Between 1885 and 1916, Carl Faberge made fifty fabulous jewelled eggs - Easter presents from Russia's last two emperors to their wives.They have become the most famous surviving symbols of the Romanov Empire: supreme examples of the jeweller's art, but, to some,the vulgar playthings of a decadent court on the brink of revolution. Everyone of these masterpieces is a slice of history, with each telling its own remarkable story.
Theo Woodall first looked at his birth certificate in 1969, when he was forty-seven years old. An elderly aunt had suggested he do so. 'You should have been told earlier,' she added. The document told Theo why. His 'parents', Philip and Linda Woodall,were really his aunt and uncle. Linda's sister, Theo's glamorous Aunt Dorise (she had added the final e some years earlier), was his true mother. That's the kind of news that would shake any man, but what really struck him was the name of his fatheron the birth certificate, despite Theo's illegitimacy - Nicholas Faberge. Theo's paternal grandfather had been the world's most famous jeweller, supplier to the Romanovs and half the nobility of Europe, Carl Gustavovitch Faberge.
Romanov family tree
Faberge family tree
Introduction
1. Christ is risen!
2. As precious as an egg on Christ's own day
3 'A continuation of file long funeral ceremonies
4. Utterly different in character, habits and outlook
5. The warm and brilliant shop of Carl Faberge
6. The ancestor who appeals to me least of all额
7. We shall have to show dirty nappies
8. A good, religious, simple-minded Russian
9. The little one will not die
10. An unparalleled genius
11. Faberge has just brought your delightful egg
12. Everything seems sad
13. Guard it well. It is the last
14. This is life no more
15. You will have all of it when I am gone
16. Determining their fate irrevocably in a few moments
17. Pick out gold, silver and platinum from the articles of minimal museum value
18. I know that May was passionately fond of fine jewellery
19. Department stores - try the department stores
20. Old civilisations put to the sword
21. Turn of the century trinkets
22. When you viewed his Faberg6 collection, you were doing him a favour
23. He who dies with the most toys wins
24. Handle it and then question it; that thing is as right as rain
25. You can put all your eggs in one basket
Afterword
Appendix - Full listing of the Imperial eggs
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements