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La Peregrina: An Extraordinary Renaissance Pearl

No jewel has captured the imagination like the Peregrina Pearl, with its vivid history as a Spanish crown treasure and its dramatic disappearance from Madrid’s Royal Palace. Its last owner, Dame Elizabeth Taylor, called it “the most perfect pearl in the world”.

 

The Peregrina was fished from the Gulf of Panama in 1577 by a young enslaved African and quickly became the most celebrated natural pearl of the Renaissance. Its extraordinary beauty, size and perfect pear shape inspired the Milanese court jeweller and lapidary Jacopo da Trezzo to christen it La Perla Peregrinathe rare one”. Rudolf II of Prague coveted it; King Philip II of Spain secured it in 1586 for the astonishing sum of 9,000 ducats, three times what Michelangelo was paid to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Before his death in 1598, Philip II decreed that the Peregrina remain an inalienable jewel of the Spanish Crown Treasury.

 

For more than two centuries, successive Spanish queens, infantas and kings wore the Peregrina as a symbol of global rule and imperial power. It appears in countless court portraits by leading artists including Alonso Sánchez Coello, Juan Pantoja de la Cruz, Bartolomé González, Diego Velázquez, Francisco Goya, the miniaturist Guillermo Ducker and, later, Sir Edwin Henry Landseer.

 

After Joseph Bonaparte seized the pearl in 1813, rival claimants emerged throughout the nineteenth century. Prince Felix Yusupov – Rasputins assassin – owned a large pearl nicknamed La Pelegrina, marketed by his family since 1826 as the ‘true’ Peregrina. Richard Burton, captivated by the pearls tangled history, purchased the authentic ‘Abercorn Pearl’ at auction in 1969 as a Valentines gift for Elizabeth Taylor.

 

This book – one Burton himself hoped to research and write – retraces the Peregrinas many journeys and misinterpretations. It revisits its famous and infamous owners, dismantling centuries of myth, misinformation and embellished lore. Drawing on decades of archival work in Austria, Italy, Portugal, Spain and France, Jordan assembles royal inventories, diaries, accounts and correspondence to publish, for the first time, the pearls full documentary history, which began in the New World in the late sixteenth century. Her research establishes conclusively that Elizabeth Taylors revered La Peregrina is the genuine royal pearl – one that, at its origin, granted freedom to an unnamed enslaved African.

La Peregrina: An Extraordinary Renaissance Pearl

£50.00Price
  • By Annemarie Jordan Gschwend

    with Diana Scarisbrick and Hugo Miguel Crespo

    September 2026

    ISBN: 978-1-915401-30-4

    Hardback, 280 x 245 mm

    328 pages, approx 175 illustrations

    £50 / €60 / $70

  • Praise for La Peregrina

    Experience the allure of La Peregrina – the pearl that captivated kings and Hollywood legends. From its discovery in Panama in 1577 to its role as the Spanish Crown jewel and later Elizabeth Taylor’s collection, this book unveils a saga of power, empire, and intrigue. Explore its unmatched beauty, royal symbolism, and mysterious disappearance through exhaustive research and stunning photography. A masterpiece for lovers of art, history, and luxury, enriched with primary sources and vivid imagery. Own the definitive account of a gem that captivated monarchs and shaped the Renaissance imagination.—Félix Labrador Arroyo, Full Professor of Early Modern History, Universidad Rey Juan Carlos.

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