Notes
The Maharaja of Patiala is portrayed on these two watches in
full attire, with a magnificent sarpech and necklace, and he is
also wearing several medals and decorations including "The
Star of India", which he was awarded on May 28, 1870.
The Maharaja's full title was: Lieut.-Gen. H. H. Farzand-i-Khas-i-
Daulat-i-Inglishia, Mansure-i-Zaman, Amir-it-Umra, Maharaja
Dhiraj Raj Rajeshwar Shree, Maharaja-i-Rajgan Maharaja Sir
Bhupinclra Singh, Mohinder Bahaclur, Yadu Vanshavatans
Bhatti Kul Bhushan, Maharaja Dhiraj of Patiala, G.C.S.I.,
G.C.I.E., G.C.V.O., G.B.E. He was ruling Prince of Patiala State
from 1891 to 1938.
The Princely State of Patiala is in the Punjab, in N. W. India, and
was the largest Sikh State. The British occupied Punjab in 1849
and later designated it a province.
The Maharaja of Patiala appreciated precious objects, jewelry
and of course watches. From about 1925 he is known to have
been one of the great clients of Cartier and indeed
commissioned Cartier to remodel his crown jewels, probably the
biggest commission of all time in terms of quality and quantity.
In 1929, before consigning the elegant reworkings to the Moti
Bagh Palace in Patiala, Cartier organised a splendid exhibition
of the Maharaja's jewels, in Paris, at the rue de la Paix, which
attracted wide publicity.
As mentioned in an article in the Antiquarian Horology issue of
December 1984, page 156, the Maharaja had many interests
among which "shooting, cricket, polo and motoring, and he was
one of the first in India to have an automobile, a French De
Dion Bouton in 1898. IIe was also the first Indian prince to have
a 20 h.p. Rolls Royce; a 1922 Barker Tourer on a chassis 42 G2.
Nine further examples of this model were added to his
collection which at one time totalled thirty eight Rolls Royce
cars!"
Literature:
Antiquarian Horology, Number Two, Volume Fifteen, December
1984, pp. 147-156, article entitled "A Rare Complicated Watch
By Piguet, circa 1910" by R. Good. The front cover of this issue
of Antiquarian Horology features a portrait of The Maharajah of
Patiala.
: The information quoted from the December 1984 issue of
Antiquarian Horology, came from John M. Fasal's book The Rolls
Royce Twenty, published by the author in 1979.
Cartier; Le Joaillier du Platine, by Franco Cologni and Eric
Nussbaum, La Bibliotheque des Arts, Paris, Lausanne, 1995,
p. 39, illustrated on p. 34.
The Magical Art of Cartier; thematic auction catalogue by
Antiquorum and Etude Tajan, Geneva, November 19, 1996,
p. 265.