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If you have ever
been to London and seen the British Crown Jewels, you will have noticed
the giant red gemstone set in the center of the Imperial State Crown. This
stone, quite possibly the most famous gem in the entire world, is the Black
Prince's Ruby. As large as a hen's egg, weighing approximately 170 carats,
and measuring five centimeters in length, the Black Prince's Ruby is a spectacular
red, and it seems to glow with an internal fire of its own. It is so remarkable
that it has become one of the world's most cherished jewels. But did you
know that the Black Prince's Ruby really isn't a ruby at all? It's actually
a spinel, and it has a long and fascinating history.
The gem's first known owner was Abu Said, a Moorish prince of Granada
in Spain in the mid-1300s. Abu Said lost the gem, as well as his crown
and his life, to Don Pedro the Cruel of Seville. In 1366 Don Pedro's own
brother attacked him in turn, but Don Pedro successfully defended himself
with help from the armies of the Black Prince of Bordeaux. As payment,
the Black Prince demanded Don Pedro's prize jewel, and Don Pedro was in
no position to argue.
How the Black Prince's Ruby came to England is unknown, but it made
its next historical appearance in a jeweled helmet worn by the English
king, Henry V, at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415. The helmet saved Henry's
life when a blow from the battleaxe of the French duke of Alencon nearly
destroyed it. Both the king and the helmet miraculously survived the war,
and the Black Prince's Ruby remained in English hands.
Later, King James the First had the gem set into the state crown, and,
despite many threats of theft, fire, and even Nazi bombs, over the centuries
the Black Prince's Ruby has remained the magnificent centerpiece of the
British royal regalia.
While the Black Prince's Ruby is by far the world's most famous red
spinel, it is definitely not the only one ever possessed or coveted by
kings, queens, and emperors. The Timur Ruby, also in the Crown Jewels
of England, is even larger, weighing 361 carats, or more than 70 grams.
It is inscribed with the names of six of its former owners. The Kremlin
Museum in Moscow has another giant gem that probably belonged to the Tsar;
this one weighs 414 carats.
The most dazzling collection of fine red spinels is found in the Crown
Jewels of Iran. The majority were plundered from India when the Mogul
Empire fell. The largest one weighs about 500 carats, and it is indeed
the biggest on record. Many others weigh over 100 carats, and more than
a dozen have been carved with the name of Jahangir, a Mogul emperor over
350 years ago.
Once you have seen a fine red spinel, you will easily understand why
ancient royalty esteemed it as much as ruby, and sometimes even more.
Top quality red spinels and rubies have superb pure red colors, and they
actually fluoresce, or glow, in natural light. These similarities led
to some confusion in early history when people classified gems only by
their colors. They called all blue gems sapphires, all green gems emeralds,
and all red gems rubies; spinels were called "Balas rubies," after a region
in northern India known as Balascia, where they were first reportedly
mined.
Later, when people learned that gems of the same color are not necessarily
the same kind of material, they still had difficulty separating red spinel
and ruby. Not only do the two gems have the same color and fluorescence,
but they are often found together in the same mines, and ruby's physical
properties are very similar to spinel's; ruby is only slightly more dense
and slightly harder. (Spinel is actually as hard or harder than emerald,
topaz, quartz, and all but five other natural minerals.)
Despite its fame in the ancient world, red spinel has never been as
abundant as ruby, and today it is quite difficult to find. The old mines
in Afghanistan that produced so many of the giant stones in the Moguls'
collections seem to have been worked out, and the gem gravels of Sri Lanka
and Africa, which give up many beautiful pastel colored spinels, only
rarely contain gems with the pure intense red color of the Black Prince's
Ruby. Now only the famous mines of Mogok, Burma, hold substantial quantities
of fine red spinels. Jealously guarded by the Burmese kings until 1885,
controlled by a monopoly under the British Empire, and then nationalized
by a socialist government in 1962, Mogok's mines have scarcely had a chance
to live up to their potential. While a few beautiful red gems have been
smuggled out through the gauntlet of jungle, opium warlords, rebels, and
soldiers that makes up the Burmese hinterland, these exquisite gems have
only been able to offer enticing hints of the sumptuous jewels that must
still lie hidden in the mountains of Mogok. No one really knows how many
gems remain there undiscovered, but perhaps there is still one that will
rival even the Black Prince's Ruby and remind us all of the days when
kings and emperors held sway over vast domains and counted their wealth
by the natural beauty that they owned.
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