Agathon Carl Theodor Fabergé

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Faberge in the 1900s

Agathon Karlovich Fabergé (German: Agathon Carl Theodor Fabergé; Russian: Агафон Карлович Фаберже, romanizedAgafon Karlovich Faberzhe; 24 January [O.S. 5 February] 1876 – 20 October 1951) was a Russian goldsmith and philatelist. He was the second son of Peter Carl Fabergé.[1]

Early life[edit]

Agathon Karlovich was born in 1876; he was educated at the Petrischule in St. Petersburg and at the Commercial Department of Dr. Wiedemann's gymnasium.[1] On 20 October 1894 (O.S.), he joined his father's firm, the House of Fabergé, at the same time as Eugene (Evgeny).[1] In the 1900s to 1910s, together with his father and his brother, Eugene, he managed the firm's business. After 1898, he became an expert on the Diamond Room in the Winter Palace.[2]

Philately[edit]

Fabergé formed a leading collection of Russian Zemstvo stamps.[3][4]

After the success at the World Exhibition in Paris in 1900, the Faberge Company became a supplier of many monarchs. Agafon himself, who spoke five languages, was a company representative at the royal houses of England, Sweden, Norway, and Siam. In 1897, Agafon married the daughter of a wealthy Riga merchant, Lydia Treyberg. After the birth of his fourth son in 1907, his father presented Agafon a country estate (known as Dacha Fabergé [ru]) that included a two-store wooden main house, in Levashovo, not far St. Petersburg. Already the father of four children, Agathon decided to expand the dacha and commissioned the architect Johannes Leopold Hulnbeck to rebuild it. Galnbeck built an impressive Art Nouveau stone mansion on the site of the old house. Contemporaries called the estate “Small Hermitage”, because it was decorated with antique furniture, antique carpets and tapestries, porcelain and bronze, prints, icons, miniatures and sculptures. There were also two very unique collections — precious stones and stamps.[5]

Russian-German stamp collector from St. Petersburg, Breytfuss Friedrich (1850–1911), involved him in collecting stamps. The instructions of the experienced collector Breytfuss played an important role in forming his interest to stamps.

In 1916, Faberge retired from his father’s company and opened up an antique shop. After the February 1917 conspiracy against the tsar, the antique trade was very busy. Wealthy people leaving Russia sold rarities. There was no shortage of the buyers — the nouveau riche millionaires. The October Bolshevik coup made Faberge close the shop. There began lootings and robberies.

In June 1918, Faberge reopened the antique shop. But later, the terror unleashed by the Bolsheviks forced him to smuggle his wife and five children to Finland. In December 1918, the Bolsheviks closed all the antique shops. Faberge found a job as a translator in the Danish embassy. Six months later, according to the new denunciation, he was arrested by security officers, this time on charges of profiteering and sent to a concentration camp.[6] Shortly after his arrest, there was a pogrom at his dacha.[7] Everything that could not be taken away was disfigured and broken. He spent more than a year in a concentration camp, where he was considered as a "bourgeois counter-revolutionary" and was taken out to be shot three times. Torture and hunger were not in vain — the 44-year-old man had become old and gray-haired; his house, villa and property were confiscated.[citation needed]

In the late 1920’s, the officials involved Faberge in an urgent secret work — evaluation of a large lot of diamonds. After signing the peace with Estonia, the Bolsheviks found a channel for smuggling gold and precious stones. The interested traders came to Revel to participate in clandestine auctions. Having learned that the Bolsheviks brought “buckets” of diamonds, they decided to bring down the price and refused to buy the stones. A trade representative telegraphed Lenin that the experts deliberately overstated the price, and it was impossible to sell the stones. Faberge was arrested again on charges of sabotage. After some time, the authorities learned about his connections with the staff of the Finnish diplomatic mission and decided to make him their agent. He came out of prison only after he had given his agreement to work for the GPU. But Faberge did not want to have it on his conscience, so he confessed everything to his Finnish friends. For a while he tried to get some work. Academician A.E. Fersman helped him; he invited him to work in the commission to study production forces of Russia at the Academy of Sciences.[citation needed]

Death[edit]

Fabergé family grave in the Hietaniemi Cemetery.

Fabergé died in Helsinki, Finland[2] on 20 October 1951. He was buried in the family grave at the Hietaniemi Cemetery.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé Eggs: A Retrospective Encyclopedia. Scarecrow Press. pp. 194–195. ISBN 978-0-8108-3946-5.
  2. ^ a b Lowes, Will; McCanless, Christel Ludewig (2001). Fabergé eggs: A retrospective encyclopedia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. pp. 194–195. ISBN 0-8108-3946-6.
  3. ^ "The dispersal of Agathon Fabergé’s great collections" by Jeffrey Stone in The London Philatelist, Vol. 115, No. 1337 (July–August 2006), pp. 198–211.
  4. ^ "Tiflis Stamp | Chapter 4. The fate of the Tiflis stamp and its owners. | the riddles of Agathon Faberge's collection".
  5. ^ Dolgova 2014, p. 128-130.
  6. ^ Костоева, В. (2018-05-13). "Сокровища Фаберже: как Россия навсегда потеряла ювелирный бренд". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-01-29.
  7. ^ Dolgova 2014, p. 130-134.

Sources[edit]

Further reading[edit]

  • Hellman, Kaj & Stone, Jeffrey C. (2017). Agathon Fabergé: Portrait of a Philatelist. Turku: Suomen Filateliapalvelu. ISBN 978-952-67315-1-3.