LONDON auction house Sotheby鈥檚 is accepting online bids until July 11 for a trove of objets d鈥檃rt from imperial and then revolutionary Russia, with a special focus on Faberg茅.

The House of Faberg茅 gave its name to Faberg茅 eggs, bejeweled Easter eggs presented to the last two Empresses of Russia: the Dowager Empress Maria Feodorovna (formerly Princess Dagmar of Denmark), and her daughter-in-law, Empress Alexandra Feodorovna (formerly Princess Alix of Hesse-Darmstadt). The first Faberg茅 egg, a gold egg covered in white enamel, was presented to Maria Feodorovna by her husband, contained a golden hen inside. Upon her husband鈥檚 death, her son, Nicholas II, ordered two eggs from Faberg茅 every year until the Russian Revolution. More than that, the house supplied royal families (connected as they were by blood and marriage to the Romanovs) with several trinkets like jewels, picture frames, boxes, and cigarette cases.

After the revolution, the Faberg茅 family were first imprisoned, and their workshops turned over to the Soviets. The surviving Faberg茅s escaped out of Russia, and established their businesses somewhere else, but never again reached the same level of fame as when they supplied the Russian Imperial Court. The name survives today, passing through several hands, and the house makes miniature jeweled eggs. Still, the name still has some pull, if one judges from the thousands of pounds of the estimate prices of the Faberg茅 items at the auction.

The highest estimate at the auction 鈥 which is called 鈥淔aberg茅, Imperial & Revolutionary Works of Art鈥 鈥 is, however, not for one of the famed eggs, but for a silver-gilt, cloisonn茅 and en plein pictorial enamel casket by Feodor R眉ckert, with an estimate price between 拢180,000 to 拢250,000 (P12,642,093.51 to P17,558,463.20*).

The most expensive Faberg茅 item in this auction is also not an egg, but rather a gem-set silver imperial presentation casket, dated 1902. The casket is studded with cabochon jewels including rubies, amethysts, garnet, emerald, quartz, moonstone, tourmaline, and mother of pearl. Coming from an American collection, the box was acquired by the grandfather of the present owner in the 20th century. The box itself had been presented by Czar Nicholas II to the former president of France, Emile Loubet, during a 1902 state visit. This lot is estimated to sell for between 拢100,000 to 拢150,000 (P7,023,385.28 to P10,535,077.92).

There are quite a few Filipinos with that kind of coin, but for more 鈥渂udget-friendly鈥 Faberg茅 pieces, up for auction is a gold-mounted rhodonite egg pendant, valued between 拢2,000 to 拢3,000 (P140,467.71 to P210,701.56). There鈥檚 also a locket with a lid in gold, covered by Faberg茅鈥檚 signature guilloch茅 enamel in pale blue, with a rose-cut diamond in the center. This is valued at 拢3,000 to 拢5,000 (P210,701.56 to P351,169.26).

To place bids, sign up for an account at . 鈥 Joseph L. Garcia

* Calculated using an exchange rate of P70.23 to 拢1.