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Volume 4 The First High School Student The Five Cursed Gems in the World

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    The Mountain of Light is the world's oldest and preserved giant diamond "Koinol", which means "Mountain of Light" in Persian.  It weighs 105.6 carats, originated in Golconda, India, and ranks 33rd among the world's famous diamonds.  This large diamond was originally owned by the Mughal Emperor of India, but was taken away by the Persian Emperor Nadir in 1739.  When Nadir was assassinated in 1747, the nobleman Abedel took advantage of it and seized the diamond.  In 1849, during the Punjab War when the British annexed India, the British Governor-General Lord Dash seized this gem and later donated it to Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, where it became the most dazzling gemstone on the top cross of the Queen's crown.  However, the Queen was attacked twice as a result.  Scarab-shaped jewelry Scarab-shaped jewelry originally circulated in Egypt after it was stolen from Tutankhamen's tomb.  Later, a South African sailor won it from the gambling table and brought it to South Africa.  Not long after the sailor gave this ornament to his daughter, he died at sea.  Days after the sailor's body washed up on the shore, his daughter also died of leukemia.  In grief, Mo Zi began to search for information about Tutankhamun on the Internet. In the end, she felt that returning the "Scarab" ornament to the Egyptian Palace might be the only way to break the "Pharaoh's Curse", so she asked the Egyptian culture  The ministry wrote a letter asking for help.  Eye of the Creator The black diamond "Eye of the Creator" weighs 67.5 carats. It was originally the eye of the Hindu god Brahma. It originally weighed 195 carats and was later quietly removed by a money-grubbing monk.  Philip Ming.  From then on, people began to spread that this incident was blamed by the gods and a curse was placed on the black diamond.  The three owners of the diamond encountered misfortune. First, the Russian princesses Nadia and Leonilla died shortly after they obtained it. Parris, a jeweler in New York, USA, later bought the diamond at a high price and resold it.  Later, after making a lot of money, he suddenly committed suicide for unknown reasons.  What's even more bizarre is that Tuan Tisa chose to end his life in a trap.  Hope Blue Diamond 300 years ago, a huge blue diamond was discovered in India. After rough bismuth treatment, it weighed 112.5 carats.  After the Louis XIV era, the French jeweler Tarvoni exchanged emeralds for this diamond from local princes and nobles in India.  Later, this blue diamond fell into the hands of King Louis of France and was named the "Crown Blue Diamond".  Shortly thereafter, Louis' favorite grandson died suddenly, and his early glorious achievements began to fade.  Later, Tavone was said to have been killed by a wild dog in Russia.  Shortly after Louis XVI obtained the "Crown Blue Diamond", he, Emperor Mary and Antony were guillotined in the storm of the French Revolution.  During the Revolution of 1792, the French treasury was robbed, and the whereabouts of this blue diamond were unknown for a time.  In 1830, this eight-year-old blue diamond was rediscovered in the Netherlands and belonged to a diamond cutter named Wilhelm Foers.  Later, his son Chauchelik stole the diamond from him and took it to London.  There, his son committed suicide, and no one knew why.  A few years later, British jewelry collector Henry Philippe Hope bought the diamond, and the diamond was named "Hope" from then on.  In 1839, Old Hope died suddenly, and his nephew Thomas Hope inherited the "Hope" diamond.  In this world, the "Hope" diamond was bought by a businessman named Jie Shiluo. He committed suicide inexplicably not long after.  The diamond was bought by the Russian Kanzhuvsky, who was stabbed to death soon after.  The next owner of the "Hope" diamond was businessman Habib Bay. Shortly after he sold it to a man named Simon, he and his family drowned in the sea near Gibraltar.  After Simon sold the diamond to Turkish Sultan Abdal II, he fell down a cliff and died in a car accident.  After seizing this priceless treasure, Abdal Sultan was deposed by the Turkish Shabab in 1909.  "Hope" was later quietly sold to Washington-based publisher Evelyn Walls MacLean for $154,000.  When they went to see the Kentucky Derby in 1918, their 19-year-old son escaped from his bodyguards in Washington and ran into the street and was run over by a car.  Shortly thereafter, he began drinking heavily, eventually losing his sanity and newspaper career, and one of their daughters died from an accidental overdose of sleeping pills.  The Murderous Mirror In 1997, a French antique collector issued an incredible warning to reporters - telling antique collectors not to buy a mirror with a history of more than 250 years, because it is a "magic mirror" that can kill people.  .  The words "Louis Albo 1743" are written on the frame of this "magic mirror".  Anyone who looks into this mirror will die from a massive brain hemorrhage.  In the more than 250 years since its birth, the "Magic Mirror" has killed a total of 38 people.  In fact, it is not the mirror that kills people (book fan Ni.), but the frame. The frame is made of an extinct tree and emits highly toxic gas when exposed to light.
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