The Amber room

the fate of the world's greatest lost treasure

The Amber Room was commissioned by Frederick I of Prussia in 1701 and given as a gift to Russia's Peter the Great. It remained as one of Russia's, and mankind's, greatest treasures for two hundred years until the Nazis invaded Russia. The vast, intricately worked panels of amber--many times more valuable than gold-- were wrenched from their walls, packed into crates, and taken to Konigsberg on the Baltic coast where they remained until the Nazi surrender in 1945. The real Amber Room has never been seen since, although there is a replica in Russia today.

Berkley Books
2005
9780425203781
book

Holdings

hidmidmiidnidwidlocation_codelocationbarcodecallnumdeweycreatedupdated
138223150416212192181617271074RHHS404T 35257940.53 SCO940.5315814652241708963493