Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - What the Stones Say: APPENDIX K

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Charles Spurgeon Collection: Spurgeon - C.H. - What the Stones Say: APPENDIX K



TOPIC: Spurgeon - C.H. - What the Stones Say (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: APPENDIX K

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APPENDIX K

THE ‘‘GREAT SANCY”

ACCORDING to Mr. Streeter, “this is the very Sphinx of diamonds “;for its

history “seems to be wrapped up in a dense cloud of mystery.” By some

writers this gem, which weighs 53 1/2 carats, has been confounded with

one of only 34 carats

in the Prussian Royal Treasury, known as the “Little Sancy.” The name

originated from the circumstance of the gem having been brought from the

East by Nicholas Harlai, Seigneur de Sancy, about the year I570. “Harlai

was attached to the Courts of Henry III and Henry IV, having been

ambassador for the former in Turkey, for the latter in England during the

reign of Elizabeth.” Of the romantic story of the loss of the diamond

referred to in the lecture we subjoin the version given in “Great

Diamonds”: —

“Henry IV of Navarre, being desirous of strengthening his army by a body

of Swiss recruits, is reported to have borrowed the diamond of Nicholas,

now superintendent of finance, intending to raise money on its security.

But the messenger charged with the. responsibility of conveying the gem

either to the king from Harlai, or from the king to the Swiss (for the story

is here somewhat confused), disappeared on the way. A long interval

elapsed before it became known that he had been waylaid and assassinated.

Full of confidence in the loyalty and inventive faculty of his servant, Harlai

proceeded to the forest where the murder had been committed. After a

long search the body was found, disinterred, and opened. In the stomach

was found the diamond, which, as suspected by his master, the faithful

valet had swallowed to prevent its falling into the hands of the thieves.”

Somewhere between 1590 and 1600 Harlai sold it to the British Crown.

Then there is good reason to believe that the Queen Dowager Henrietta

Maria, when in exile, sent the “Sancy,” with other valuables, to Somerset,

Earl of Worcester, “in return for the sacrifices he had made in the cause of

the house of Stewart.” It passed into the hands of James II, who sold it to

Louis XIV for f25,000. Like the “Regent”, it disappeared in the French

60

Revolution. About the year 1830 it was the property of a French merchant,

and since then of the Russian Prince Demidoff, Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy,

and the Maharajah of Puttiala, who wore it in his turban at a Grand Durbar

when the Prince of Wales visited India. Mr. Streeter finishes up the

interesting story of the “Sancy’s” vicissitudes by stating that owing to the

death of the Maharajah the gem is once more on sale.