Lord Mountbatten’s Indian Bracelet, Jewelled Elephants Auctioned In UK

The Indian heirlooms up for auction included a diamond set and enamelled gold bracelet made in India, that once belonged to Queen Victoria.

Lord Mountbatten's Indian Bracelet, Jewelled Elephants Auctioned In UK

A pair of jewelled gold and enamel elephants bought from Jaipur in 1946



London:

A diamond bracelet and jewelled decorative elephants from Jaipur are some of the Indian heirlooms that have made it a collection of 350 personal items belonging to Patricia Mountbatten, the eldest daughter of Lord Louis Mountbatten – the last Viceroy of India – that fetched over 5.6 million British pound at an auction in London.

Patricia Edwina Victoria Mountbatten was the Second Countess Mountbatten of Burma and had a strong royal connection as the great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria and first cousin to Prince Philip, the 99-year-old husband of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II.

The Sotheby’s online auction earlier this week had estimates of up to 100,000 British pounds, a majority of which were surpassed as bidders from across the world lined up for the items inherited from her ancestors sharing connections with India, a place that was said to be very special to the family.

“Lady Mountbatten’s residence, Newhouse, was a private place for entertaining only the closest of family and friends, capturing all the magic of a stately home on an intimate scale,” said Harry Dalmeny, Sotheby’s Chairman, UK & Ireland.

“Through her belongings, many passed down from members of the extended family over the years, collectors have the chance to see the story of the 20th century unfold and acquire evocative vestiges of a glittering way of life,” he said.

Patricia Mountbatten’s Indian connection was not just as the daughter of Lord and Lady Mountbatten but also on her husband John Knatchbull’s side of the family as his father, Michael Knatchbull, spent four months as India’s youngest Viceroy in 1938.

John Knatchbull himself worked for Louis Mountbatten in India and later became an Oscar-nominated film producer, behind the well-known Raj era epic ‘A Passage to India’.

The Indian heirlooms up for auction included a diamond set and enamelled gold bracelet made in India, that once belonged to Queen Victoria.

The bracelet, which fetched 40,320 British pounds, includes a portrait of Victoria’s husband Albert, as a child, and would have been commissioned by the monarch herself.

This was then passed down through Victoria’s descendants to Louis Mountbatten and then to his daughter Patricia. A pair of gold and enamel elephants made in Jaipur, given by Louis Mountbatten to his wife Edwina as a present to mark their 24th wedding anniversary in 1946, beat the valuations between 2,000 and 3,000 British pound to fetch 34,020 British pound.

They are engraved on the base with the words “Edwina from Dickie” in Louis’ handwriting. The pair had become engaged at Viceroy’s House in Delhi in 1922.

“The loving gift is an insight into their marriage – one that had brought together two of the most glamorous and adventurous figures of the period – and testament to the importance of India to both of them.

1946 was the year Lord Mountbatten was made a Viscount and this gift anticipates the news of his appointment as Viceroy the following year,” notes a Sotheby’s statement.

A “Tutti Frutti” style set of jewels in the collection, which sold for 107,100 British pounds, belonged to Edwina Mountbatten, who is said to have had a particular penchant for this style that took inspiration from Indian cut-coloured gems.

The auction also included a lot made up of a rare Anglo-Indian inlaid bureau by Thomas Chippendale, made in 1767 and passed down through the Knatchbull family, which sold for 69,300 British pounds.

“Our overriding desire when organising our mother’s affairs is to honour her wishes and celebrate the memory of both our mother and our father. They had discussed these arrangements with us, and we are simply putting their plans into effect. We are of course keeping many things and importantly amongst these are objects which are of sentimental value and much loved,” read a statement from the Mountbatten family, in reference to the auction.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by our staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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