Eastern Eye (UK)

Auction reflects Mountbatte­n family’s close links with India

JEWELLERY, PAINTINGS AND OBJETS D’ART AMONG HEIRLOOMS IN SOTHEBY’S SALE

- By AMIT ROY

FAMILY treasures belonging to Patricia Mountbatte­n, the elder daughter of Lord Louis Mountbatte­n, the last viceroy of India, are to be auctioned by Sotheby’s on March 24.

More than 350 lots “spanning jewellery, furniture, paintings, sculpture, books, silver, ceramics & objets d’art” reflect the Mountbatte­n family’s close links with India.

The heirlooms include an Indian diamond bracelet once owned by Queen Victoria; bejewelled elephants from Jaipur, gifted by Lord Mountbatte­n to his wife, Edwina, on their wedding anniversar­y; and an Indian inlaid miniature bureau made by Thomas Chippendal­e, which is said to be “a celebratio­n of the link between England and India”. Originally made for £4, its price estimate is £40,000-£60,000.

There is also the Imperial Order of the Crown of India, with the decoration mounted with diamonds, pearls and turquoises (est £15,000-20,000).

“This rare Anglo-Indian order, still in its original case, was an award that could only be bestowed by the Monarch to a female recipient,” according to the auction house.

“The diamond, pearl and turquoise-set decoration would have been worn at state occasions by Doreen, Lady Brabourne, Patricia’s mother-in-law. The only person who still wears this order today, and the last to hold it, is Her Majesty the Queen.”

Patricia was born in London on February 14, 1924. She died at Newhouse, her home in Mersham, near Ashford, Kent, on June 13, 2017.

Her mother, Edwina, who accompanie­d Lord Mountbatte­n to India in 1947 during the transfer of power, died in 1960. She was buried at sea in a ceremony attended by the Indian Navy frigate INS Trishul, sent by then Indian prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who had a wreath cast into the waters in her memory.

Patrica also had close links with India through her film producer husband, John Brabourne, the seventh Baron Brabourne, who died in 2005. His credits include the David Lean-directed A Passage to India (1964) and the Agatha Christie adaptation­s, Murder on the Orient Express (1974) and Death on the Nile (1978). As a captain in the armed forces, John had once worked for Patricia’s father in India.

John’s father, Michael Herbert

Rudolf

Knatchbull, the fifth Baron Brabourne, was governor of Bombay when he laid the foundation stone at Brabourne Stadium in 1936. In 1938, he served for four months as India’s youngest viceroy. He was also governor of Bengal and, after his death in 1939, was buried at St John’s Churchyard in Calcutta (now Kolkata). After his elder son, Norton, died, the title passed to his younger son, John.

UNDER THE HAMMER: (Clockwise from above) A pair of jewelled gold and enamel elephants, Jaipur, 1946; The Imperial Order of the Crown of India; a portrait of Lady Patricia when a girl by Raymond Kanelba; and a portrait of Michael Knatchbull, fifth Baron Brabourne (1895-1939) by Sir Oswald Birley

When Patricia and John married in 1946, the newlyweds spent several months in India as part of their honeymoon. Princess Elizabeth (who would later become Queen Elizabeth II) was been a bridesmaid at their wedding, which was attended by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth.

When her father was assassinat­ed by the IRA in 1979, his title passed exceptiona­lly to Patricia, who became Lady Mountbatte­n.

According to Sotheby’s, many items in the auction – estimates vary from £80 to £100,000 – “were inherited from her ancestors, and share connection­s with India, a place that was very special to the family”.

A statement from the Mountbatte­n family said: “Our overriding desire when organising our mother’s affairs is to honour her wishes and celebrate the memory of both our mother and our father. They had discussed these arrangemen­ts with us, and we are simply putting their plans into effect. We are, of course, keeping many things and important among these are objects which are of sentimenta­l value and much loved.”

Harry Dalmeny, Sotheby’s chairman, UK & Ireland, said: “Lady Mountbatte­n’s residence, Newhouse, was a private place for entertaini­ng only the closest of family and friends. Through her belongings... collectors have the chance to see the story of the 20th century unfold and acquire evocative vestiges of a glittering way of life.”

Sotheby’s said of Lord Mountbatte­n’s role in India: “Patricia’s father Louis had been appointed Britain’s last viceroy of India, with a mandate to oversee the British withdrawal from the country, and the family grew close to the great leaders, Mahatma Gandhi and prime minister Jawaharlal Nehru.”

About the bejewelled elephants, it said: “Inscribed in Lord Mountbatte­n’s handwritin­g; ‘Edwina from Dickie’ and ‘18 July 1946’, these gold enamel elephants made in Jaipur were a gift from Lord Mountbatte­n to his wife Edwina commemorat­ing their 24th wedding anniversar­y.

“The loving gift is an insight into their marriage – one that had brought together two of the most glamorous and adventurou­s figures of the period – and testament to the importance of India to both of them. 1946 was the year Lord Mountbatte­n was made a viscount and this gift anticipate­s the news of his appointmen­t as viceroy the following year.”

Also on offer is a handbag which had once belonged to Edwina – “an unusual and amusing gem-set gold mesh purse by Lacloche Frères, Paris, circa 1905 (est. £2,000-3,000)”.

It is pointed out: “This extraordin­ary handbag comes in the form of a large pig, its spine, tail and trotters set with diamonds. The Mountbatte­n family loved animals and had a veritable menagerie of pets wherever they lived, from a horse gifted to Edwina and Louis by the Maharajah of Jaipur on the occasion of their wedding, to a lion cub that Edwina brought home from South Africa when Patricia was 13.”

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 ??  ?? CELEBRATIN­G MEMORIES: (Above left) Patricia Mountbatte­n and John Brabourne on their wedding day; and their friends and family, including the Queen (right) who was a bridesmaid in the ceremony
(above right)
the couple with
CELEBRATIN­G MEMORIES: (Above left) Patricia Mountbatte­n and John Brabourne on their wedding day; and their friends and family, including the Queen (right) who was a bridesmaid in the ceremony (above right) the couple with

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