Thursday, October 8, 2015

'THE QUEEN MARIA-JOSE' RUBY RING OF 8.48 CARATS TO BE AUCTIONED BY SOTHEBY'S ON 11/11/15 IN GENEVA FOR AROUND RM 40 MILLION SO GET YOUR CREDIT CARD READY! THIS RUBY RING IS PERFECT IF YOU ARE GETTING MARRIED OR SIMPLY TO GIVE TO YOUR DARLING AND IF YOU DON'T HAVE ONE, TO WEAR YOURSELF! THE LAST QUEEN OF ITALY WORE IT ALMOST DAILY

KEE@FSWMAG.COM
  
Sotheby’s To Auction ‘THE QUEEN MARIA-JOSÉ RUBY RING’ FEATURING AN EXCEPTIONAL BURMESE RUBY  WEIGHING 8.48 CARATS
   
Formerly in the Personal Collection of the Last Queen of Italy A Gift on the Occasion of her Wedding to Crown Prince Umberto  

MAGNIFICENT JEWELS & NOBLE JEWELS  Sotheby’s Geneva - 11 November 2015   
Geneva

This November, Sotheby’s Geneva is thrilled to offer “The Queen Maria- José Ruby Ring”, an exceptional ruby and diamond ring formerly part of the personal collection of the last Queen of Italy, Maria-José (1906-2001). 

The superb jewel has impeccable provenance: it was a gift from Italian bibliophile Tammaro de Marinis on the occasion of Maria-José’s wedding to Crown Prince Umberto in 1930.   

The stunning ring is set with an exquisite Burmese ruby weighing 8.48 carats, and boasting the most sought-after hue for rubies: “pigeon’s blood”. 

This sensational piece will be offered during Sotheby’s auction of Magnificent Jewels and Noble Jewels on 11 November 2015, with a pre-sale estimate of $6-9 million (CHF 5.75 – 8.6 million).  
    
David Bennett, Worldwide Chairman of Sotheby’s International Jewellery Division, commented: “The “Queen Maria-José Ruby Ring” is a magnificent jewel of exceptional quality with truly outstanding royal provenance. 

"Its “pigeon’s blood” colour is sumptuous - the perfect jewel for a queen - and the jewel’s history, coming from the jewellery collection of Queen Maria-José, of course adds enormously to its romantic appeal.”    

THE QUEEN MARIA-JOSÉ RUBY RING  
The Swiss Gemmological Institute (SSEF) has certified this important 8.48-carat ruby is of Burmese origin with no evidence of heat treatment. 

The institute’s specialists commented: “The rarity of this ring lies not only in the beauty, quality and Burmese origin of the ruby, but also its workmanship and well-documented historic provenance… This makes the ‘Queen Maria-José Ruby Ring’ a very exceptional treasure.” 

OUTSTANDING HISTORICAL PROVENANCE  
Princess Maria-José of Belgium was known and admired for her elegance and beauty. She shared a passion for jewellery with her future husband, Umberto II of Italy (1904-1983). 

On the occasion of their wedding in Rome on the 8th of January 1930, Maria-José received this sensational ruby ring as a gift from her friend, the celebrated scholar and bibliophile Tammaro de Marinis (1878-1969).   

In its report on the ruby ring, the Gemmological Institute of America (GIA) states: “A man of great taste, Tammaro chose the perfect ring for this brilliant princess, married to the heir to the throne of Italy, for the royal character of the exquisite “pigeon blood” ruby within its diamond frame… Any Burmese ruby in excess of 5 carats is considered very rare even today; thus, in the nineteenth century, one such as this – being over 8 carats and such a fine colour – would have been held as truly exceptional.” 
  
EXCEPTIONAL RUBIES: MULTIPLE RECORDS AT SOTHEBY’S GENEVA   
Within the last 12 months, Sotheby’s Geneva has been thrilled to break the world auction record for a ruby on two occasions.   

In May 2015, Sotheby’s Geneva once again established a new world record for a ruby, with the sale of the “Sunrise Ruby”, an exquisite 25.59-carat Burmese ruby, for CHF 28.3 million ($30.3m) – more than three times the previous record (see below). 

This result was also a new record for a ruby per carat at $1,185,451 per carat: making the gem the first coloured stone (non-diamond) to sell for more than $1 million per carat.   

The previous record had been set in November 2014, when Sotheby’s sold the “Graff Ruby”, a “Gem among Gems”, for CHF 8.3 million ($8.6 million), setting at the time a world auction record for a ruby, and a record price per carat for a ruby, at $997,727 per carat.  

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Sotheby’s has been uniting collectors with world-class works of art since 1744.  Sotheby’s became the first international auction house when it expanded from London to New York (1955), the first to conduct sales in Hong Kong (1973), Geneva (1980), India (1992) and France (2001), and the first international fine art auction house in China (2012). 

Today, Sotheby’s presents auctions in 9 different salesrooms, including New York, London, Hong Kong, Paris, and Geneva and Sotheby’s BidNow program allows visitors to view all auctions live online and place bids in real-time from anywhere in the world. Sotheby’s offers collectors the resources of Sotheby’s Financial Services, the world’s only full-service art financing company, as well as private sale opportunities in more than 70 categories, including S|2, the gallery arm of Sotheby's Contemporary Art department, as well as Sotheby’s Diamonds and Sotheby’s Wine. 

Sotheby’s has a global network of 90 offices in 40 countries and is the oldest company listed on the New York Stock Exchange (BID).   

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