Diamonds Unearthed
In the final installment of this three-part series, Smithsonian diamond expert Jeffrey Post, curator of the National Gem and Mineral Collection, discusses the fascinating stories behind the Smithsonian's diamond collection
- By Cate Lineberry
- Smithsonian.com, January 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Eventually the necklace was returned to the family in Austria and it stayed in the family until after World War II. It was eventually purchased by Harry Winston, who sold it to Marjorie Merriweather Post.
How did Harry Winston get the necklace?
In the 1950s, it was common for people like Harry Winston to buy old pieces of jewelry in Europe. People in Europe had lost everything during the war. To survive and recover, families had to sell some of their jewelry. So you had Winston and Cartier and Van Cleef and others traveling through Europe buying up all these old pieces of jewelry. They were buying them just to get the gemstones. The '50s were a very forward-looking time. Everything was modern. People wanted new things. They weren't interested in old jewelry. Winston would buy up all these old pieces of jewelry and pop the diamonds out. They'd pop out the emeralds, the rubies, the sapphires. They'd take them to cutters. The cutters would recut them into modern cuts to make them more attractive and a more modern piece of jewelry. In this case, Harry Winston knew it was more profitable for him to sell it to Marjorie Merriweather Post as a historic piece of jewelry than to take all the diamonds out and recut them. So some of these pieces were preserved only because of Marjorie Merriweather Post. Over time, she donated a number of them to the Smithsonian.
What are the Marie-Antoinette Diamonds?
We also have two diamonds that were cut in the late 1700s that are called the Marie Antoinette diamonds. They are set in earrings. There's a legend that they belonged to Marie Antoinette, that she wore them as earrings. There's pretty good evidence to associate the diamonds with Marie Antoinette, but whether she actually wore them as earrings or not, I'm not convinced.
There's another really interesting story about a necklace that was called the Marie Antoinette diamond necklace. She never actually owned it, but there was such a scandal associated with that necklace, it washed over on her. In fact, it was part of what caused the downfall of the King and Queen of France. In this necklace were several large pear-shaped diamonds and a couple that were similar to the stones that we have here. It may be that the diamonds we have originated from that necklace, which would make them even more interesting in some ways.
What is the history behind the Spanish Inquisition Necklace?
Harry Winston gave it the interesting name the Spanish Inquisition necklace. It was a necklace that belonged to the maharaja of Indore in India. The large emeralds and diamonds in that necklace were cut during the Mogul period, so going back to the early 1600s in India. They're almost football-shaped diamonds that were very typical of the cutting style of that time. They are the oldest cut diamonds in the collection.
In part one, Jeffrey Post discusses how diamonds form. In part two, he talks about colored diamonds, conflict diamonds and synthetic gems grown in the lab.
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (1)
With the Portuguese diamond on her neck,
great, one of this days you guys will say the 800 pound
Emerald come from North Carolina...
Posted by There's pictures of Maria I on September 29,2010 | 07:34 PM