12.1 C
Munich
星期二, 21 10 月, 2025

The Story Behind the Priceless Pieces Targeted in the Louvre Heist

Must read

What I Wish My Pregnant Friends Had Said When I Was Infertile

“Welllllll,” she drew out the word, staring down at her plate as she paused long enough for me to understand what was about to...

Mia Goth Has Officially Graduated From Scream Queen to Movie Star

Spooky season lovers, get ready: Guillermo del Toro’s new film adaption of Frankenstein is soon upon us. Starring Jacob Elordi (as the titular monster),...

Gold is ‘the ultimate currency in a crisis.’ Does that mean you should buy? – National

The price of gold continues to rise, with the gleaming metal again catching investor attention around the world over recent weeks. But what’s fuelling...

Hermès Appoints Grace Wales Bonner as Creative Director of Menswear

This article first appeared on Vogue Business.Grace Wales Bonner is Hermès’s new creative director of menswear. The British designer, 35, who created her namesake...

Paris’s Louvre Museum has always been a cultural touchstone, but a seven-minute raid on the centuries-old art institution over the weekend has inspired frenzied conversation the world over.

At about 9:30 a.m. CET on Sunday, two people (both with their faces hidden) used power tools and a truck-mounted crane lift to break into the Galerie d’Apollon—which houses many of France’s crown jewels—through a window. The thieves then made off with nine priceless items, according to France’s Ministry of Culture. In a statement, French president Emmanuel Macron called the robbery “an attack on a heritage that we cherish because it is our history.”

This isn’t the first time the Louvre has been burglarized. Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa was stolen from the museum in 1911 by Italian handyman Vincenzo Peruggia and recovered two years later in Florence; in 1976, three thieves managed to make off with a diamond-encrusted sword once used at the 1824 coronation of King Charles X; and seven years later, two pieces of ornate 16th-century Milanese armor donated by the Rothschild family went missing, only surfacing again in 2021. After a landscape by French painter Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot titled Le Chemin de Sèvres was stolen directly from the wall it hung on in 1998, the Louvre’s security system was significantly updated—making this weekend’s theft all the more shocking.

“Everybody in the jewelry world is just completely stunned by this,” says Vogue contributing editor and resident jewelry expert Lynn Yaeger. “There have been a lot of gangs stealing jewelry in Paris and elsewhere, but I would say this is as major as the 1911 Mona Lisa heist. The whole thing is very dispiriting.”

But what, exactly, was taken on Sunday—and where could the loot be going? Here’s everything we know so far about the pieces at the center of what is already being called the theft of the decade.

What was stolen from the Louvre, exactly?

The Ministry of Culture confirmed that the stolen jewels included a necklace and earrings that were a wedding gift from Napoleon to his second wife, Empress Marie-Louise of Austria, in 1810; a necklace, earrings, and tiara from from the Queen Marie-Amélie and Queen Hortense collection; and a brooch, bodice bow, and tiara from the collection of Empress Eugénie.

Emerald jewelry from the collection of Empress MarieLouise displayed at the Louvre in January 2020

Emerald jewelry from the collection of Empress Marie-Louise, displayed at the Louvre in January 2020

Photo: Getty Images

The tiara from the collection of Empress Eugnie that was recovered by Louvre officials exhibited at the Louvre in April 2025

The tiara from the collection of Empress Eugénie that was recovered by Louvre officials, exhibited at the Louvre in April 2025

Photo: Getty Images

In a bit of good luck, the tiara belonging to Empress Eugénie was one of two stolen pieces found at the scene, suggesting that the thieves may have lost them while escaping.

Who were the royals whose jewels were stolen?

Empress Eugnie 1856

Empress Eugénie, 1856

Photo: Getty Images

A portrait of Marie Louise of Austria

A portrait of Marie Louise of Austria

Photo: Getty Images

Empress Eugénie, or Eugénie de Montijo—the wife of Napoleon III whose role as the Bonaparte dynasty’s arbiter of fashion and collaboration with the pioneering English couturier Charles Frederick Worth changed the course of sartorial history—was known for her grand and iconoclastic taste. The fashion journalist and critic Alexander Fury credits Eugénie not only with introducing the color empress blue to the world but also with helping to popularize Louis Vuitton trunks.

#Story #Priceless #Pieces #Targeted #Louvre #Heist

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

What I Wish My Pregnant Friends Had Said When I Was Infertile

“Welllllll,” she drew out the word, staring down at her plate as she paused long enough for me to understand what was about to...

Mia Goth Has Officially Graduated From Scream Queen to Movie Star

Spooky season lovers, get ready: Guillermo del Toro’s new film adaption of Frankenstein is soon upon us. Starring Jacob Elordi (as the titular monster),...

Gold is ‘the ultimate currency in a crisis.’ Does that mean you should buy? – National

The price of gold continues to rise, with the gleaming metal again catching investor attention around the world over recent weeks. But what’s fuelling...

Hermès Appoints Grace Wales Bonner as Creative Director of Menswear

This article first appeared on Vogue Business.Grace Wales Bonner is Hermès’s new creative director of menswear. The British designer, 35, who created her namesake...

Jeremy Allen White on Transforming Into Bruce Springsteen for ‘Deliver Me From Nowhere’

The result was 1982’s Nebraska, an acoustic gem released with no tour, press, or lead single. Bruce didn’t even want his face on the...