Famous Diamonds: The Taylor-Burton Diamond

Like the famous Elizabeth Taylor Diamond, the Taylor-Burton Diamond was another of Richard Burton’s extravagant gifts to wife Elizabeth Taylor during their public and tumultuous marriages. It’s also the final famous diamond in our series.

Photo by Gianni Bozzacchi. Reprinted by permission.

Photo by Gianni Bozzacchi. Reprinted by permission.

The couple’s emotionally-charged private life often drew more attention than their movie roles, and their luxurious tastes, Taylor’s love for diamonds especially, were legendary.

The 69.42-carat diamond is a D-color, flawless, pear-shape with 58 facets and was graded by GIA. Following its discovery in South Africa in 1966, it was cut by Harry Winston and eventually sold to Cartier for $1.05 million in 1969. Burton purchased the diamond the very next day for an estimated $1.1 million (the exact amount has never been disclosed), Crowds lined the streets for the chance to catch a glimpse of the famous diamond before Burton picked up the gift for Taylor.

The expensive gift was just one of many exchanged between Taylor and Burton during their first marriage. Taylor originally wore the diamond in a ring, but eventually had it redesigned by Cartier into a necklace. During her ownership of the famous gem from 1969 to 1978, Elizabeth Taylor wore the beautiful necklace to the 1970 Academy Awards. She later sold the necklace and donated part of the proceeds to help fund a hospital in Botswana.

Main image courtesy of Mouawad.

  • RyanTee82

    D color? All the sources I’ve read have said F-G color. Still as very white stone, but not the same grade

    • giamktg

      GIA created the 4Cs (Color, Clarity, Cut and Carat Weight) as a
      universal method for establishing the quality of any diamond, anywhere
      in the world. The 4Cs means two very important things: diamond quality
      can be communicated in a universal language, and diamond-buying
      consumers can know exactly what they are about to purchase.

      Color is just one of the many factors that go into diamond quality, and each of the quality factors should be considered together.

      Ultimately, when buying a diamond, you should buy what you love.

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