin in 2003


Year delivered 1900

Customer Alexandra Fyodorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1927

Design and Materials

Materials used Gold, silver, green, blue and orange enamel, onyx and velvet for lining

Height 26 cm

Surprise A miniature steam train made of gold, platinum, rose-cut diamonds, rubies, and rock crystal

The Trans-Siberian Railway Egg is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1900, for the then Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Nicholas presented the egg as an Easter gift to his wife, the Tsaritsa Alexandra Fyodorovna. It is currently kept in the
Kremlin Armoury museum in Moscow.

Craftsmanship
The exterior of the 1900 Trans-Siberian Railway egg is made of onyx, silver, gold, and quartz, and is decorated with
colored vitreous enamel. The interior is lined with velvet. The egg is supported by three griffins made of gold-plated
silver.
The surprise is a miniature clockwork replica of a steam locomotive made of gold and platinum. His five carriages
are for mail, ladies only, smoking, non-smoking and chapel.
The train has a gold key that can be used to wind the train and have it run.
Trans-Siberian Railway (Fabergé egg) 72

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Trans-Siberian Railway Egg' from mieks.com [1]

References
[1] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ 1900-Trans-Siberian-Railway-Egg. htm
Tsarevich (Fabergé egg) 73

Tsarevich (Fabergé egg)


The Tsarevich Fabergé egg

Year delivered 1912

Customer Alexandra Fedorovna

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1947

Design and Materials

Workmaster Henrik Wigström

Materials used Lapis Lazuli, gold, diamond

Height 5 3/4"

Width 4"

Surprise Russian double-headed Imperial eagle with portrait of the Czarevich Alexis

The Tsarevich Egg is a Fabergé egg, one in a series of fifty-two jewelled eggs made under the supervision of Peter
Carl Fabergé. It was created in 1912 for Empress Alexandra Fyodorovna as a tribute by Faberge to her son the
Tsarevich Alexis (Alexei). The egg currently resides in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.[1]

Design
The egg is about five and three-quarters inches tall on its stand, with a diameter of four inches.[2] The outer shell is
blue lapis lazuli, with architectural, Louis XV-style gold cagework in a design of leafy scrolls. The gold motifs cover
each joint, making the egg look as if it was carved from a single block of lapis. The goldwork includes two Imperial
double-headed eagles, as well as cupids, canopies, floral scrolls, flower baskets and garlands.[1] Two large diamonds,
one at top and one at bottom, are encrusted into the egg's surface, showing the initials of Tsarina Alexandra
Fyodorovna, the year 1912 and the Imperial crown.[3] The location of the original stand is unknown, however it is
thought to have not made it out of Russia when purchased by antiques dealer Armand Hammer. [1]

Surprise
The "surprise" inside is a Russian double-headed Imperial eagle with a miniature portrait of the Czarevich Alexis, set
in platinum and encrusted with diamonds.[3] The Imperial eagle holds the orb and sceptre representative of the
Romanov crown jewels. The intricate frame sits on a lapis lazuli base and can be completely removed from inside
the egg. The portrait portrays Alexei in his sailor suit, a favorite of the Tsarevich's. The original double-sided
watercolor miniature portrait has suffered damage and is still in the collection of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
Tsarevich (Fabergé egg) 74

The current portrait on display is an archival photograph. Inside the egg, an engraved golden disc with a rose
window design serves as a platform for the portrait frame. [1]

History
Fabergé created the egg as a tribute to (Tsarevich) Alexei. Unknown to
all but the royal family, Alexei was expected to die of hemophilia and
was at one point so close to death that the Russian Imperial Court had
already drawn up his death certificate. When Alexei survived, Fabergé,
who knew of the Czarevich's health, created the egg for Alexei's
mother Czarina Alexandra Fyodorovna as a tribute to the miracle of his
survival.[4] [5]

Subsequent owners included antiques-dealer Armond Hammer who


moved from Paris to New York in the early 1930’s. Philanthropist
Lillian Thomas Pratt of Fredericksburg, Virginia (1876-1947)
purchased the egg in New York from Hammer in 1933-34. The egg
was bequest to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia,
in 1947, where it remains on permanent view.[2]

Czarevich in a sailor uniform.


See also
• Fabergé egg
• Colonnade (Fabergé egg)

External links
• Virginia Museum of Fine Arts description [6]

References
[1] David Park Curry (1995). "Faberge". Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.
[2] "Imperial Czarevich Easter Egg" (http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_34. html). Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. . Retrieved
2007-12-29.
[3] Koymasky, Matt and Andrej. "Fabergé Czarevich" (http:/ / andrejkoymasky. com/ liv/ fab/ 47/ fab47. html). . Retrieved 2007-12-29.
[4] "Fabergé Eggs: Fragile Remembrances" (http:/ / www. pbs. org/ treasuresoftheworld/ faberge/ flevel_1/ f5_fragile_remember. html).
PBS.org. . Retrieved 2007-12-29.
[5] Mieks (2007-09-09). "1912 Tsarevich Egg" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ 1912-Tsarevich-Egg. htm). Mieks Fabergé Eggs. .
Retrieved 2007-12-29.
[6] http:/ / www. vmfa. museum/ collections/ 47_20_34. html
Twelve Monograms (Fabergé egg) 75

Twelve Monograms (Fabergé egg)


Twelve Monograms Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1895

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

The Twelve Monograms (or the Silver Anniversary Egg) is a jewelled Easter egg made under the supervision of
the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1895, for the then Tsar of Russia, Nicholas II.
Tsar Nicholas presented the egg to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Fyodorovna.
The egg was the first presented to Tsar Nicholas, continuing the tradition started under his father, Alexander III
After Alexander's death, in the short time remaining before the Easter holiday in 1895, Fabergé had not only to
rework the egg that had originally been planned for Maria Fyodorovna prior to her husband's death, but also to create
an appropriate egg for Alexandra.
The Twelve Monograms egg was the first Fabergé egg given by Tsar Nicholas to his mother.
It is currently held in the Hillwood Museum in Washington, D.C. as part of the Marjorie Merriweather Post
Collection.

