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HISTORY OF FABERGÉ |
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But Fabergé remained loyal to the Imperial Family as well as he was completely devoted to his country. Fabergé was a great patriot. He could have made a lot of money during the war, but instead of that he turned his Moscow shop into a factory to produce ammunition. He had endless military commissions which he was unable to fulfill, but somehow, Fabergé still managed to make Imperial Eggs for the Tsar and his family. With minimal recourses and only a few craftsmen he managed to create the Steel Military Egg for Nicholas II to give Alexandra on 1916 Easter morning. Fabergé mirrored the height of the war in this particular egg by making the shell of silver which was very much in contrast to the other eggs. | ||||
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That same year Nicholas II gave his mother Order of St. George Egg. She in return wrote this thank you note to her son: My dearest Nikki, I kiss you three times and thank you with all my heart for your lovely egg with miniatures which dear old Fabergé brought by himself. It is beautiful. It is so sad not to be together. I wish you, my dear darling Nikki, all the best things and success in everything. Your fondly loving old mama Unfortunately, success was not part of Nicholass future. In 1917, he was forced to abdicate the throne. The Tsar and his family were placed under house-arrest and in April 1918, the revolutionaries moved them to Ekaterinburg, in Siberia. On 17 July, just after midnight, the Tsar, his family, and their faithful servants were awakened from their sleep, brought downstairs into basement and brutally slaughtered. Imperial Russia had ceased to exist. |
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Carl Fabergé died on September 24, 1920 at the age of 74 and those who knew him said that he died from a broken heart. While revolution and communism destroyed the Tsar of Russia and three hundred years of monarchic reign, FabergÈís delicate and fragile creations survived. Revolution changed Russia that FabergÈ had known and loved. Communists set out to destroy everything once associated with tsarism. Most of imperial treasures were melted down and recycled at the mint. But FabergÈís creations were speared from destruction. The newly formed Soviet Union needed hard cash to rebuild the country that had been devastated by years of war. In the beginning of 1928 the Soviet Union stretched out to the West trying to find buyers for all these imperial treasures. American and European art dealers jumped at the chance to purchase FabergÈ. In 1930 and 1933, fourteen of the Imperial Easter Eggs were officially sold by Antikvariat, the new government bureau established in 1921 to sell State treasures to the West. |
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While revolution and communism destroyed the Tsar of Russia and three hundred years of monarchic reign, FabergÈís delicate and fragile creations survived. Revolution changed Russia that FabergÈ had known and loved. Communists set out to destroy everything once associated with tsarism. Most of imperial treasures were melted down and recycled at the mint. But FabergÈís creations were speared from destruction. The newly formed Soviet Union needed hard cash to rebuild the country that had been devastated by years of war. In the beginning of 1928 the Soviet Union stretched out to the West trying to find buyers for all these imperial treasures. American and European art dealers jumped at the chance to purchase FabergÈ. In 1930 and 1933, fourteen of the Imperial Easter Eggs were officially sold by Antikvariat, the new government bureau established in 1921 to sell State treasures to the West. |
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In the beginning of 1928 the Soviet Union stretched out to the West trying to find buyers for all these imperial treasures. American and European art dealers jumped at the chance to purchase FabergÈ. In 1930 and 1933, fourteen of the Imperial Easter Eggs were officially sold by Antikvariat, the new government bureau established in 1921 to sell State treasures to the West. | ||||
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