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Catherine the Great's emerald and diamond brooch.


The Spanish Inquisition Necklace.


The Chalk emerald ring.
  Taking its lead from Pantone, Christie's pays special tribute to the emerald


May 15, 2013


With Pantone naming Emerald Green as its dominant color for 2013, the auction house Christie's has paid special tribute to the gemstone from which the color communication specialist took its lead.

For the occasion, it named what it described as its four favorite pieces of emerald jewelry. The first was Empress Catherine the Great's Emerald and Diamond Brooch. It featured a hexagonal cut Colombian emerald weighing between 60 and 70 carats.

Also on the list was the Spanish Inquisition Necklace, which first belonged to Spanish royalty and was later worn by the ladies of the French court. It features 374 antique-cut diamonds and 15 emeralds, which are among the most valuable in the world. Once owned by an Indian prince and by the American jeweler Harry Winston, it was bequeathed to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., where it remains on display today.

The third item was the Chalk Emerald, named after its former owner, Claire Chalk. The 38-carat stone was set as a ring and surrounded by 60 pear-shaped diamonds by Harry Winston. Chalk wore the ring to a White House dinner honoring Queen Elizabeth II, and according to Christie's politely removed it when she noticed the British monarch was wearing "a less illustrious emerald." Ms. Chalk donated the ring it to the Smithsonian in 1972.

The fourth item was Elizabeth Taylor's Bulgari Brooch, which was a gift to the actress from Richard Burton on their wedding day. It broke world records when it was sold for $6.6 million at a Christie's auction in 2011. The emerald weighs 23.46 carats and the total weight of the diamonds is approximately 20 carats.

Christie's also mentioned a number of memorable dates in emerald history, including 330 BC, when the Egyptians began mining emeralds. Another was 1537, when Spanish conquistadors discovered emeralds in South America and introduced them throughout Europe, and two more were 1066 and 1485, when laws were passed that forbade everyone but nobility from wearing the green gemstone.

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