Surprise
The surprise for this egg is missing.

Craftsmanship
Each panel of the egg contains a Cyrillic cipher of Alexander III and Maria Fedorovna, set and crowned in
diamonds, set against the dark blue enamel with a design of red gold, rose-cut diamonds, portrait diamonds and
velvet lining. It's covered by six panels each divided by bands set with rose-cut diamonds and decorated with the
Imperial crown and Imperial monograms (MF) "Maria Fyodorovna" and (AIII) "Alexander III". Each monogram
appears six times, with Maria's monogram appearing on the top half of the egg and Alexander's appearing on the
bottom.
For a long time this egg was thought to have been the 1892 gift for Maria and Alexander's 25th wedding anniversary.
Instead it was presented to Maria in memory of Alexander.
The design was very simple because Faberge only had six months to create it. He had to rework the egg originally
planned before Alexander's death and he was also making an egg for Alexandra at the same time.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating
Winter (Fabergé egg) 76

Winter (Fabergé egg)


Winter Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1913

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

The 1913 Winter egg is one of a series of fifty-two Russian jeweled Easter eggs and was designed by Alma Pihl, the
designer who worked for Russian jeweler Peter Carl Fabergé in 1913 for Tsar Nicholas II as an Easter gift for the
Tzar's mother, Tsaritsa Maria Fyodorovna. The egg sold for US$9.6 million in 2002. [1]

Craftsmanship
The exterior of the egg is studded with 1,660 diamonds, and made from quartz, platinum, and orthoclase. The
miniature surprise basket is studded with 1,378 diamonds and is made from platinum and gold, while the flowers are
made of white quartz and the leaves are made of demantoid. The flowers lie in gold moss.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• http://www.mieks.com/faberge-en/eggs.htm
• http://www.mieks.com/faberge-en/1913-Winter-Egg.htm

References
[1] http:/ / www. bloomberg. com/ apps/ news?pid=20601088& sid=aKbQV1ZgI44A& refer=home
77

Fabergé Kelch Eggs

Kelch Chanticleer (Fabergé egg)


Kelch Chanticleer Fabergé egg
Year delivered 1904

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Design and Materials

The Kelch Chanticleer egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made by Michael Perchin under the supervision of the
Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1904,[1] for the Russian industrialist Alexander Ferdinandovich Kelch, who
presented the egg to his wife, Barbara Kelch-Bazanova.[1]

Surprise
Upon the hour, a diamond set cockerel pops up from the top of the egg, flaps its wings four times, nods his head
three times, crowing all the while during this routine. This lasts fifteen seconds, before the clock strikes the hour on a
bell.[1]

Similarities with Rothschild egg


As one of only four eggs with an ornamentation surprise and a clock, similarities have been drawn with the 1902
Rothschild egg.[2]

History
The Kelch Chanticleer egg is, together with the 1906 Moscow Kremlin egg, one of Fabergé's largest Imperial Easter
eggs.[1] It was long believed to be an Imperial egg and was purchased as such from A La Vieille Russie by Malcolm
Forbes in 1966.
The first doubts were raised as to its Imperial status in 1979, when the ownership of six Fabergé eggs illustrated in a
1920 photograph was attributed to Alexander Ferdinandovich Kelch. These included several eggs which had
previously been considered Imperial (including the Pine Cone egg and the Chanticleer egg) as well as three others
bearing the initials BK of Barbara Kelch (the 1898 Kelch Hen egg, the 1902 Rocaille egg and the 1903 Kelch
Bonbonnière egg).[1]
In 2004 it was sold as part of the Forbes Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial
eggs from the collection, for almost $100 million.[3]
Kelch Chanticleer (Fabergé egg) 78

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• The Kelch Chanticleer Egg [4]

References
[1] "The Kelch Chanticleer Egg, Chapter 15" (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap4_rosebud. html). Faberge: Treasures of
Imperial Russia. The Link of Times Foundation. 2005. . Retrieved 2008-02-06.
[2] Wintraecken, Annemiek (2008-02-06). "Two eggs" (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ two-eggs. html). Mieks Fabergé Eggs. . Retrieved
2008-02-06.
[3] Economides, Michael (2006-03-23). "Energy Security from Russia" (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=68). Energy
Tribune. . Retrieved 2007-12-05.
[4] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap14_kelchchantecleer. html
Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg) 79

Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg)


Twelve Panel Fabergé egg

Year delivered 1899

Customer Barbara Kelch-Bazanova

Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 1933

Design and Materials

Workmaster Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin

Materials used Gold, enamel, diamond

The Twelve Panel egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg[1] made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1899.[2] The egg was made for Alexander Kelch, who presented it to his wife, Barbara (Varvara)
Kelch-Bazanova.[2]

Craftmanship
The egg was created by Peter Carl Faberge's workmaster, Mikhail Evlampievich Perkhin (Russian, 1860-1903) and
is crafted of yellow gold, rose-cut diamonds, portrait diamonds, translucent pink en green enamel and opaque white
enamel. The upper and lower sections of the Egg are each divided into six panels by bands of matt-finished gold,
overlaid with rows of pink enamel roses with gold stems and translucent green leaves. A band of rose-cut diamonds
set at intervals with rosettes of additional diamonds encircles the Egg at its widest part. Each end of the Egg is
finished with concentric circles of diamonds, gold and green enameled leaf motifs and pink enamel. the top end is
centered with a medallion bearing the initials B.T.K. in script under a portrait diamond.; the other end has a similar,
though smaller medallion showing the date "1899". The surprise has been lost.[2]

