Daily Mail

The £30m egg hunt

Newly identified, experts believe this is a fabled Faberge egg – and that its unsuspecti­ng buyer in Britain doesn’t know its true worth. So... is it sitting on YOUR mantelpiec­e?

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

THE mystery of the missing Imperial Faberge eggs has confounded art aficionado­s for decades.

But thanks to a little googling over a glass of wine, a British mum has come across the biggest ever clue in the hunt for one of the lost £30million treasures.

Until now, there was only a basic descriptio­n and grainy image of the Necessaire from Imperial Russia. Experts believe it is in Britain but they think the owner is unlikely to realise the fortune they are sitting on – because there has never been a clear picture.

Kellie Bond’s discovery during a basic internet search has changed all that. Experts hope this photograph will prompt someone who might have the bejewelled masterpiec­e on their mantelpiec­e to come forward.

Mrs Bond, 37, said: ‘I felt like a real-life Indiana Jones when I found the photo. How exciting would it be for someone to recognise this egg and realise they have won a multimilli­on-pound treasure hunt.’

Richly set with diamonds, rubies and a sapphire, the Necessaire is one of only two Imperial Faberge eggs known to have survived the Russian Revolution, but whose whereabout­s are unknown. Experts have been on its trail for years. It is one of 50 glittering jewelled Easter eggs painstakin­gly fashioned by imperial goldsmith Peter Carl Faberge from 1885 to 1917 for Russian Tsar Alexander III – as gifts for his wife, Empress Maria Feodorovna – and his son Tsar Nicholas II. But they became symbols of the wealth, power, corruption and greed that led to the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 and the assassinat­ion of the Romanov royal family a year later.

Today, 43 are held in museums and private collection­s around the world – the Queen has three of them – but the other seven are still missing, and just two are known to have survived the revolution.

As German forces advanced on St Petersburg in 1917, the Necessaire was among treasures evacuated to Moscow and placed in the Kremlin armoury. It was later sold by Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin as part of his ‘treasures into tractors’ programme. The Necessaire was acquired by London dealer Wartski of Mayfair. But the firm did not know the egg was an Imperial Faberge. Its staff took a grainy photo of the item and listed it as: ‘A fine gold egg, richly set with diabeen monds, cabochon rubies, emeralds, a large coloured diamond at top and a cabochon sapphire at point.’

In 1952, the dealer sold the ornament for £1,250 (the equivalent of £36,000 today) to a man described in the firm’s sales ledger only as ‘Stranger’. It has not been heard of since, and until now there has no clear photo for anyone to recognise if they had it.

Kieran McCarthy, a Wartski director, said: ‘In 1952, there was no means of knowing it was an Imperial Egg. It was the Cold War and there was no informatio­n coming from behind the Iron Curtain. It was not until Glasnost that the Russians started to release informatio­n about these treasures. Now we know we had the Necessaire egg – but sold it.

‘We don’t know where it went, and all the people who were here at the time are no longer alive. But in 1952 the vast majority of our customers were British – so it is highly likely the egg is still in a British home.’

The photo is believed to have been snapped some time in the 1920s, 1930s or 1940s when the egg was exhibited alongside another magnificen­t Russian treasure, the Golden Chalice commission­ed by Catherine The Great in 1791. Both items are known to have been together at Wartski in London. Mrs Bond, who lives in Gloucester with husband Neil and their two sons aged eight and ten, said: ‘I have been fascinated with Faberge ever since helping my sister research a presentati­on on the Romanovs. I am entranced by the craftsmans­hip of the eggs.

‘It was a couple of months ago, the kids were asleep and I poured a glass of wine and sat down at my computer. I simply googled “Russian Revolution” and started scrolling through the images, which I had seen countless times before. Then I saw this one I had never seen before. I was looking at it thinking, the clasp, the goldwork – that’s the Necessaire egg!

‘I was running round the house jumping up and down with excitement. My husband and sons thought I was mad.’

The photo was on the picture sharing site Pinterest. The person who put it there had copied it three years earlier from an eBay page – that no longer exists – selling ‘1920s Russian press clippings’. Mrs Bond sent the photo to Mr McCarthy, after reading of his Faberge expertise, having previously discovered a lost Imperial Egg in 2014 in the hands of an American scrap-metal dealer who had been planning to melt it down.

Mr McCarthy said finding the egg now would be ‘a prize akin to discoverin­g an original Leonardo da Vinci painting’.

‘Like finding a da Vinci painting’

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 ??  ?? ‘Real-life Indiana Jones’: Mother Kellie Bond with the picture of the missing Necessaire Faberge egg that she found on the internet
‘Real-life Indiana Jones’: Mother Kellie Bond with the picture of the missing Necessaire Faberge egg that she found on the internet

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