Green Vault Plundered by Thieves Was Treasure Hoard All Princes Envied
Late at night in the spring of 1698, Peter the Great arrived in Dresden, capital of the state of Saxony. Furious over the gawking by the general public (he was 6’8”) he threatened to leave. Despite his anger and despite the time of the night (past midnight) Peter wanted to visit a museum, and a set of rooms within that museum in particular. Prince Fürstenberg, who was his host while Elector August was away, agreed.
The rooms Peter was so determined to see were known as the Green Vault, so named because they were painted Saxon green. Here, Robert Massie notes in his epic biography Peter the Great: His Life and World, “the rulers of Saxony kept a collection of jewels and precious objects which were among the richest in Europe. Peter was absorbed by both collections and remained, examining one instrument or object after another, until dawn.”
This week, on Monday, the world woke up to the shocking news that a billion dollars worth of those jewels had been stolen in a brazen heist.
Any theft at a major museum is always distressing. But I was just in Dresden a couple months ago and visited the Green Vault, and like many other visitors I was surprised at how intense the security was. (Although, a lot of energy seemed to be devoted specifically to not allowing photography.) Visitors also go in one or two at a time through an airlock, which then reopens to let you through. This is repeated on the way out. Staffers are in every one of the small chambers, palpably eager to catch somebody doing something wrong. Visits have a timed entry, and exit. Reports indicate, however, the thieves broke in during off hours.
As a tourist, the security seemed like a small price to pay. For while the collection is somewhat different from when Peter the Great visited more than 300 years ago, it is still mesmerizing. Plus, it was heaven for anybody frustrated that the decorative arts and the geniuses behind those types of objects have, with the exception of somebody like Louis Comfort Tiffany, been given short shrift in favor of the other visual arts like painting, sculpture, and architecture. And while each room has its wonders, the royal jewels of Saxony (which included the thankfully out-on-loan largest green diamond in the world) are utterly gobsmacking. Three of the diamond sets known as garnitures (essentially think of them as head-to-toe diamond decorations for a royal; two consisted of 37 diamonds, one smaller one of other gems and pearls) were stolen. The jewelry room also holds a gift from Peter the Great himself, a statue of a moor decorated with precious stones (reportedly untouched).
The world’s biggest green diamond, the “Dresden Green Diamond.”
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The world’s biggest green diamond, the “Dresden Green Diamond.”
The rooms today are a complete reconstruction, but their origins date back to at least 1572 when the Dresden Kunstkammer, or cabinet of curiosities, is first noted in writing. At that time (and when Peter visited) there were three rooms on an upper floor for the treasure collection—Silver, Jewelry, and a Hall of Preciosities. The Kunstkammer was world-renowned for its collection of natural curiosities, clocks, armor, and rare books. And the treasury was world-renowned for its astounding splendor. Both were representative of this German city’s reputation, which was referred to as Florence on the Elbe. People of noble rank or with the “right credentials” could visit it. Augustus the Strong, who was Elector of Saxony (1694-1633) and eventually the King of Poland (1697-1706, 1709-1733), renovated and expanded it, opening it to the public and thus making it what some consider the first museum. In an attempt to create a synthesis of the arts known as Gesamtkunstwerk, the rooms built to display the objects left behind the Saxon green and instead became treasures in their own right intended to awe the visitor.
The White Silver Room (Weißsilberzimmer), one of the rooms in the historic Green Vault (Gruenes Gewoelbe) at the Royal Palace in Dresden, eastern Germany.
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