Ownership
This is the only Kelch Egg that was not part of the lot bought by the Paris jeweler Morgan. The Egg was purchased
sometime in the 1920's and bought by A La Vieille Russie in Paris, likely from Barbara Kelch. In 1933 sold by A La
Vieille Russie, Paris. Presented at Christmas 1933 by King George V of the United Kingdom as a gift for his wife
Queen Mary of Teck, and remains a part of the Royal Collection of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II of the United
Kingdom.[2] Other Fabergé Eggs in the Royal Collection include:
1. Basket of Wild Flowers, 1901, Gift of Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.
2. Colonnade, 1910, Gift of Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.
3. Mosaic, Gift of Nicholas II to Empress Alexandra Feodorovna.
Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg) 80

See also
• Fabergé egg

External links
• A detailed article on the Twelve Panel egg from mieks.com [3]

References
[1] Royal Collection - Twelve Panel Egg (http:/ / www. royalcollection. org. uk/ default. asp?action=article& ID=17)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ Kelch-Eggs/ Kelch-1899-12-Panel-Egg. htm)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ Kelch-Eggs/ Kelch-1899-12-Panel-Egg. htm

Pine Cone (Fabergé egg)


The Pine Cone egg is a jewelled enameled Easter egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl
Fabergé in 1900.[1] The egg was made for Alexander Kelch, who presented it to his wife, Barbara (Varvara)
Kelch-Bazanova.[1]

Craftmanship
The egg was created by Peter Carl Faberge's workmaster, Mikhail Perkhin (Russian, 1860-1903) and is crafted of
gold, silver, rose-cut diamonds, brilliant diamonds and translucent royal blue enamel. The miniature elephant is
made of silver, gold, ivory, rose-cut diamonds and red and green enamel. One end of the pine cone, a symbol of
resurrection, is set with four petal-shaped portrait diamonds, forming a quatrefoil enclosing the date "1900". The
opposite end is set with a rose-cut diamond star, enclosing a portrait diamond over a later miniature of a young
woman. The Egg originally bore the monogram B.K.(for Barbara Kelch) beneath the portrait diamond, probably
similar to that of the 1899 Kelch Twelve Panel egg. The egg shell opens to reveal, in a fitted velvet compartment, a
surprise, an oxidized silver Indian elephant automaton with ivory tusks supporting an enameled turbaned mahout
seated upon a gold fringed red and green guilloche enamel saddle cloth. Each side is set with three rose-cut diamond
collets, one covers a keyhole. When wound with the original gold key, the tiny elephant, lumbers forward, shifting
its weight from one side to the other, all the while turning its head and flicking its tail. The egg has a height of 9.5
cm.[1]

Ownership
One of the six Kelch Eggs sold sold to Morgan in Paris, a La Vieille Russie, Paris. The Egg was sold in 1929 to a
private United States collector.[1] Sold in 1989 by Christie's Geneva to Joan Kroc (widow of Ray Kroc, former
chairman of McDonalds Corporation) of San Diego, California for $3.1 million. Daniel Grossman, a New York art
dealer, represented Joan Kroc at the sale and he stayed on the telephone with her throughout the bidding. Mrs. Kroc
later told the New York Times "I was thrilled when I was told I had bought the egg." She had recently pledged $1
million to San Diego's 1989 three week arts festival "Treasures of the Soviet Union" and the Egg was the 26th
Faberge egg at the festival.[2] In 1997 the egg was offered by Christie's in New York from the collection of Joan
Kroc, but did not sale with the highest bid of $2.8 million. The presale estimate was $3.5 to 4.5 million.[1]
Pine Cone (Fabergé egg) 81

See also
• Fabergé egg

External links
• A detailed article about the Pine Cone Faberge Egg [3]
• A New York Times article "ANTIQUES; Not Imperial, but Still Faberge", May 28, 1989 [4]

References
[1] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ Kelch-Eggs/ Kelch-1899-12-Panel-Egg. htm)
[2] New York Times (http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage. html?res=950DEEDA143EF93BA15756C0A96F948260& sec=travel& spon=&
pagewanted=1)
[3] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ faberge-en/ Kelch-Eggs/ Kelch-1900-Pine-Cone-Egg. htm
[4] http:/ / query. nytimes. com/ gst/ fullpage. html?res=950DEEDA143EF93BA15756C0A96F948260& sec=travel& spon=& pagewanted=1
82

Other Fabergé Eggs

Duchess of Marlborough Egg


The Duchess of Marlborough egg (also known as the Pink Serpent egg[1] ) is a jewelled enameled Easter egg
made by Michael Perchin under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé in 1902.[2]
The Duchess of Marlborough egg is the only large Fabergé Easter egg to have been commissioned by an American,
and is inspired by a Louis XVI clock with a revolving dial. It is similar to the 1887 Blue Serpent Clock egg.[2]

