The Hope Diamond has changed hands many times over the course of its documented history, and some of these exchanges have occurred by theft. The same could be said about its previous, undocumented history, also.
One look at the Hope and one can understand that for whatever other reason it has been stolen, it's beauty, size, and value are certainly primary motivators.
Stolen is the past participle.
The present perfect forms are have stolen and has stolen.Examples:They have stolen a statue from the park. (plural subject)He has stolen a statue from the park. (singular subject)
The past participle of "steal" is "stolen."
The word "stolen" is a verb form, or an adjective, and has no plural.
A person who deals in stolen goods is called a fence.
it was stolen because together with the diamond casket they were both worth a lot of money.
According to the legend, a curse befell the large, blue diamond when it was stolen from an idol in India - a curse that foretold bad luck and death not only for the owner of the diamond but for all who touched it.
The room the hope diamond is in is the room that has a sign that labeled "Hope Diamond".
The Hope probably originated in Golconda, India, with an undocumented provenance until it was sold by Jean Baptiste Tavernier to French Royalty in the 1600s. According to Wikipedia: "Though [Tavernier] is best known for the discovery and sale of the 118-carat (24 g) blue diamond that he subsequently sold to Louis XIV of France, was stolen in 1792 and re-emerged in London as The Hope Diamond..." You can read more about its physical characteristics and its ownership history, below.
There are 45.52 carats on the hope diamond
There is Western speculation -- probably formulated by Victorians in the late 1800s -- that the original stone was the "...eye of a sculpted statue of the goddess Sita, the wife of Rama, the seventh avatar of Vishnu" from which it was removed. As well, the stone may have been stolen from the French crown jewels -- according to speculation. You can read more, below.
The Hope Diamond is basically a blue diamond.
Forty-five carats is large for a diamond. You could scour auction venues to find a diamond of this weight, and bid to purchase it. You would pay not only for its carat weight, but its colour, its cut and its clarity. There are two notables of this weight, the Hope Diamond and the Marlborough Diamond. The Hope Diamond is safely held in the Smithsonian in Washington DC, and based on its history as a gift, is difficult to price. It is not for sale. The Marlborough Diamond was stolen, as below, in 1980, and was at the time valued at £400,000. As of 2010, the diamond has not been found. You can read more about both these diamonds, below.
You can see the Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, DC.
The Hope Diamond is not mentioned by that name in the movie Titanic. The stone that is given as a gift, however, bears a remarkable similarity to the Hope Diamond set in a diamond necklace.
Yes. Crown jewels were once stolen from Dublin castle. They have never been found.
All the carats in the Hope Diamond are classified as blue-gray.