55
Carats, it was cut in a pear shape and was first owned by Charles the Bold,
Duke of Burgundy, who lost it in battle in 1477. The stone is in fact named
after a later owner, Seigneur de Sancy, a French Ambassador to Turkey in the
late 16th century. He loaned it to the French king, Henry III who wore it
in the cap with which he concealed his baldness. Henry IV of France also
borrowed the stone from Sancy, but it was sold in 1664 to James I of
England. In 1688, James II, last of the Stuart kings of England, fled
with it to Paris. It disappeared during the French revolution.


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