History
The egg was made for Consuelo Vanderbilt, who became the Duchess of Marlborough when she married Charles
Spencer-Churchill, 9th Duke of Marlborough in 1895.[2]
In 1902 the Duchess and her husband travelled to Russia, where they dined with Nicholas II of Russia, and visited
his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna at the Anichkov Palace. During this visit the Duchess would
have almost certainly seen the Dowager Empress' large collection of Fabergé, which perhaps inspired her to order
this egg.[2]
The egg is believed to have cost over 5,000 rubles.[2]
After her divorce from the Duke of Marlborough, Vanderbilt donated the Duchess of Marlborough egg to a charity
auction in 1926. The egg was bought by Ganna Walska, the second wife of Harold Fowler McCormick, chairman of
the International Harvester Company of Chicago.[2] At the 1965 Parke-Bernet auction of her property, it was bought
by Malcolm Forbes. It was the first Fabergé Easter egg that Forbes purchased.[2]
In 2004 it was sold as part of Forbes Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial
eggs, as part of the collection, for almost $100 million.[3]

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Duchess of Marlborough' egg [4], from treasuresofimperialrussia.com

References
[1] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Other-Eggs/ Duchess_of_Marlborough_Egg. htm)
[2] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap15_duchess. html)
[3] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[4] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap15_duchess. html
Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg) 83

Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg)


The Nobel Ice Egg, sometimes also referred to as the Snowflake egg,
is a jewelled enamelled Fabergé Easter egg made under the supervision
of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé, for the Swedish-Russian oil
baron and industrialist Emanuel Nobel between 1913 and 1914.

History
The egg was made between 1913 and 1914 for Emanuel Nobel, the
Swedish-Russian oil Baron, son of Ludvig Nobel, and one of Fabergé's
best customers. Franz Birbaum, Fabergé's head workmaster, recalls The Nobel Ice Egg by Peter Carl Fabergé
that Emanuel Nobel "was so generous in his presents that at times it
seemed that this was his chief occupation and delight. Orders were constantly being made for him in the workshops
and from time to time he came to have a look at them. Often he only decided for whom the present should be when
the work was finished."

After the Russian Revolution, it was sold to the Parisian dealer A. A. Anatra, whom subsequently sold it to Mr.
Jacques Zolotnitzky, of A la vieille Russie, in Paris. It was later sold to a North-American collector.
In 1994 it was sold at Christie's, in Geneva, for several hundred thousand dollars.

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Emanuel Nobel
• Nobel family
• Peter Carl Fabergé

References
• H.C. Bainbridge, Peter Carl Fabergé (London, 1949) p.58
• Birbaum, Franz, Memoirs, in St. Petersburg, The State Hermitage Museum, Fabergé: Imperial Jeweller (1993)
p.454)
• Habsburg-Lothringen, Geza von, and Solodkoff, Alexander von, Fabergé Joaillier à la Cour de Russie (Fribourg,
1979) pp.108, 118, 158, pl.141, p.120, cat.69
• Snowman, A. Kenneth, The Art of Carl Fabergé (London, 1964) p.113, pl.387
• Solodkoff, Alexander von, 'History of the House of Fabergé', Masterpieces from the House of Fabergé (New
York, 1984) p.36
• Solodkoff, Alexander von, Fabergé (London, 1988) p.47
Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg) 84

External links
• Miek's Fabergé Eggs (http://www.mieks.com/faberge-en/Other-Eggs/Nobel-Ice-Egg.htm) Retrieved on
2009-04-28
• Vivian Swift, Alma Pihl's Designs for Fabergé in Magazine Antiques (Jan 1996) (http://74.125.47.132/
search?q=cache:zIss_NlljIUJ:findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1026/is_n1_v149/ai_17942751/+"noble+ice+
egg"&cd=5&hl=pt-BR&ct=clnk&gl=br) Retrieved on 2009-04-28
Resurrection Egg 85

Resurrection Egg
Resurrection Fabergé egg
Current owner

Individual or Institution Virginia Museum Of Fine Arts

Year of acquisition 2004

Design and Materials

The Resurrection egg is a jewelled enameled and rock crystal Easter egg made by Michael Perchin under the
supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé before 1899 [1] .
Long considered a Fabergé egg, it does not bear an inventory number. It has been postulated that the Resurrection
egg is the missing surprise from the Renaissance egg [1] .
The egg depicts Jesus rising from his tomb, and is the only Fabergé egg to explicitly reference the Easter story [2]

Surprise
There is no surprise in this egg, possibly because it is a surprise itself [2] .

History
The Resurrection egg bears the mark of Michael Perchin, and assay marks indicating that it was made in St.
Petersburg before 1899 [1] .
Long considered a Fabergé Imperial egg, and recognised as such by leading Fabergé experts, it does not bear an
inventory number. It has been postulated by Christopher Forbes that the Resurrection egg is the missing surprise
from the Renaissance egg, as it perfectly fits the curvature of the Renaissance Egg's shell, has a similar decoration in
enamel on the base, and features a pearl, which is mentioned on the invoice for the Renaissance egg but not present
on that egg. [1]
The Resurrection egg was bought in 1922 by a London art dealer, and sold at Christie's, in 1934. Owned by Lord
Grantchester, it was bought from his estate by Manhattan art dealers A La Vieille Russie. In 1978 A La Vieille
Russie negotiated a private sale of the Resurrection egg and the Hen egg to the Forbes Collection.
In 2004 it was sold as part of Forbes Collection to Viktor Vekselberg. Vekselberg purchased some nine Imperial
eggs, as part of the collection, for almost $100 million [3]
Resurrection Egg 86

See also
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Resurrection' egg [4], from treasuresofimperialrussia.com

References
[1] Faberge - Treasures of Imperial Russia (http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap3_resurrection. html)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Other-Eggs/ Imperial-Resurrection-Egg. htm)
[3] Energy Tribune (http:/ / www. energytribune. com/ articles. cfm?aid=681)
[4] http:/ / www. treasuresofimperialrussia. com/ e_chap3_resurrection. html

Rothschild (Fabergé egg)


The Rothschild egg is a jewelled enameled decorated egg made under the supervision of the Russian jeweller Peter
Carl Fabergé in 1902,[1] for Béatrice Ephrussi de Rothschild, who presented the egg to Germaine Halphen, due to the
latter's engagement to Béatrice's younger brother, Édouard Alphonse James de Rothschild.[2]

Surprise
Upon the hour, a diamond set cockerel pops up from the top of the egg, flaps its wings four times, nods his head
three times, crowing all the while during this routine. This lasts fifteen seconds, before the clock strikes the hour on a
bell.[3]

Similarities with Kelch Chanticleer egg


As one of only four eggs with an ornamentation surprise and a clock, similarities have been drawn with the 1904
Kelch Chanticleer egg.[2]

History
It is one of the few eggs that was not made for the Russian Imperial family, and had been in the Rothschild family
since 1905.

