PAST EXHIBITION

Saxon Stones

While discussing the great collectors of minerals in Dresden, the secretary of the chancellery, Jean-Auguste Lehninger, cited the following in his 1782 Description of the City of Dresden: "At Neuber's, jeweler of the Court, there are many rare and beautiful stones, and all kinds of jewelry, especially a superb collection of snuffboxes made of various stones—a kind of mosaic—that surprises every connoisseur with whom Sr Neuber makes a considerable trade." The great success of Johann Christian Neuber's Steinkabinettabatieres (stone cabinet snuffboxes) and his personal interest in minerals led him to seek his own source for the stones. In 1775, Friedrich Augustus III awarded him the concession of a mine near Schlottwitz, south of Dresden, a region famous for the diversity and superior quality of its rocks.

All the specimens came from the American Museum of Natural History, New York.

  • agate stone

    Agate
    Oberstein, Germany
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

  • jasper stone

    Jasper
    Saxony, Germany
    Maybe stone no. 72 in the Breteuil Table
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

  • jasper stone with horizontal striations

    Jasper from Frobburg
    Saxony, Germany
    Probably stone no. 106 in the Breteuil Table
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

  • red jasper stone

    Red jasper from Altenberg
    Saxony, Germany
    Stone no. 27 in the Breteuil Table
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

  • agate stone

    Agate
    Oberstein, Germany
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

  • agate stone with orange at center

    Agate
    Oberstein, Germany
    American Museum of Natural History, New York
    Photo Michael Bodycomb

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