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The Cartier family built a $4 billion jewelry empire from scratch, creating pieces so magnificent that King Edward VII called them the "jeweller of kings and the king of jewellers." Their workshops created jewelry that crowned kings and adorned empresses, with clients including Princess Mathilde, Empress Eugénie, Grace Kelly, and Elizabeth Taylor. ------------------- The Swarovski Family: How Crystals Built a $4 Billion Empire -- • The Swarovski Family: How Crystals Built a... ------------------- The Secretive Wealthy Family That Owns Zara: The $134 Billion Ortega Dynasty -- • The Secretive Wealthy Family That Owns Zar... ------------------- TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introduction 1:05 Chapter 1: The Jeweled Throne of Europe 4:32 Chapter 2: From Dirt Poor to Diamond Rich 7:43 Chapter 3: Three Brothers Split the World 11:28 Chapter 4: When Success Becomes a Curse 15:33 Chapter 5: The Great Sellout ------------------- The empire began with Louis-François Cartier, born in 1819 Paris to a metalworker father whose family lived in poverty and desperation. His big break came when he apprenticed under Adolphe Picard, whose workshop on Rue Montorgueil transformed rough stones into objects that wealthy women coveted. In 1847, Louis-François bought Picard's workshop, betting his entire future on his ability to turn stones and metal into wealth. By 1859, he had opened a boutique on Boulevard des Italiens during Napoleon III's reign, positioning himself where the emperor's crowd shopped. The game-changing moment came in 1856 when Princess Mathilde brought him a broken necklace that other jewelers said couldn't be fixed. When Princess Mathilde told her friends about his amazing work, it spread through aristocratic circles, opening doors to empresses and duchesses. Alfred Cartier raised three sons who became the perfect team for world domination: Louis, Pierre, and Jacques divided up the planet like a board game. Louis took Europe and set up headquarters on Rue de la Paix in 1899, revolutionizing the industry by working with platinum and creating the Tank watch. Pierre conquered America starting in 1909, targeting the biggest names like the Astors, Vanderbilts, and Rockefellers. His masterpiece was trading a pearl necklace for a Manhattan mansion, securing prime real estate on Fifth Avenue through sheer audacity. Jacques opened his London operation in 1902, timing it perfectly with King Edward's coronation when everyone needed ceremonial jewelry. He made dangerous trips to India, charming maharajas into showing him treasure rooms filled with rubies and emeralds collected over centuries. Their most spectacular creation was the Patiala Necklace, commissioned in 1925 by the Maharaja of Patiala for one billion rupees—worth $2.5 billion today. King Edward VII gave them an official royal warrant in 1904, with royal courts across Europe following England's lead. Death hit the dynasty hard, taking Jacques in 1941 and Louis in 1942, leaving Pierre to balance global operations alone during World War II. The fourth generation inherited massive wealth without understanding the brutal work that had created it, treating their inheritance like a trust fund. These descendants had grown up rich and comfortable, never knowing what it felt like to be hungry enough to work eighteen-hour days. Pierre's death in 1964 was like pulling the keystone out of an arch, causing everything the family had built to start crumbling. Claude Cartier fired the first shot in the family retreat, selling the New York operations in 1962 before Pierre had even died. The remaining heirs couldn't agree on what Cartier should become, each having different ideas that made unified strategy impossible. The Paris headquarters fell in 1972 when Robert Hocq bought it for $12.8 million—a fraction of what the business was worth. London was sold in 1974, and the final piece disappeared in 1976 when all branches were reunited under professional management. By 1979, all three branches had been united under Cartier Monde, but the founding family had been completely eliminated from the company. Under the Swiss Richemont Group, Cartier became more successful than ever, now worth $12.2 billion and generating $6.2 billion in annual revenue. The company operates over 200 stores in 125 countries, creating wealth that makes the original family fortune look like pocket change. The Cartier story stands as the ultimate warning about what happens when people inherit empires they never had to build—sometimes the greatest enemy of a dynasty is internal indifference.