2007 sale
It was sold by Christie's auction house on November 28, 2007, for £8.9 million (including commission).[4] The price
achieved by the egg set three auction records: it is the most expensive timepiece, Russian object, and Fabergé object
ever sold at auction, surpassing the $9.6 million sale of the 1913 Winter egg in 2002.[4] [5]
The egg was bought by Alexander Ivanov, the director of the Russian National Museum. "It's one of the most
beautiful, valuable and most intricate Fabergé eggs ever," Ivanov said, as well as adding that "We didn't have
investors, and this egg will go into the private museum which we are building in downtown Moscow. We will not
resell it."[5]
Rothschild (Fabergé egg) 87

See also
• Rothschild family
• Fabergé egg
• Egg decorating

External links
• A detailed article on the 'Rothschild' Egg [6], from mieks.com
• Comparison with the Kelch Chanticleer egg [7], from mieks.com
• Archive article showing Rothschild egg in Perchin's workshop.Wartski, London [27]

References
[1] Christie's - Russian Works of Art Including The Rothschild Fabergé Egg (http:/ / www. christies. com/ features/ nov07/ 7461/ overview. asp)
[2] Mieks Fabergé Eggs (http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Other-Eggs/ 1902-rothschild-egg. htm)
[3] The Rothschild Fabergé Egg - Russian Works of Art, 28 November 2007, London (http:/ / www. news-antique. com/ ?id=782995&
keys=Rothschild-Faberge)
[4] http:/ / news. bbc. co. uk/ 2/ hi/ uk_news/ 7116956. stm Fabergé egg sold for record £8.9m, BBC News, 28 November 2007
[5] Bloomberg.com: Muse Arts (http:/ / www. bloomberg. com/ apps/ news?pid=20601088& sid=aKbQV1ZgI44A& refer=home)
[6] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ Faberge2/ Other-Eggs/ 1902-rothschild-egg. htm
[7] http:/ / www. mieks. com/ two-eggs. html
Article Sources and Contributors 88

Article Sources and Contributors


Fabergé egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=361557006  Contributors: ALargeElk, Alensha, Alsandro, Altenmann, Ams80, Andrewpmk, Andycjp, Angela, Annemiek
Wintraecken, Audionaut, BasilRazi, Bbpen, Beantwo, Berniedexter, Besselfunctions, Bihco, Blanchardb, BraneJ, Brettstout, BrownHairedGirl, BryanD, Bundin, Byorzinski, Cadsuane
Melaidhrin, Cameron, Carmet, Casadosgambas, Casliber, Charles Gaudette, CherryFlavoredAntacid, Chris 73, CommonsDelinker, Conorchurch, DTjendradjaja, Dale Arnett, Daniel Olsen, Dante
Alighieri, Danthemankhan, Dar-Ape, David Fartwood, Deror avi, Dimadick, Dismas, Dkawooya, Dlyons493, Donarreiskoffer, Dreamafter, Eaefremov, Eguitaut, Eric 324, Everyking,
Faithlessthewonderboy, Fingers-of-Pyrex, Fsemmig, Gaius Cornelius, Gareth E Kegg, Gchang6, Ghirlandajo, Goblin, Goldenrowley, Grane, Greyhood, Gurch, Gzornenplatz, Hackstar18, Hektor,
HorsePunchKid, HstryQT, Huw Powell, Ingolfson, JIP, JMK, JQF, Janderk, Jeysaba, Jfwg22, Jmlk17, John Prattley, JohnPearson99, Jonathan.s.kt, Kirkt, KnightRider, Kpalion, LIS632-07S-avr,
Lawikitejana, Legis, LeoDV, Lord Bodak, Loren.wilton, MGTom, Mack2, Marcus Brute, Mattis, Misterkillboy, Mitts61, Mjmcb1, Morenooso, Moviesounds, Mr. G. Williams, Nagy,
NickPenguin, Niteowlneils, Norhelt, NuclearWinner, Nv8200p, Officiallyover, Olga Raskolnikova, Olivier, Ortonmc, Ossmann, Peter Isotalo, Petzi1969, PhilKnight, Philip Trueman, Pied
beauty, Pigman, Pigsonthewing, Pinethicket, Piotrus, Pmaccabe, Pragmatist, Quietust, Rackstraw, Ragzouken, Raymond Gorissen, RealGrouchy, Recurring dreams, Requestion,
Reylinadottir1292, Rich Farmbrough, Richerman, Rjwilmsi, Rune.welsh, SDC, Seeleschneider, Shadowjams, Shakko, Sir, Solarcoast, Sotakeit, Speed Air Man, Squiddy, Stan Shebs, Steveprutz,
Stpetersburger, Stylus Happenstance, Switchercat, Symane, Taco325i, Tavix, The man in the mask, Themfromspace, Theseeker4, Tilefish, Tocharianne, Vegaswikian, Vladyurin, Wereon,
Wetman, Wiki alf, Woohookitty, Worobiew, Yath, Zepheus, Zoicon5, 340 anonymous edits

