THE CORONATION EGG: A FABERGÉ IMPERIAL EASTER EGG PRESENTED
BY EMPEROR NICHOLAS II TO HIS WIFE, EMPRESS ALEXANDRA FEODOROVNA,
AT EASTER 1897,WORKMASTER MICHAEL PERCHIN, ST. PETERSBURG
Enameled
translucent lime yellow over a guilloché sunburst
ground and applied with a green gold trellis of laurel leaf
pinned at the top of the egg with a circle of diamonds and with
black enamel Imperial eagles at the intersections, the shields
of the eagles set with diamonds and the ribbons enameled blue,
the top of the egg with the Imperial monogram of the Empress
Alexandra Feodorovna set with diamonds and rubies on a white
enamel ground beneath a table diamond, the bottom of the egg
with a calyx of finely engraved leaves centered by the blackenameled
date 1897 on a white enamel ground below a table diamond within
a diamond-set circular frame. The egg opens to reveal a velvet-lined
compartment containing a gold, platinum, enamel and jeweled
miniature coach, a replica of Catherine the Great's coach of
1793 which was employed in the coronation procession of Nicholas
and Alexandra, executed in minute detail, enameled translucent
strawberry red and applied with a diamond-set gold trellis,
the roof mounted with gold Imperial eagles at the corners and
sides and with a diamond-set Imperial crown at the center, the
doors mounted with diamond-set Imperial eagles and with rock
crystal windows engraved with drapery, the interior with tiny
steps which fold down when the doors are opened, and with a
translucent strawberry red enameled bench and cushions before
a light blue enameled drapery with gold trim, the ceiling painted
with gold vine and with a light blue enamel roundel within a
gold wreath, a gold hook at the center, all components of the
carriage finely articulated, the compartment itself suspended
from gold springs, the gold wheels with platinum tires, the
inner edge of the top of the egg marked with Cyrillic initials
of workmaster and pre-1899 assay mark of 56 standard for 14
karat gold, the underside of the coach also marked with Cyrillic
initials of workmaster, pre-1899 assay mark of 56 standard for
14 karat gold and Fabergé in Cyrillic; the name of Wigström
scratched on the inner surface of the shell. The egg
is listed on Fabergé's invoice as follows : 1
April 18.
Yellow enamel egg and coach ----------------------------5500r.
Emerald pendant egg with diamonds ------------------1500r.
Glass case and jade stand ---------------------------------150r.
St. Petersburg, May 17, 1897
The 1897 Coronation Egg is the most celebrated and best known
of all of Fabergé's creations, the most exhibited and
most published work of art by the Russian master. 2
As its name denotes, it commemorates the festivities surrounding
the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II and Alexandra Feodorovna,
which began with their entry into Moscow on May 9, 1896. Nicholas
noted in his diary: 9 May. The first hard day for us
the day of our entrance into Moscow. By 12 an entire gang
of princes had gathered, with whom we sat down to lunch. At
2.30 the procession began to move. I was riding on Norma,
Mama was sitting in the first gold carriage and Alix in the
second, also alone. 3 At
the head of the four-mile-long cortège, from the Petrovsky
Palace outside the gates of Moscow to the Nicholsky Gate of
the Kremlin, rode squadrons of the Imperial Guard, followed
by the Cossacks of the Guard, Moscow's nobility, then, on
foot, the Court orchestra, the Imperial Hunt and court footmen.
