Fabergé egg


Memory of Azov

Fabergé egg (Russian: Яйца ФабержеYaĭtsa Faberzhe) is any one of the thousands of jeweled eggs made by the House of Fabergé from 1885 to 1917. Most were miniature eggs that were popular gifts at Eastertide. They were worn on a neck chain either singly or in groups.
The most famous eggs produced by the House were the larger ones made for Alexander III and Nicholas II of Russia; these are often referred to as the 'Imperial' Fabergé eggs. Of the 50 made, 42 have survived. A further two eggs, the Constellation and Karelian Birch eggs, were planned for 1918 but not delivered, as Nicholas II and his family were assassinated that year, and Nicholas had abdicated the crown the year before.
Seven large eggs were made for the Kelch family of Moscow.
The Moscow Kremlin egg, 1906.
The eggs are made of precious metals or hard stones decorated with combinations of enamel and gem stones. The Fabergé egg has become a symbol of luxury, and the eggs are regarded as masterpieces of the jeweler's art.
'Fabergé egg' typically refers to products made by the company before the 1917 Revolution, but use of the Fabergé name has occasionally been disputed, and the trademark has been sold several times since the Fabergé family left Russia after 1917 (see House of Fabergé), so several companies have subsequently retailed egg-related merchandise using the Fabergé name. The trademark is currently owned by Fabergé Limited, which also makes egg-themed jewellery.

History

The first Fabergé egg was crafted for Tsar Alexander III, who decided to give his wife, the Empress Maria Fedorovna, an Easter Egg in 1885, possibly to celebrate the 20th anniversary of their betrothal. It is believed that the Tsar’s inspiration for the piece was an egg owned by the Empress’s aunt, Princess Wilhelmine Marie of Denmark, which had captivated Maria’s imagination in her childhood. Known as the Hen Egg, it is crafted from gold. Its opaque white enameled ‘shell’ opens to reveal its first surprise, a matte yellow gold yolk. This in turn opens to reveal a multi-coloured gold hen that also opens. It contains a minute diamond replica of the Imperial Crown from which a small ruby pendant was suspended. Unfortunately, these last two surprises have been lost.
Empress Maria was so delighted by this gift that Alexander appointed Fabergé a ‘goldsmith by special appointment to the Imperial Crown’. He commissioned another egg the following year. After that,Peter Carl Fabergé, who headed the House, was apparently given complete freedom for future Imperial Easter Eggs, as from this date their designs become more elaborate. According to the Fabergé family tradition, not even the Tsar knew what form they would take: the only requirement was that each one should contain a surprise. Following the death of Alexander III on November 1, 1894, his son presented a Fabergé egg to both his wife, the Empress Alexandra Fedorovna, and to his mother, the Dowager Empress Maria Fedorovna.
Bouquet of Lilies Clock egg.
No eggs were made for 1904 and 1905 because of the Russo-Japanese War. Once an initial design had been approved by Peter Carl Fabergé, the work was carried out by an entire team of craftsmen, among them Michael Perkhin, Henrik Wigström and Erik August Kollin.
The Imperial eggs enjoyed great fame, and Fabergé made some other large eggs for a few select private clients, such as the Duchess of Marlborough, the Nobels, the Rothschilds and the Yusupovs. A series of seven eggs was made for the industrialist Alexander Kelch.
In the 1983 James Bond movie Octopussy, a Faberge egg is the object of a bidding war between James Bond and Kamal Khan. Bond replaces the real egg with a dummy egg that contains a recording device.

List of Fabergé Tsar Imperial Easter eggs

Below there is given a chronology of the eggs made for the imperal family, though there has been dispute about the dates of some eggs. An alternative chronology dates the Blue Serpent Clock Egg as made in 1895, and states that the Twelve Monograms egg is in fact the supposedly lost Alexander III Portraits egg, made in 1896. Thus, according to this chronology, the 1887 "Gold egg with clock" would be in fact lost.
  • 1885 Hen
  • 1886 Hen with Sapphire Pendant
  • 1887 Blue Serpent Clock
  • 1888 Cherub with Chariot
  • 1889 Nécessaire
  • 1890 Danish Palaces
  • 1891 Memory of Azov
  • 1892 Diamond Trellis
  • 1893 Caucasus
  • 1894 Renaissance
  • 1895 Rosebud
  • 1895 Twelve Monograms
  • 1896 Revolving Miniatures
  • 1896 Alexander III Portraits
  • 1897 Coronation
  • 1897 Mauve
  • 1898 Lilies-of-the-Valley
  • 1898 Pelican
  • 1899 Bouquet of Lilies Clock
  • 1899 Pansy
  • 1900 Trans-Siberian Railway
  • 1900 Cockerel
  • 1901 Basket of Wild Flowers
  • 1901 Gatchina Palace
  • 1902 Clover Leaf
  • 1902 Empire Nephrite
  • 1903 Peter the Great
  • 1903 Royal Danish
  • 1904 No eggs made
  • 1905 No eggs made
  • 1906 Moscow Kremlin
  • 1906 Swan
  • 1907 Rose Trellis
  • 1907 Cradle with Garlands
  • 1908 Alexander Palace
  • 1908 Peacock
  • 1909 Standart Yacht
  • 1909 Alexander III Commemorative
  • 1910 Colonnade
  • 1910 Alexander III Equestrian
  • 1911 Fifteenth Anniversary
  • 1911 Bay Tree
  • 1912 Czarevich
  • 1912 Napoleonic
  • 1913 Romanov Tercentenary
  • 1913 Winter
  • 1914 Mosaic
  • 1914 Grisaille
  • 1915 Red Cross with Triptych
  • 1915 Red Cross with Imperial Portraits
  • 1916 Steel Military
  • 1916 Order of St. George
  • 1917 Karelian Birch
  • 1917 Constellation (unfinished)