Where are the original
Fabergé Imperial eggs today?
Forbes Magazine Collection, New York
These nine eggs were previously owned by Forbes.
In 2004 they were bought by Victor Vekselberg, the third-richest man in Russia,
and returned to Russia. The eggs were purported to be worth $5.9 billon,
but were sold to Vekselberg for $100 millon.
1885 Hen egg
1894 Renaissance egg
1895 Rosebud egg
1897 Coronation egg
1898 Lilies of the Valley egg
1900 Cockerel egg
1911 Bay Tree egg
1911 Fifteenth Anniversary egg
1916 Order of St. George egg
Kremlin Armoury Museum, Moscow
1891 Memory of Azov egg
1899 Bouquet of Lilies Clock egg
1900 Trans-Siberian Railway egg
1902 Clover egg
1906 Moscow Kremlin egg
1908 Alexander Palace egg
1909 Standart egg
1910 Alexander III Equestrian egg
1913 Romanov Tercentenary egg
1916 Steel Military egg
Virginia Museum of Arts, Richmond, Bequest of Lillian Thomas Pratt
1896 Revolving Miniatures egg
1898 Pelican egg
1903 Peter the Great egg
1912 Czarevich egg
1915 Red Cross egg with Imperial Portraits
The Matilda Geddings Gray Foundation
New Orleans Museum of Art
1890 Danish Palaces egg
1893 Caucasus egg
1912 Napoleonic egg
The Royal Collection, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
1901 Basket of Wild Flowers egg
1910 Colonnade egg
1914 Mosaic egg
The Edouard and Maurice Sandoz Foundation, Switzerland
1906 Swan egg
1908 Peacock egg
The Marjorie Merriweather Post Collection at Hillwood Museum, Washington, DC
1895 Twelve Monograms egg
1914 Grisaille egg
The Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore
1901 Gatchina Palace egg
1907 Rose Trellis egg
The India Early Minshall Collection, Cleveland Museum of Art
1915 Red Cross egg with Triptych
Prince Rainier III of Monaco Collection
1887 Blue Serpent Clock egg
Private Collections
1892 Diamond Trellis egg
1899 Pansy egg
1907 Cradle with Garlands egg
1913 Winter egg
Missing Imperial Easter Eggs
1886 Hen egg with Sapphire Pendant
1888 Cherub egg with Chariot
1889 Necessaire egg
1896 Alexander III egg
1897 Mauve Enamel egg
1902 Empire Nephrite egg
1903 Danish Jubilee egg
1909 Alexander II Commemorative egg