
Missing Masterpieces
Dark Secrets and Vanished Paintings
Kenneth MacInnes(Author)
Amberley Publishing
Published on 15. January 2026
Book
Hardback
288 pages
978-1-3981-0602-4 (ISBN)
Description
As auction prices continue to climb and the super-rich continue to use works of great beauty of investment vehicles, it is impossible not to speculate about the fates of the hundreds of antiques, jewels and paintings that have gone missing over the past thousand years... Where are the world's lost masterpieces?
Paintings once seized by the Nazis as spoils of war are now worth up to $100 million each. 100,000 works of Depression-era art in the United States are missing, valued at around $1 billion. Priceless Chinese antiques, Middle Eastern treasures and legendary Romanov diamonds have been plundered by invaders and lost in countless bloody revolutions.
This book tells the story of stolen heirlooms, daring heists, fabled gems, dark secrets and vanished paintings now worth a small - or sometimes very large - fortune.
Paintings once seized by the Nazis as spoils of war are now worth up to $100 million each. 100,000 works of Depression-era art in the United States are missing, valued at around $1 billion. Priceless Chinese antiques, Middle Eastern treasures and legendary Romanov diamonds have been plundered by invaders and lost in countless bloody revolutions.
This book tells the story of stolen heirlooms, daring heists, fabled gems, dark secrets and vanished paintings now worth a small - or sometimes very large - fortune.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Chalford
United Kingdom
Illustrations
8 Plates, color
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-3981-0602-4 (9781398106024)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Kenneth MacInnes has edited or translated more than 350 books from Russian into English, and has translated several works of English literature into Russian - including the novels of George Orwell. He has read papers on Anglo-Russian history at the annual foreign language conference of the Academy of Sciences in St Petersburg.