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Russia to Unveil Restored Amber Room
May 13, 2003
By IRINA TITOVA
TSARSKOYE SELO, Russia (AP) - Elaborately carved amber panels, in shades
ranging from butter yellow to dark red, stretch up 26-foot walls. Gilded parrots
perch on candle holders, their tiny tilted heads reflected in mirrors. Mosaics
of semiprecious stones sparkle, adding to the sensation of being enclosed in an
oversized jewelry box.
Russia's legendary Amber Room, which vanished after German troops looted it
from an imperial palace during World War II, makes a dazzling reappearance this
month after a painstaking nearly quarter-century reconstruction.
``I think never in Russian history has anyone had to restore such a unique
historical object literally out of nothing,'' Culture Minister Mikhail Shvydkoi
said Tuesday, announcing the project's completion.
At the end of May, Russian President Vladimir Putin and German Chancellor
Gerhard Schroeder will open the room to 47 fellow heads of state at St.
Petersburg's 300th birthday bash. In June, it will be unveiled to the public.
Over the years, the lost chamber - a Prussian gift to St. Petersburg's
founder, Czar Peter the Great - ignited imaginations and inspired a series of
treasure hunts.
Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm I gave the czar the elaborately carved
chamber in 1716. In exchange, he received his wish: 55 very tall Russian
soldiers.
In 1941, German troops who had invaded the Soviet Union reached the suburbs
of St. Petersburg, then known as Leningrad. Occupying the Catherine Palace in
Tsarskoye Selo, a one-time Russian imperial residence, they dismantled the Amber
Room and took it to the German city of Koenigsburg.
After the war, the victorious Soviet Union annexed the city and renamed it
Kaliningrad. However, by the time the Soviet Army got there, the Amber Room had
disappeared, believed destroyed in Allied bombing or hidden away.
Some said the treasure was buried in a silver mine not far from Berlin.
Others speculated it was hidden on the shores of the Baltic. Still others went
as far as South America searching for the room, worth an estimated $100 million
to $250 million.
In 1979, the Soviet government initiated reconstruction of the room,
allocating about $8 million. Germany's Ruhrgas, the biggest importer of Russian
gas, joined the project in 1999 and donated $3.5 million, helping guarantee its
completion.
The culture minister, who presented the restored chamber to reporters Tuesday
with Ruhrgas executive board member Achim Middelschulte, said the project had
become ``a symbol of German-Russian understanding and friendship.''
Many of the approximately 30 artisans on the project have devoted the better
part of their working lives to it, hunched over microscopes to etch tiny designs
into the amber, inhaling amber dust. The reconstruction used some six tons of
the stone.
``This work ... became the raison-d'etre for many of us. And now that it's
almost over, many of the most skillful amber carvers are at a loss,'' said
Alexander Krylov, who joined the workshop in 1981.
Even before the work started, it took 11 years just to research the room and
reinvent old craftsmanship techniques, said Tatyana Zharkova, spokeswoman for
the Tsarskoye Selo museum.
``From the pictures the experts obtained, one could tell that the room was
made of amber of at least 13 various tints, but nobody knew exactly what those
tints were'' from the black-and-white photographs, she said.
Experts worked off modern black-and-white photographs of amber of various
tints and compared them with prewar pictures, helping them draw conclusions
about which shade was used in which panels.
The responsibility for deciding the coloring was given to a single craftsman,
Krylov, for the sake of consistency.
``We all know what is blue and what is yellow. But when it concerns hues,
everyone may have his own perception on how dark or light it is. So, in order to
keep all the coloring in harmony, they decided to rely on one and the same
man,'' Zharkova said.
Meanwhile, the quest for the original marched on. Treasure-hunters searched
caves, jails, churches, salt mines, tunnels and bunkers. In 1967, the Soviet
government initiated its own search commission. It shut it down in 1984, saying
the investigation was fruitless.
Only two components of the original room have been found.
One was a chest of drawers, which a Berlin woman reported owning in 1997
after seeing a television documentary on the Amber Room.
The other was a mosaic, part of a series celebrating the five senses, which a
lawyer was trying to sell the same year in Bremen, Germany, for a client. The
client's father had accompanied the wartime convoy to Koenigsburg as a German
officer. He said he had no idea how his father got the mosaic, titled ``Smell
and Touch.''
By the time it popped up, a copy of the mosaic had already been completed in
the Tsarskoye Selo workshop.
Alexander Kedrinsky, one of the few surviving people who researched the
original Amber Room before World War II, said the new chamber was an improvement
over the old.
``The original Amber Room didn't look that impressive really,'' he admitted.
``It was decaying, had undergone two renovations and needed another.''
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