Golden box stolen nearly 20 years ago returned to Waddesdon Manor

Bonbonnière went on display in A Rothschild Treasury this week.

The gold box recently returned to Waddesdon Manor after 19 years
Author: Henry WinterPublished 30th Apr 2022
Last updated 30th Apr 2022

At about 2am on Tuesday 10 June 2003, Waddesdon Manor, the Rothschild house and garden in Buckinghamshire, experienced a dramatic break-in and theft.

A masked gang in blue boiler suits smashed their way through a window, and within just minutes had made off with more than 100 gold boxes and other precious objects.

The stolen items - mainly 18th-century French pieces, along with some English – were of high value. Very few of them have ever been recovered.

In August 2021, one of the boxes was identified by the team at Art Loss Register (ALR) when it came up for sale at a UK regional auction house which subscribes to the ALR’s service providing due diligence checks on items for sale.

The gold box that has surfaced is a French bonbonniere dated 1775-1781 and made in Paris, a centre for the production of gold boxes in the 18th century. These small circular boxes were personal accessories, kept in a pocket, in a boudoir or salon, and used for sweets.

Often embellished with painted or enamelled scenes, this one has a miniature of an unknown woman holding a basket of roses on its lid. It is decorated with gold piqué (inlaid) stars on a dark blue ground and has a tortoiseshell interior.

As soon as the ALR identified it, they alerted staff at Waddesdon, who checked the images and other details to confirm that it was in fact one of the stolen boxes. The ALR notified the auction house and contacted Thames Valley police so that they could investigate further given the seriousness of this theft and the number of other boxes which are still missing.

The Buckinghamshire château is marking the centenary of her death with a programme of exhibitions and displays that highlight her role in its history.

The box has now been returned to Waddesdon and is now on display in the Rothschild Treasury, a gallery that houses more than 300 objects made from rare and precious materials that celebrates the Rothschild family as collectors of extraordinary objects.

This particular gold box was acquired by Alice de Rothschild (1847-1922). Alice was the sister of Ferdinand de Rothschild (1839-1898), who built Waddesdon, and she inherited the Manor and its contents from him.

This spring Waddesdon is marking the centenary of her death by celebrating her life, collections and legacy with Alice’s Wonderlands – a comprehensive programme of exhibitions and displays that highlight her pivotal role in Waddesdon’s history.

Pippa Shirley, Director of Collections, Historic properties and Landscapes at Waddesdon says “I am absolutely delighted that this box has returned, and very grateful to the Art Loss Register for its part in its successful recovery.

"The 2003 theft was deeply traumatic for everyone at Waddesdon – I remember it vividly - and this feels such a positive outcome and gives us hope that the other boxes may yet come back to us.

"It is also such a happy coincidence that it should reappear in the year in which we are celebrating Alice de Rothschild and her extraordinary contribution to the collections here.”

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