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A Salamander brooch from the 16th or 17th century, with the emeralds from Colombia and the diamonds from India. (Photo Credit: Museum of London)


A watch, created around 1600, which was set in a single Colombian emerald crystal. (Photo Credit: Museum of London)


Also from the Cheapside collection, a gold bow pendant comprising rose-cut and step-cut foil-backed rubies and table-cut diamonds. (Photo Credit: Museum of London)
  Cheapside jewelry collection goes on display, provides window to riches of Elizabethan era


October 14, 2013


It was more than 101 years ago when a team of demolition workers working in an old building in Cheapside, in what today is the financial center of London, broke through the wooden floor. As the dust settled they discovered they had chanced upon a veritable treasure of jewelry.

Without realizing it, they had uncovered the stockpile of a 17th-century, Elizabethan goldsmith. The workers took their haul to a certain George Fabian Lawrence, a London dealer who usually was ready to pay cash for whatever builders found. But he quickly realized that this was out of his league and he contacted the trustees of the London Museum. They agreed to buy the lot.

More than century after it was discovered, the collection of 500 items, which represents the largest number of Tudor and Jacobean jewelry items ever found at one time, is being put on display by the Museum of London. The exhibition will run from October through to April 2014.

Historians believe that the jewelry had been hidden by a goldsmith or goldsmiths who were sent to fight in the English Civil War which began in 1642. Since it remained in its hiding place, it is reasonable to assume that they did not survive the conflict.

The museum curators have described the collection as "the single most important source of our knowledge on early modern jewelry worldwide." What is remarkable is the large number of diamonds and colored gemstones that are used, clearly indicating the access that the Cheapside goldsmiths had to supply routes from Colombia and India.

Among the items to go on display is a Salamander brooch with table-cut diamonds and a diamond-encrusted gold bow pendant. More unusual pieces include a tiny white and blue agate cameo depicting a woman's head and a Colombian emerald carved into the form of a parrot.

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