3 world's most famous evil diamond

According to the statistics, there will only be one colored diamond per 100,000 diamonds produced at a probability of only one in 100,000. The pink, green, golden and other diamonds shine unusual glorious and become more precious precious, regardless of age regardless of national boundaries, pouring all the people. The strange "hope" diamond expert Harvey Harris wrote in 1990 that since human beings have learned to value sparseness, so many have never seen so many high prices for such small items on. Too large Szeto, this small item, starry night sky, deeply captured the hearts of thousands of people seeking the ultimate beauty. Today, tell you about the famous diamonds that have left an indelible mark in history. Strange "hope" There is a metaphysical view that those precious jewels diamonds, because of their worth Allure, always accompanied by death and conspiracy, is covered with blood ominous things, the French Tavemul found in southern India After a blue giant diamond was brought back to France, unknown things came one after another, and all the masters who owned it died unexpectedly incessantly. Their strange twists and turns experienced enough to write a novel. After the vicissitudes of the French Revolution, the blue diamond was stolen from France in 1792. Was re-cut once in the London jewelry market in 1830 to reproduce in 1911 and drifted to the United States, Washington Post's head of Macleans in the bag. Someone told Mrs. McEllan that "hope" was a diamond that would bring bad luck, and Mrs McEllan did not agree, often wearing the diamond to show the richness. Just a year after Blue Diamond's move to the McLaren family, their son died in a car accident, and Mr. McLennan and his daughter died one after another. Mrs McEllan also died in loneliness in 1947. In 1958, the American jeweler Winston bought all the jewelry heritage of Mrs. Maclalan and became the new owner of Blue Diamond's "hope." Miracles happened, Winston one not only safe, jewelry business has become particularly good, and later developed into a world-renowned diamond brand "Harry Winston." Later, Mr. Winston donated "hope" diamonds to the country and is now hiding in the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, USA. Since then, "hope" diamonds stopped for hundreds of years at work. 300-year-old Wittelsbach sleeping 300-year-old Wittelsbach In 2009, the "Diamond King" billionaire diamond lawyer Laurence Graff with a record high price of 24.3 million US dollars a A precious blue diamond with 300 years of European royal history. The rare diamond of this market is the prestigious 17th-century Wittelsbach diamond weighing 35.56 carats, comparable in color and clarity to the famous "hope". Named diamonds have a law, that is, many times the master. Few people can always hold. In 1664, King Philip VI of Spain sent his daughter Margareta Teresa the daughter of the year 15 when she married Austrian Emperor Leopold I. In 1720, the diamond was passed to Maria Amalia, the Austrian princess who married Bavarian prince Charles Albert. Wittelsbach is the surname of the Bavarian prince Charles Albert family. When the country became a republic in 1931, the Wittelsbach diamonds were auctioned along with other jewelry on the Bavarian crown. Mysterious "Dresden" was born in the mysterious "Dresden" Around 1743, Augusta spent 60,000 Thira (about 9,000 pounds) to buy a pear weighing 41 karats Natural green diamond, pure diamond texture, according to legend is produced in the famous diamond production in India's Golconda. Came to Europe in the 1820s, in the 18th century German court walk in the royal room. At that time, the princess of Dresden, Germany, had the ultimate love of the green diamond, just to showcase that the diamond was even decorated in the palace with several green exhibition halls. The huge green diamond was named after "Dresden Green Diamond" because it was stored in the German Dresden treasure house. After the Second World War, "Dresden" green diamond was transported to Moscow and passed After a period of displaced life was returned in 1958. The "Dresden" green diamond is the epitome of green diamonds and is often considered a sister piece of "hope" diamonds whose value is hard to measure. Although not the largest diamond, its 41-carat weight is the largest green diamond nobody can surpass in today's world because of its extremely rare green color.