Nicholas rode on his white steed, simply dressed in a white
army tunic, reigns in his left hand, right hand raised to
his visor in salute. Behind Nicholas rode the Russian Grand
Dukes and European nobility. Next came the widowed Dowager
Empress Maria Feodorovna in the massive carriage of Catherine
the Great Russian Court Protocol gave her precedence over
the new Empress, a situation which was later to cause considerable
friction between the two (the Dowager made good use of her
right to wear the Russian Crown Jewels). Last came the young
Empress dressed in dazzling white in a gilded coach drawn
by eight white horses. According to the perhaps biased Princess
Radziwil, the cortège was not a great success:
When he made his entrance into Moscow, the golden carriages,
magnificence, escort of chamberlains in gold-embroidered costumes,
and soldiers in parade uniforms were the same as at his father's
coronation. But one could sense no genuine warmth in the tribute
of the crowd, no enthusiasms other than that always found
on such an occasion. Yes, the only time that the hurrahs of
the masses seemed to come from the heart was when the Dowager
Empress' carriage appeared, while her daughter in law was
met with deathly silence. 4
On May 14, the Coronation took place in the Dormition, or
Uspensky, Cathedral, a ceremony lasting four hours. Nicholas
was seated on the throne of Tsar Mikhail Feodorovich inset
with 870 diamonds, rubies and pearls. Alexandra Feodorovna
sat on Ivan the Great's Ivory Throne. Nicholas wore the uniform
of the Preobrazhensky Guard, a heavy gold-thread mantle embroidered
with black double-headed eagles and the nine-pound diamond
crown of Catherine the Great, made by Jérémie
Pauzie in 1762 (now in Diamond Fund of the Russian Federation,
Moscow). Alexandra wore a silver-white court dress with a
train carried by 12 attendants, a single strand of pink pearls
and the small diamond crown (now in the collection of the
Hillwood Museum, Washington, D.C.). Nicholas pondered the
day's events in his diary: 14 May, 1896. A great day,
a triumphant day, but for Alix, Mama and me, difficult in
the moral sense. I shall not forget it my whole life long.
5
The Empress' brother, Grand Duke Ernst Ludwig of Hesse, who
attended the Coronation ceremonies, described the scene vividly:
The coronation in Moscow on May 26th 1896 was the most
opulent celebration which I ever witnessed. It bordered close
to the Oriental and lasted for 10 days. In Moscow the cathedral
was filled with paintings on gold ground of saints and all
priests were dressed in gold robes applied with embroidery
and precious stones. A very deep feeling of mysticism was
in all the ceremonies and you could feel the tradition of
Byzance. Through the holy oil the Emperor and the Empress
are now sanctified (geheiligt.) The Emperor takes the Holy
Communion as a priest in the inner sanctuary, then the Emperor
takes his crown off before the throne, he kneels down and
prays aloud the so wonderful prayer for his people. And following
the prayer for the Emperor he gets up and then is the only
person standing at that moment in the whole Russian Empire.
The procession to and from the cathedral leads over an elevated
passage, as high as the heads of the people around, so that
all, who take part in the procession, can be seen. The procession
is all uniforms, gold, silver, Emperor and Empress in their
gold and ermine under a gigantic canopy, all grand duchesses
(Fürstinnen) strewn with jewels. To look at all this
must have been like a fantastic dream because the
sun was shining an all. 6
The Coronation Egg contains a faithful replica of the coach
in which Alexandra rode. The egg's shell, embellished with
a trellis of black double-headed eagles on yellow guilloché
enamel ground, is a reminder of the heavy cloaks of gold
thread in woven with Imperial eagles by the Moscow firm of
Sapozhnikov, that were worn by the Imperial couple at the
coronation ceremony in the Uspensky Cathedral, a scene perfectly
rendered in Laurits Tuxen's paintings.
Alexandra Feodorovna's carriage was a coupé coach
built in St. Petersburg by Johann K. Buckendahl in 1793. The
original, 512 cm long and 270 cm high, is made of oak, ash,
birch, lime, iron and steel and is embellished with copper,
brass, bronze, silver and gold, its interior is decorated
with velvet and silk, with beveled glass windows. It is suspended
on four C-shaped transverse springs and sits length- and cross-wise
on straps, has seats for the coachman and pages, rear steps
for the footmen and folding steps attached to the floor of
the carriage. The exterior is upholstered with dark red velvet,
applied with sequins, artificial diamonds, tassels and golden
embroidery of trelliswork, flowers and foliage. The coach
is surmounted by a copper-gilt crown set with pastes (originally
aquamarines). The coach was renovated in 1826, 1856, 1894
and 1896 and most recently in 1992-93 through a grant of the
Ford Motor Company for a Fabergé exhibition held at
the Winter Palace in 1993, when it was carried up the Ambassador's
Staircase in pieces and then reassembled to be shown alongside
the Fabergé miniature replica in St. George Hall.
