The French Connection

The French Connection

A dramatic daylight robbery at a museum in Paris last year has resulted in an insurance payment of over £3m to the Royal Collection Trust, after two royal items were stolen while on loan to an exhibition.

The figure has been revealed in the Royal Collection Trust’s annual accounts, showing the scale of the loss from the raid on the Cognacq-Jay Museum in Paris last November.

Robbers smashed display cases and took items from an exhibition of 18th Century luxury miniature items.

The haul included two historic, richly-decorated snuff boxes on loan from the UK’s Royal Collection.

The French Connection.
The French Connection.

 

Media reports at the time of the robbery last year claimed there had been losses of around a million euros – but a figure of £3,020,000 is shown in the annual report of the Royal Collection Trust as an insurance receipt, outlining this is “in respect of snuff boxes stolen whilst on loan to the Musée Cognacq-Jay”.

The trust, a charity that looks after the paintings, sculptures, furniture and jewellery in the Royal Collection, says in the report published on Tuesday that the money “will be placed into a designated fund to be used for the enhancement of the collection”.

The two stolen items from the Royal Collection are believed to be a snuff box with a cameo of the Birth of Venus, thought to have been made in Germany in the 18th Century, and a Fabrique Royale snuff box, made in Germany in the 18th Century, and encrusted with nearly 3,000 diamonds.

The Fabrique Royale box had belonged to the Russian royal family before being seized by the Soviet authorities in 1917. It was later bought in 1932 by Queen Mary, wife of George V.

The French newspaper Le Monde reported that the robbery had been perpetrated by four masked raiders who pulled up on scooters and then used an axe to break into display cases, in front of shocked visitors at the museum.

 

 

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