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Course Description

 

 It is 1894, and Tsar Alexander III of Russia has died. A decade earlier, he ordered a gold Easter egg as a surprise gift for his wife, who was so captivated by the egg and the surprise inside of it that he continued the tradition every year. His son and successor, Nicholas II, requests two eggs each year: one for his mother and one for his wife from the imperial jeweler, Fabergé. Each egg takes between one and several years to create, and each one costs a fortune. Today, any egg is worth tens of millions of dollars: collections are worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

Notes

MEMBERS PAY HALF PRICE
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