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The Glitter of the Russian Court (Dutch: Juwelen! Schitteren aan het Russische Hof ) was the second jubileum exhibition in Amsterdam by the H'ART Museum , focussed on the personal taste for luxury by Russian nobility.
Jewels! The Glitter of the Russian Court. In September 2019 the jubilee exhibition Jewels! The Glitter of the Russian Court began, which was meant both to celebrate 10 years of educating the Dutch public about the collections in St. Petersburg and to explain the relationships of the Russian nobility to the current Dutch royalty. [19]
In 2019, Van Der Velden was part of the exhibition at the Hermitage Museum in Amsterdam, “Jewels! The Glitter of the Russian Court.” Inspired by the rich history of Russian jewellery and artifacts that were part of the exhibition, she created a unique one-off piece: The Memento Mori Ring. [18]
Jérémie Pauzié (French pronunciation: [ʒeʁemi pozje]; 6 December 1716 – 30 November 1779) was a Genevan diamond jeweler, artist and memoirist, known for his work for the Russian Imperial court and the Imperial Crown of Russia, which he created with the court's jeweler Georg Friedrich Ekart.
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A Russian court has sentenced a Russian-American woman to 12 years in prison for treason after she made a donation of just over $50 to a US-based charity supporting Ukraine. Ksenia Karelina, 33 ...
(Reuters) - A Russian court has upheld a 12-year guilty verdict for treason against a physicist accused of passing secrets about hypersonic technology to the Netherlands, a Russian legal ...
They were initially uneducated and ignorant, but was soon given a sophisticated polish and made to be the most favored women at the Russian court; they were treated almost as if they were a part of the Imperial family, and were to be known as : "almost Grand Duchesses" and as the "jewels" and ornaments of the Russian court. [1]