Rita Necklace

Rita Necklace

£250.00 inc VAT

This necklace covers shades of pinks including golds, lilac beads and pale brown stones.

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Out of stock

Utterly unique this Rita necklace is exclusively available in the UK through Abrahams Store. Palizzi Jewellery originates from the toe of Italy. These beautifully crafted items are truly unique, allowing you to stand out from the crowd, anywhere.

Creator Adriana says “Palizzi is a different brand of jewellery. We steer away from easily identifiable trends and place more value in creativity and expression. Each piece, from earrings to necklaces is a unique handmade product arid so it is easy to view Palizzi jewellery as being wearable art. The use of completely natural and often recycled materials further consolidates the synergy with nature and the environment that Palizzi represents.The area in Southern Italy which Palizzi calls its home has historically been rife with artistic culture. Palizzi follows in the footsteps of the many artists and artisans who have nurtured this tradition into a way of life.

In a fashion and design landscape where many trends appear the same and concepts blend into one another, Palizzi aims to make a unique mark. The colours and shapes are unmistakably inspired by Mediterranean landscapes and cultures that made this part of Italy so artistic. The use of crochet technique with recycled copper brass or silver wire creates complex interlaced structures. Into these semi-precious stones crystals, pearls, natural vintage and recycled minerals are fixed in an intricate process.”

Coat of arms of Calabria

Palizzi is one of only two places in Italy where what is effectively a Greek dialect is spoken. Learn more about this ancient place here.


One of the most famous necklaces in history was the “Queens Necklace”. However despite the billing it was fated never to be the property of a Queen.

A Queens Ransom ?

Commissioned by Louis XV for his mistress Madame du Barry, making the necklace placed the jewellers, Boehmer and Bassenge in considerable debt.

Before the necklace it was completed, Louis XV died from natural causes. So poor Jeanne never received her gift. (Ultimately all she got was a pain in the neck along with many other ‘aristos’.)

When complete, the Queen’s Necklace contained no less than 647 diamonds and weighed 2,840 carats.  The jewellers were keen to sell the necklace that they valued at 1.7 million livres, enough “to buy 4 chateaux in the Ile de France”. Marie-Antoinette was Queen to Louis XVI of France and the daughter of Empress Maria Teresea of Austria. However, even she, with something of a reputation for profligacy, turned it down on grounds of cost.

The Con is On

Into the story then came a con artist, “Countess” de la Motte and Cardinal Rohan the Bishop of  Strasbourg. (Is this the original actress and the bishop story ?). Rohan had been Ambassador to Austria and had upset Maria Therese, the Empress of Austria (also Marie Aintoinette’s mum). So when he returned to Paris, he was out of favour at court. Then he met the “Countess” who offered him the opportunity to regain influence. The “Countess”, persuading Rohan that she was the Queen’s friend, arranged a meeting .

In a night time assignation Rohan spoke to a lady whom he believed to be the Queen who agreed a price. So Rohan, believing he was acting for the Queen, brokered a deal with the Jewellers for the Necklace. With the assurance of “the Queen” the jewellers handed over the necklace to the “Countess” who promptly disappeared along with the jewels.  The affair only came to light when the Jewellers had to ask the Queen for the promised payment. Rohan was arrested and jailed but was eventually cleared.

It is thought that the necklace taken to London where it was broken up and the whereabouts of the individual diamonds remains a mystery. Marie-Antoinette lost her head to the guillotine 1793.  Although innocent in this instance, the perceived excesses of the French Aristocracy and Monarchy caught up with them.

In 2001, the movie “The Affair of the Necklace”, starring Hilary Swank and Jonathan Price dramatised the story. Sadly, despite being a great and true story, the film attracted a number of ‘golden raspberries’.

A Literary Theft

Is Arsène Lupin the same character as the “gentleman burglar” A J Raffles ? Lupin is the French character invented in the early 20th Century by Maurice Leblanc while Raffles was created by E W Hornung in the late 19th.  Leblanc wrote a story entitled “The Queen’s Necklace” in 1905 about the theft of the ‘recovered’ necklace from the Louvre Museum in Paris.  Lupin became a prolific character in French literature, comic books, film, TV and stage. More like, maybe, a French Sherlock Holmes. Indeed on several occasions Holmes and Lupin lock horns.

A contemporary theft

Rolling forward to 2021, Netflix have produced a series called Lupin, in which Omar Sy, the eponymous hero, steals the Queen’s Necklace from the Louvre.  No golden raspberries here and I’d recommend this series to anyone. Omar Sy is also the star of (and won a Cesar for) Untouchable – another brilliant French film. It is a bit of a dark comedy in the way that only the French can do but quite excellent and uplifting.

See the range of exclusive necklaces available from Abrahams Store, here.

See the range of horn necklaces available from Abrahams Store, here.

Marie Antoinette
Marie Antoinette, Queen of France
The Queen's Necklace
The Queen's Necklace
Lupin, Gentleman Thief
Arsene Lupin - Gentleman Thief
Omar Sy
Omar Sy, latest incarnation of Lupin