*
Further images
Note:
It's incredibly rare that jewels from the 17th Century survive to the present day and even rarer with traceable royal provenance. The House of Wettin is one of the oldest dynasties in Europe with its origins in the 10th Century. This necklace found itself in the Albertine branch of the family and was probably housed in the famous Dresden Green Vaults. The vaults had been created in 16th Century to house the treasures of the Electorate of Saxony, with a large collection of this put on public display by Augustus The Strong (Elector of Saxony) from 1723, as it still is today. The necklace was never part of the public display and returned into the private hands of the Wettin family, namely King Frederick Augustus III, the last King of Saxony, around 1930. It was consigned by Prince Ernst Heinrich of Saxony's widow Princess Virginia for auction with her nephew at Habsburg Feldman auctioneers in the 1990s, eventually making its way into the erudite collection of American socialite and philanthropist Mrs Jayne Wrightsman. As much as its provenance, it is also an exemplary collection of old mine Colombian emeralds.
Provenance
The Saxon Royal Family
Grünes Gewölbe (Green Vault), Dresden
King Frederick Augustus III, the last King of Saxony, (1865 - 1932)
His son, Prince Ernst Heinrich (1896-1971)
Princess Virginia of Saxony (née Dulon) (1910 - 2002)
Habsburg & Company Auctioneers GenevaSJ Phillips
Mrs Jayne Wrightsman
Sotheby’s, New York, 2 December 2012, Magnificent Jewels, Lot 374
Private Collection
Christie's, New York, 8th December 2021, Magnificent Jewels, Lot 111