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Polish Crown Jewels Totally Explained
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Everything about Polish Crown Jewels totally explained The only surviving original piece of the Polish Crown Jewels from the time of the Piast dynasty is the ceremonial sword - Szczerbiec. It is currently on display along with other preserved royal items in the Wawel Royal Castle Museum, Kraków.
Several royal crowns were made, including several during the 16th Century, a "Hungarian Crown", a "Swedish Crown" used by the Vasa kings, and others that were subsequently lost or destroyed. The crown jewels used by the Saxon kings and some reminders of the Polish monarchs (like a cup of Queen Jadwiga so-called roztruchan, or magnificent karacena armour of King Jan III Sobieski appropriated by Frederick Augustus I, Elector of Saxony) are today displayed in the Grünes Gewölbe and the Rüstkammer in Dresden, Germany.
Components
According to an inventory of the State Treasury at the Wawel in performed in 1633 by the Kanclerz Ossoliński, the Crown Regalia (Jewels) of the Rzeczpospolita (kept in 5 chests) consists of:
Also a private treasury of the Vasas (kept at the Royal Castle in Warsaw) consisted of:
the so-called "Swedish Crown", also known as the "Purchased Crown" was a type of corona clausa consisting of 5 larger and 5 smaller parts and 262 precious stones and pearls; the crown was made for Sigismund Augustus; after King's death it was pawned to Giovanni Tudesco; later it was ransomed by King Sigismund III Vasa for 20,000 florins and used for his coronation in Uppsala as the King of Sweden on February 19, 1594; in 1623 King Sigismund III bequeathed it to the Rzeczpospolita, and in 1633 it was bequeathed to the State Treasury after King's death.
the so-called "Muscovy Crown" made in about 1610 for Prince Władysław Vasa's coronation as a Tsar of Russia (never used); it was the type of corona clausa and was later bequeathed by King Władysław IV Vasa to the Rzeczpospolita. After King's death (1648) it was appropriated by King John II Casimir and bequeathed to the State Treasury in 1668; pawned lawlessly in 1700 by King Augustus II the Strong, it was appropriated by Frederick I of Prussia (part of so-called Pawn of the Rzeczpospolita) as a result of German claiming to the outlays sustained during the Deluge
a silver White Eagle heraldic base for the royal crown (pure silver, partly gilded, 89 cm heigh); the eagle was created for King John II Casimir in Augsburg by Abraham Drentwett and Heinrich Mannlich in about 1666; presented in the times of a military weekness of the Rzeczpospolita after the Deluge and lost war against the Ottoman Empire by King Michał Korybut to Tsar of Russia.
All of the Crown Regalia were robbed by the Germans (except for the "Muscovy Crown") in 1795 after the Third Partition of the Rzeczpospolita and destroyed on the order of Frederick William III of Prussia in March 1809 (except for the Szczerbiec).
In 1925 Polish Government purchased the silver regalia of King Augustus III and Queen Maria Josepha in Vienna for $ 35,000 (175 000 zł). It consisted of 2 crowns, 2 sceptres and 2 orbs made in about 1733. (The original Crown Regalia were hidden - see War of the Polish Succession). The jewels were exhibited in Warsaw till 1939 and in 1940 they were stolen by German forces.
Gallery
Image:Sigismund III of Poland Rubens.jpg|Portrait of King Sigismund III Vasa in coronation robes (detail). The King is wearing the "Muscovy Crown"
Image:Swedish Crown.jpg|The "Swedish Crown", detail of a portrait of Władysław IV in coronation robes
Image:Portret koronacyjny Władysława IV Wazy.jpg|Portrait of King Władysław IV Vasa in coronation robes, wearing the so-called "Swedish Crown"
Image:Coronation robe Wladyslaw IV.jpg|Coronation robe of Władysław IV (detail) with Polish and Swedish Coats of arms
Further Information
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