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    St. Andrew for Sultan


    JapanX

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    Another (for other example see http://gmic.co.uk/index.php/topic/55148-order-and-medal-from-collection-of-state-historical-museum-in-moscow/) Order of St. Andrew the First-Called with Diamonds.

    This one was send by Alexander II to Süleymân I after the end of Crymean War.

    Currently in the collection of Topkapi Saray Museum in Istanbul.

    Dimensions

    Height 120mm

    Width 80 mm

    Gold, dimonds, rubies and enamel...

    Thanks to our colleague Mitya Ivanov we have an opportunity to examine this beatiful and unique specimen.

    Edited by JapanX
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    Nick,

    very nice pictures of this very rare non Christian version of the order of St Andrew. The only other one I saw, was the St. Andrew given to the Japanese fleet admiral prince Fushimi. This St. Andrew is without diamonds and has no initial of the Tsar in the middle, actually it has a natural fat belly. The set is exhibited on the battleship Mikasa in Japan. The princ was lt. commander on the Mikasa under admiral Togo during the famous battle of Tsushima (Russo-Japanese war). The next time I visit the Mikasa I will try to make pictures of the set.

    Pieter

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    Another St Andrew with diamonds from collection of Kremlin Museum

    Wow. All that "ice". Amazing work and may I say, more difficult to achieve than just buying the latest output from the mines and putting them in settings. Diamonds can appear to be all the same in clearness and brightness, but all stones can be graded by cut, carat, color and clarity.

    It is these last two catagories that are really important here so that in the field of diamonds, one of the stones doesn't look "dirty" or more blue or gray than the others.

    Thanks for posting. Let me know when you can borrow them for a while for you, and your friends :whistle: to examine closely. I would like to see the construction and maker-marks on these beauties.

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    Let me know when you can borrow them for a while for you, and your friends :whistle: to examine closely. I would like to see the construction and maker-marks on these beauties.

    Hmmm...

    State Historical Museum offered me a job once :whistle: :lol:

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    Another (for other example see http://gmic.co.uk/in...seum-in-moscow/) Order of St. Andrew the First-Called with Diamonds.

    This one was send by Alexander II to Süleymân I after the end of Crymean War.

    Currently in the collection of Topkapi Saray Museum in Istanbul.

    Dimensions

    Height 120mm

    Width 80 mm

    Gold, dimonds, rubies and enamel...

    Thanks to our colleague Mitya Ivanov we have an opportunity to examine this beatiful and unique specimen.

    Not Sultan Süleymân I. The painting is of Suleiman the Magnificent, died 1566. Alexander II could have given a St. Andrew to any of the following sultans, none named Suleiman.

    Abdülmecid I

    TANZİMÂTÇI

    (The Strong Reformist or

    The Advocate of Reorganization)

    GHAZI (The Warrior) 80px-Sultan_Abdulmecid_Pera_Museum_3_b.j 1 July 1839 25 June 1861 80px-Tughra_of_Abd%C3%BClmecid_I.JPG

    32 Abdülaziz I

    BAHTSIZ (The Unfortunate)

    ŞEHÎD (Shāhīd) 80px-Sultan_Abdulaziz_I.JPG 25 June 1861 30 May 1876 80px-Tughra_of_Abd%C3%BClaziz.JPG

    33 Mehmed Murad V 80px-Murad_V_%28cropped%29.JPG 30 May 1876 31 August 1876 80px-Tughra_of_Murad_V.JPG

    34 Abdülhamid II

    Ulû Sultân Abd ūl-Hāmīd Khan

    (The Sublime Khan) 80px-Ahamid.jpg 31 August 1876 27 April 1909

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    Yep, my mistake Mark.

    Sorry about that.

    Most likely it was Abdulmecid I (a.k.a Abdul Mejid I).

    Wrong search and wrong wiki page :lol:

    Hope I didn't ruined your day ;)

    Cheers,

    Nick

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    • 2 weeks later...

    Let me know when you can borrow them for a while for you, and your friends :whistle: to examine closely. I would like to see the construction and maker-marks on these beauties.

    as requested :whistle:

    Same piece that we saw in post #12, but now with reverse ;)

    It is believed that this one was manufactured around 1800.

    Obverse

    Edited by JapanX
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