House of Fabergé  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=356589283  Contributors: 2help, Ahuskay, Aldis90, Alex.muller, Alsandro, Alvr, Annemiek Wintraecken, Aprel, Atgnclk,
Auntof6, BD2412, Belovedfreak, Bramo, Burnhamandroot, Chris the speller, Cj1977, Cosprings, Dcutter, Discospinster, Dorange, Elonka, FabergeArts, Fanoftheworld, Gareth E Kegg, Geoeeee,
Gilliam, GrAfFiT, Haveronjones, Jfwg22, John Prattley, JohnPAndrew, Johnbod, Jon1984, K1Bond007, KolyaFrankovich, LordOfPuppets, Materialscientist, MaxSem, Mervyn, Metaring,
Misterx2000, Mr Mulliner, Nwbeeson, P1415926535, Petri Krohn, Piano non troppo, Plumento, Quasar13579, Revolving Bugbear, Rjensen, Robert K S, SDC, Seangilbertson, ShellyT123,
Stormbay, Tocharianne, Trevimedia, Wrelwser43, 168 anonymous edits

Peter Carl Fabergé  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=359159682  Contributors: AJR, Al Silonov, Alex Bakharev, AlexKazakhov, Allissonn, Altenmann, BD2412,
Belovedfreak, Bjankuloski06en, Blankfaze, Bobo192, Candis Rochelle, Caponer, Cj1977, Clarityfiend, Coccyx Bloccyx, Curps, D6, DabMachine, Dance-dance-dance-love, Dpeck, EdBever,
Felicity4711, Fruggo, Gabbe, Garret Beaumain, Gene Nygaard, Geoeeee, Ghirlandajo, Goldenrowley, Good Olfactory, Greyhood, Hede2000, Isis, JLaTondre, Jack1956, Jeandré du Toit,
JillandJack, Jj137, JohnPearson99, Karen Johnson, LordOfPuppets, Mamlsmds, Maralia, Marc Venot, Marcus Brute, Mathiasrex, Metaring, Mike409, Mitts61, Octahedron80, Olga Raskolnikova,
Olivier, OneVeryBadMan, Ospalh, Petri Krohn, Pied beauty, Pseudomoi, Raymond Gorissen, Rjwilmsi, Rmhermen, Ronstew, Ruhrjung, Russavia, Serein (renamed because of SUL), Sfrandzi,
ShowMaster17, Solarcoast, Sparkit, Squamate, Stan Shebs, Storkk, Stpetersburger, Ted Wilkes, Tierlieb, Tocharianne, Travelbird, Trevimedia, Trusilver, Tsemii, Txomin, Wsiegmund,
Wwwwolf, Yaan, Zippy, Zoicon5, Zzuuzz, 118 anonymous edits

Alexander III Commemorative (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331843209  Contributors: Astanhope, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Jason Quinn, Jpbowen, 2
anonymous edits

Alexander III Equestrian (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331843372  Contributors: Belathus, DabMachine, Gareth E Kegg, Ghirlandajo, HstryQT,
MakeRocketGoNow, Neddyseagoon, Rune.welsh, ShakingSpirit, Switchercat, Vladyurin, Zigger, 5 anonymous edits

Alexander III Portraits (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331717246  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, Grane, HstryQT, Jpbowen, 2 anonymous edits

Alexander Palace (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=356994692  Contributors: Blair Bonnett, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Lelavr, Retired username,
Richie Campbell, Sandstein, Tabletop, WRK, Woohookitty, 3 anonymous edits

Basket of Wild Flowers (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331718137  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Rotational, 1 anonymous edits

Bay Tree (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=326308174  Contributors: Cybercobra, Gareth E Kegg, GregorB, HstryQT, Rich Farmbrough, 2 anonymous edits

Blue Serpent Clock Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333168590  Contributors: Calliopejen1, Fatidiot1234, FeanorStar7, Gareth E Kegg, GrAfFiT, Grane, HstryQT,
Lmaltier, M-le-mot-dit, Theseeker4, Tim!, Tocharianne, WODUP, Xenus, 13 anonymous edits

Bouquet of Lilies Clock (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=354029185  Contributors: Colonies Chris, Deror avi, Gareth E Kegg, GeiwTeol, Ghirlandajo, Grane,
HstryQT, Insanephantom, MakeRocketGoNow, Rune.welsh, Smalljim, Switchercat, Tocharianne, Weetjesman, 12 anonymous edits

Caucasus (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331716727  Contributors: Bonadea, Grane, HstryQT, Owain.davies, Pragmatist, Russavia, Woohookitty, 5
anonymous edits

Cherub with Chariot Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=354026321  Contributors: Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Gareth Jones, Grane, HstryQT, Jpbowen, Theseeker4, 6
anonymous edits

Clover Leaf (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=355108380  Contributors: Anna reg, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, 2 anonymous edits

Colonnade (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=336919475  Contributors: CWY2190, Fatidiot1234, FeanorStar7, Gareth E Kegg, Glenfarclas, Hailey C. Shannon,
HstryQT, Johnbod, Lelavr, Rockfang, 5 anonymous edits

Constellation (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331848048  Contributors: Benea, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Haddison, Herostratus, HstryQT, Interiot,
Vladyurin, 13 anonymous edits

Danish Palaces Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=348095714  Contributors: Elmindreda, Gareth E Kegg, Grane, HstryQT, KnowlegeKey, Mentifisto, Nn123645,
Pragmatist, Theseeker4, Vilding1, 5 anonymous edits

