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Empress Eugénie’s tiara and France’s crown collection stolen again: Inside the royal jewelry heist at the Louvre
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SCANDAL

Empress Eugénie’s tiara and France’s crown collection stolen again: Inside the royal jewelry heist at the Louvre


The thieves also took a sapphire parure once worn by Queen Hortense and Queen Marie-Amélie


Empress Eugénie’s tiara and France’s crown collection stolen again: Inside the royal jewelry heist at the Louvre© Harold Cunningham
Daniel NeiraSenior Writer
OCTOBER 20, 2025 3:07 PM EDTOCT 20, 2025, 3:07 PM EDT

Paris, a city built on beauty and history, is now gripped by scandal. On Sunday morning, a robbery unfolded inside the Louvre’s legendary Galerie d’Apollon, home to France’s most prized crown jewels. 

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In just seven minutes, thieves armed with power tools made off with eight pieces of “incalculable” value, leaving behind shattered glass, stunned guards, and a single fallen crown once belonging to Empress Eugénie.

A robbery unfolded inside the Louvre’s legendary Galerie d’Apollon, home to France’s most prized crown jewels. © Walter Bibikow
A robbery unfolded inside the Louvre’s legendary Galerie d’Apollon, home to France’s most prized crown jewels.

“Beyond their market value, these items have inestimable heritage and historical value,” the Louvre said in a statement obtained by People. “The ministers of culture and the interior are on site with the museum's management.”

According to Le Parisien, four individuals were involved, two disguised as museum workers wielding chainsaws and angle grinders, and two others waiting on scooters for a quick escape. 

Empress Eugenie (1826-1920) © Photo Josse/Leemage
Empress Eugenie (1826-1920)

French Interior Minister Laurent Nuñez confirmed to France 24 that the robbery lasted only about seven minutes. When guards intervened, the thieves fled, dropping one relic, Empress Eugénie’s crown, but taking with them priceless symbols of France’s imperial past.

Other pieces from Eugénie’s personal collection were taken as well© VCG
Other pieces from Eugénie’s personal collection were taken as well

Among the treasures stolen was the legendary Tiara of Empress Eugénie, commissioned by Napoleon III in 1853 as a wedding gift for his new bride. 

The diadem, adorned with 212 pearls and nearly 2,000 diamonds set in silver, represents a lost world of courtly grandeur. Empress Eugénie wore it for her 1853 portrait by Franz Xaver Winterhalter and again at Windsor Castle in 1855 during her investiture by Queen Victoria into the Order of the Garter. 

Among the treasures stolen was the legendary Tiara of Empress Eugénie, commissioned by Napoleon III in 1853© Print Collector
Among the treasures stolen was the legendary Tiara of Empress Eugénie, commissioned by Napoleon III in 1853

After the fall of the Second Empire, the tiara passed through exile, auctions, and aristocratic heirs, including the House of Thurn und Taxis, where it appeared again on the head of the so-called “Punk Princess,” Gloria von Thurn und Taxis, at lavish soirées of the 20th century. But now, it has vanished once more.

Other pieces from Eugénie’s personal collection were taken as well, among them, a decorative diamond bow brooch with jeweled tassels comprising 2,438 diamonds and 196 rose-cut diamonds. 

Set of jewelry of Queen Marie-Amelie and Queen Hortense© STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN
Set of jewelry of Queen Marie-Amelie and Queen Hortense

Once the centerpiece of a belt, the intricate jewel has long been one of the Louvre’s most admired. Several reliquary brooches were also stolen, tiny masterpieces designed to hold sacred relics that reflected the Empress’s devout Catholic faith.

The thieves also took a sapphire parure once worn by Queen Hortense and Queen Marie-Amélie, a set of luminous blue stones and diamonds that trace France’s royal lineage. The tiara featured 24 Ceylon sapphires mined from what is now Sri Lanka, and a matching necklace and earrings that have adorned generations of queens. Only one sapphire earring from the set reportedly remains.

Necklace and earrings from the emerald set of Napoleon 1 s second wife Empress Marie Louise© MAEVA DESTOMBES
Necklace and earrings from the emerald set of Napoleon 1 s second wife Empress Marie Louise

Also among the missing is part of the emerald wedding gift Napoleon I commissioned for his second wife, Empress Marie Louise. The set features a necklace with 32 emeralds and 1,138 diamonds and a pair of matching earrings, joined the Louvre’s collection in 2004. 

The thieves left behind a single damaged treasure, the Crown of Empress Eugénie. The gold diadem, created in 1855 by Lemonnier and adorned with eight imperial eagles, 1,354 diamonds, 1,136 rose-cut diamonds, and 56 emeralds, was found just outside the museum. 

Marie Louise, Empress of the French (1791-1847) became the second wife of Napoleon I in 1810. © Print Collector
Marie Louise, Empress of the French (1791-1847) became the second wife of Napoleon I in 1810.

The Ministry of Culture confirmed that “two high-security display cases were targeted, and eight objects of invaluable cultural heritage were stolen.” The investigation, now handled by the Brigade de Répression du Banditisme, is being treated as an organized criminal conspiracy.

This isn’t the first time Europe’s royal gems have disappeared into criminal hands. In 2023, five men were convicted for a $123 million heist at Dresden’s Green Vault, where 21 diamond artifacts were taken, including a sword and hat clasp encrusted with hundreds of stones. 

The crown of the Empress of the French © STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN
The crown of the Empress of the French

Years before that, four people were arrested in England over the theft of the Portland Tiara, worn at the 1902 coronation of Edward VII. The French Crown Jewels, first assembled in the 16th century under King François I and expanded by Louis XIV, have long been targets for thieves and revolutionaries.

Much of the collection was dispersed during the Revolution and later sold by the Third Republic in 1887. 

© ¡HOLA! Reproduction of this article and its photographs in whole or in part is prohibited, even when citing their source.

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