7
In 1952 the goldsmith responsible for the Fabergé coach,
Georges Stein, was still alive. Kenneth Snowman interviewed
him and recorded Stein's remembrances in his 1953 publication.
8 Stein was aged twenty-three
at the time when Fabergé hired him away from the jeweler
Kortman, offering him a higher salary of five rubles a day
($2.50). His eyesight is said to have been so incredibly good
that he could detect a flaw in a diamond without a loupe.
The meticulous work on the coach, executed without any artificial
optic aid, took fifteen months at sixteen hours a day
a total of 7,200 hours with many a visit to
the Imperial Coach Museum. The cost to Fabergé of the
coach alone would, according to Stein, have been 2,250 rubles,
exactly half of what Fabergé charged the Tsar for the
egg. A pear-shaped emerald drop suspended in the coach's interior
cost an extra 1,500 rubles; the glass case in which the coach
was separately exhibited, an additional 150 roubles.
The Coronation Egg was displayed in the Empress' apartment
in the Winter Palace in a corner cabinet and is exactly described
in 1909 by N. Dementiev, Inspector General of the Imperial
Winter Palace, including its white velvet-lined interior which
was the nest for the model State carriage.... The egg
rests on a silver-gilt wire stand . 9
The surprise and its separate glass case were also minutely
described, including a yellow diamond pendant egg (briolette)
which hung in the carriage (and which apparently had
replaced the original emerald drop) . It is placed on
a rectangular jadeite pediment with a silver-gilt rim and
is contained in a rectangular glass case with silver-gilt
edging. Silver-gilt Imperial crowns are placed at each of
the four corners of the case. 10
The egg was confiscated by the Provisional Government in 1917, listed among the treasures removed from the Anichkov Palace, dispatched to the Kremlin and finally transferred to the Sovnarkom in 1922 for sale:
1 gold egg with diamonds and rose-cut diamonds, containing a gold carriage with a pear-shaped diamond. 11
The egg was sold by Antikvariat to dealer Emanuel Snowman
in 1927, sold by his London firm Wartski to Charles Parsons
in 1934, reacquired by Wartski in 1945 and sold, together
with the Lilies of the Valley Egg, to Malcolm Forbes for a
total of $2,160,00 in 1979.
NOTES:
1. Fabergé/Proler/Skurlov
1997.
2. The Coronation egg was, according to the exhaustive bibliography established by Lowes/McCanless 2001, pp. 53f., shown at over twenty-six exhibitions and mentioned in almost sixty books.
3. Quoted from Edvard Radzinsky,
The Last Tsar , 1992.
4. Count Paul Vassili (Catherine Radziwil), Bakom Förlaten till Ryska Hofvet , Stockholm, 1915, vol. 2, p. 52.
5. Nicholas' Diary, 14 May 1896, Russian State Archive, Fol. 601, op. 1, d. 236, pp. 9-10.
6. Manfred Knodt, Ernst Ludwig Grossherzog von Hessen und bei Rhein, Darmstadt 1997, pp. 152/3. Translated by the author.
7. Exhibition catalogue St.Petersburg/Paris/London, 1993/4, No. 369, pp. 436-437.
8. Snowman 1953, p. 87.
9. Nr. 198. Archive of the State Hermitage, stock I, inv. VIII G, file 7b, fol. 47 verso. Quoted from Fabergé/Proler/Skurlov 1997, pp. 132.
10 . Op. cit., Nr. 190. #b44041 Ibid. |