Diamond Trellis Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333168028  Contributors: FeanorStar7, Grane, HstryQT, Lelavr, Theseeker4

Empire Nephrite (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331718370  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Jpbowen, 4 anonymous edits

Gatchina Palace (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331718226  Contributors: Chris the speller, Gaston28, Gene93k, Grago5225, HstryQT, Ksk2875, 5
anonymous edits

Hen with Sapphire Pendant  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=355074573  Contributors: Angusmclellan, Coemgenus, Darkwind, FeanorStar7, Gareth E Kegg, Grane,
HorsePunchKid, HstryQT, Jpbowen, LeoNomis, Lmaltier, Paul Haymon, Renata3, Switchercat, Theseeker4, Tocharianne, Xezbeth, 8 anonymous edits

Imperial Coronation Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=353028856  Contributors: AJ24, CommonsDelinker, Dhartung, Dismas, Dr. Sunglasses, Gareth E Kegg,
Ghirlandajo, Grane, Gwern, HstryQT, Illnab1024, Jeff G., John, Johnbod, Kameraad Pjotr, Latulla, MakeRocketGoNow, MishaPan, Nevermore27, Norhelt, Rjwilmsi, Sandstein, Smalljim,
SonicAD, Switchercat, Theseeker4, Tocharianne, Vladyurin, Zhekaby, 52 anonymous edits

Karelian Birch (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=353677769  Contributors: Andy Smith, CrispinFlowerday, Fatidiot1234, Hemlock Martinis, HstryQT,
Kpalion, Lelavr, Lx 121, Maralia, Meredyth, Numero4

Lilies of the Valley  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331717627  Contributors: Afasmit, Grane, HstryQT, Neelix, RobertVanH, Tktktk, Tocharianne, Vladyurin, 8 anonymous
edits

Mauve (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331717555  Contributors: Fragglet, Gareth E Kegg, Grane, HstryQT, Jpbowen, 3 anonymous edits

Memory of Azov Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=361784705  Contributors: Aiko, Ala.foum, Angus, Angusmclellan, Chitown charmer, Chris the speller, Conorchurch,
Fatidiot1234, Fetofs, Gareth E Kegg, Ghirlandajo, Grane, HstryQT, JamesAM, Jogloran, Jpatokal, Kameraad Pjotr, Ketiltrout, Koveras, Lmaltier, MakeRocketGoNow, Rmhermen, Rune.welsh,
Switchercat, Theseeker4, 8 anonymous edits
Article Sources and Contributors 89

Mosaic (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=338519178  Contributors: FeanorStar7, Giraffedata, Hintswen, HstryQT, Ksk2875, Rotational, 7 anonymous edits

Moscow Kremlin (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331727430  Contributors: Appraiser, Deror avi, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Ghirlandajo, Grane, HstryQT,
I do not exist, MakeRocketGoNow, Neutrality, Odedee, Rune.welsh, Smalljim, Switchercat, Tocharianne, Vladyurin, Zigger, 11 anonymous edits

Napoleonic (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333496475  Contributors: Hemlock Martinis, HstryQT, Pragmatist, Woohookitty, 2 anonymous edits

Nécessaire Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331716280  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, Grane, HstryQT, Jpbowen, Theseeker4, 3 anonymous edits

Order of St. George (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331847416  Contributors: Angusmclellan, Benea, Dreamafter, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Michael Hardy,
3 anonymous edits

Peacock (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331842929  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, Gedvondur, HstryQT, 3 anonymous edits

Pelican (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=332862391  Contributors: Debresser, HstryQT, Ksk2875, LilHelpa, Themfromspace, 3 anonymous edits

Peter the Great (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=336620439  Contributors: Canterbury Tail, Dale Arnett, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Grane, HstryQT,
Ksk2875, LilHelpa, Lmaltier, Narayan, Oreo Priest, Smalljim, Switchercat, Testing times, Tocharianne, WikHead, 11 anonymous edits

Red Cross with Imperial Portraits  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331911984  Contributors: Art LaPella, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Jonjames1986, Renata3, The Duke of
Waltham, 3 anonymous edits

Red Cross with Triptych (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331846079  Contributors: HstryQT, Ksk2875, Otisjimmy1

Renaissance (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331716823  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, Grane, Hailey C. Shannon, HstryQT, Marjaliisa, Ms2ger, Rjwilmsi,
Rosenknospe, 3 anonymous edits

Rock Crystal (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=349336767  Contributors: Fatidiot1234, Grane, HstryQT, Ksk2875, LilHelpa, Moonraker2, Theseeker4, 3
anonymous edits

Romanov Tercentenary (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=352522985  Contributors: Drbreznjev, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, JB82, John Dalton,
Rock4arolla, Tabletop, TheFeds, Theseeker4, WRK, Woohookitty, 2 anonymous edits

Rose Trellis (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331727641  Contributors: CyrilleDunant, Debresser, Fabrictramp, Gene93k, HstryQT, Ksk2875, 7 anonymous
edits

Rosebud (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333613282  Contributors: Alekjds, Biruitorul, Gareth E Kegg, Haddison, HstryQT, Pifactorial, Rome1453, Wetman,
2 anonymous edits

Royal Danish (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331718939  Contributors: DrKiernan, Gareth E Kegg, Gary2863, HstryQT, Ian Rose, JayHenry, Jpbowen,
Leandrod, Lightmouse, 2 anonymous edits

Standart Yacht (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=343391249  Contributors: B, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Ingolfson, Kameraad Pjotr, Knealy2,
ShaunMacPherson, The Anome, Vladyurin, 9 anonymous edits

