Cartier Heir Retraces Family History in Bahrain

By Moonbox News November 30, 2022

Manama, Bahrain – 30 November 2022: An heir of the Cartier family has retraced her  grandfather’s landmark visit to Bahrain that took place 110 years ago, the first time the  jeweler visited the Middle East. 

Hosted by the Bahrain Institute for Pearls and Gemstones (Danat), Francesca Cartier  Brickell spent a week in the Kingdom. She visited the pearling path around Muharraq  Governorate and the diving and natural pearl extraction areas, and learned about the developments that have occurred in the field of pearl extraction over the past century and Bahrain’s role in reviving and preserving the trade. The area has been designated a  UNESCO World Heritage Site, reflecting a cultural tradition that dominated the Arabian  Gulf from prehistory to the early 20th century.  

Cartier Brickell also recreated a picture taken of Bahrain’s merchant families with her grandfather Jacques, who visited Bahrain in 1912 to gain direct access to natural pearls that featured in 80 per cent of Cartier’s jewellery. She sat in the same position as her grandfather, flanked by the grandchildren of those who appeared in the original photo.  In the original photo, from right to left, we see Yousif bin Ahmed Kanoo, Salman bin  Hussain Mattar, Jacques Cartier, Muqbel bin Abdulrahman Al Thakir, and Abdulrahman  Al Ibrahim.

The current photo shows Fawzi bin Ahmed Kanoo, Ibrahim bin Khalifa  Mattar, Francesca Cartier, Muqbel bin Salman Al-Thukair and Omar bin Yousif Al Thukair (grandson of the Al Ibrahim family). 

Her tour included attending the Jewellery Arabia Exhibition, where she gave a lecture and signed copies of her book, The Cartiers, which chronicles the history of her family and its role in the jewellery trade. Cartier was the jeweller to the British Empire, and arguably the most famous jeweler of the time. Jacques Cartier was the last family member to manage the Cartier jewellery and watches brand. 

Bahrain has been known since antiquity for its pearl fisheries, widely considered the best in the world. Assyrian texts from 2000 BC referred to “fish eyes” from Dilmun (the ancient name of Bahrain). In Roman times, naturalist Pliny described Tylos (the island’s  Greek appellation) as a place “famous for the vast number of its pearls”. “Natural pearls were like magnets” for the world’s wealthiest women, Cartier Brickell writes in her book. 

“In the early twentieth century, a perfect pearl was considered the most valuable object  in the world.” 

“Francesca Cartier Brickell traveled to Bahrain to retrace her great grandfather’s journey 110 years ago. The black and white photograph of Jacques Cartier seated next to pearl merchants from 1912 transports us back to a time when natural pearls were the gemstones sought after by royalty. It is a photograph that depicts a brand’s quest for the greatest pearls from the primary source, which is a testament to excellence,” said Noora  Jamsheer, CEO of Danat. “Although natural pearls are no longer the most popular gemstone in jewelry, oyster beds continue to produce magnificent lustrous pearls in fresh and salt-water beds all over the world. Today, Bahrain is the only country that protects  natural pearl beds and enforces sustainable pearl fishing practices, which were  developed following the launch of the Government of Bahrain’s National Plan to Revive  the Pearl Sector in 2016.”

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