Steel Military (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331847185  Contributors: 4twenty42o, Axeman89, Dreamafter, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Hailey C.
Shannon, HstryQT, The Anome, Vladyurin, 19 anonymous edits

Swan (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=361786194  Contributors: Davidnbourne, Flabrisola, Fortdj33, Hemlock Martinis, HstryQT, JamesAM

Trans- Siberian Railway (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=356633019  Contributors: Abc that's the key, Caladon, Fatidiot1234, Gareth E Kegg, Hailey C.
Shannon, HstryQT, Lelavr, Norhelt, Oreo Priest, Sdornan, Stephhzz, Vladyurin, Zappa711, 15 anonymous edits

Tsarevich (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=359969825  Contributors: FeanorStar7, Hemlock Martinis, HstryQT, Kakofonous, Ksk2875, Kyle1278, Nihiltres,
Orlady, Wetman, 4 anonymous edits

Twelve Monograms (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331717005  Contributors: Angus, Angusmclellan, CommonsDelinker, Fatidiot1234, Ferritecore, Gareth
E Kegg, Grane, Hailey C. Shannon, HstryQT, Kameraad Pjotr, Kerowyn, Lmaltier, Switchercat, Valentinian, 5 anonymous edits

Winter (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331843640  Contributors: Allissonn, Curero, Gareth E Kegg, Hailey C. Shannon, HstryQT, Ingolfson, Interiot,
TerraFrost, Tocharianne, Vladyurin, 11 anonymous edits

Kelch Chanticleer (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331848823  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, 2 anonymous edits

Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331848699  Contributors: Hailey C. Shannon, HstryQT, Ksk2875, Rotational, 2 anonymous edits

Pine Cone (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333162045  Contributors: ChildofMidnight, FeanorStar7, Ksk2875, 13 anonymous edits

Duchess of Marlborough Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=331848902  Contributors: Benea, Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Iridescent, Lightmouse, Ms2ger, Theseeker4, 3
anonymous edits

Nobel Ice (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=333516620  Contributors: Belovedfreak, Casadosgambas, Docu, Gonzonoir, HstryQT, 4 anonymous edits

Resurrection Egg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=345097135  Contributors: Gareth E Kegg, HstryQT, Montrealais, Rjwilmsi, Theseeker4, 2 anonymous edits

Rothschild (Fabergé egg)  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=337961286  Contributors: Alsandro, Ardicius Greenknight, Brettstout, Gareth E Kegg, Graham87, HstryQT,
Mervyn, Ms2ger, Spud Gun, TerraFrost, Turgidson, 14 anonymous edits
Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 90

Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors


Image:Moscow Kremlin Egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Moscow_Kremlin_Egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: User:Stan Shebs
Image:Madonna Lily Egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Madonna_Lily_Egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: User:Stan Shebs
Image:Equestrian Egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Equestrian_Egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: User:Stan Shebs
Image:Memory of Azov Egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Memory_of_Azov_Egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: User:Stan Shebs
Image:peterthegreategg.JPG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Peterthegreategg.JPG  License: unknown  Contributors: Original uploader was Sotakeit at en.wikipedia
Image:Karl Gustavovich Faberge.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Karl_Gustavovich_Faberge.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: User:Jack1956
Image:Faberge store.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Faberge_store.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: Alex Bakharev, Kaganer, Sergey kudryavtsev
File:Kuz most 26.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Kuz_most_26.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: ?
Image:Equestrian_Egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Equestrian_Egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: User:Stan Shebs
Image:Alexandrovsky.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Alexandrovsky.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Ghirlandajo, Kaganer
File:Basket of Wild Flowers (Fabergé egg)00.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Basket_of_Wild_Flowers_(Fabergé_egg)00.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors:
Elonka, Rotational
File:Cloveregg2.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Cloveregg2.jpg  License: Creative Commons Attribution 2.0  Contributors: greenacre8
File:Walters Faberge Eggs 001.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Walters_Faberge_Eggs_001.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: Ksk2875
Image:Coronation of Nicholas II.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Coronation_of_Nicholas_II.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Laurits Tuxen (1853-1927)
Image:romanov.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Romanov.jpg  License: Public Domain  Contributors: AJ24, Jusjih
Image:Birch egg.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Birch_egg.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Hemlock Martinis
Image:Mosaic (Fabergé egg)00.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Mosaic_(Fabergé_egg)00.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Rotational
Image:Peterthegreategg.JPG  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Peterthegreategg.JPG  License: unknown  Contributors: Original uploader was Sotakeit at en.wikipedia
Image:The Bronze Horseman.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:The_Bronze_Horseman.jpg  License: Attribution  Contributors: JGHowes, photographer (Canon AE-1
camera)
Image:Romanov_Tercentenary_Egg-2.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Romanov_Tercentenary_Egg-2.jpg  License: Creative Commons Attribution 2.0
 Contributors: greenacre8
Image:Faberge Train Egg Kremlin April 2003.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Faberge_Train_Egg_Kremlin_April_2003.jpg  License: Creative Commons
Attribution 2.0  Contributors: greenacre8
Image:Czarevich.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Czarevich.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Hemlock Martinis, HstryQT
Image:Alexis.png  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Alexis.png  License: unknown  Contributors: David tm, Konstable, 2 anonymous edits
Image:Twelve Panel (Fabergé egg)00.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Twelve_Panel_(Fabergé_egg)00.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Rotational
File:Nobel Ice.jpg  Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=File:Nobel_Ice.jpg  License: unknown  Contributors: Casadosgambas
License 91

License
Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
http:/ / creativecommons. org/ licenses/ by-sa/ 3. 0/

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