
Marie Antoinette's lock of white hair sold for €7,500
A locket containing what is said to be a lock of Marie-Antoinette's hair, cut hours before she was guillotined in 1793, has been sold for €7,500.
According to legend, the hair of the 37-year-old queen turned white overnight owing to the stress of her impending execution. The lock, tied with a ribbon and black thread, is indeed white. The buyer at auction was anonymous.
The brass locket, slightly damaged on the back, also contains a handwritten note bearing the words: 'The hair of Marie-Antoinette, Queen of France, was given to me by a Commune [revolutionary government] prosecutor in charge of inspections of the Temple prison at the time when this unfortunate woman was detained there.'
The author of the note is unknown. Jean-Pierre Osenat, the

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Daily Mail
2 hours ago
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Small boats? Now migrants are coming by luxury yacht, writes SUE REID. So are the numbers arriving EVEN WORSE than we think?
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This week, we found the Tacoma back in Brest, a couple of hundred yards from Roue's office. After 52 days impounded in Cornwall by Border Force, she was sailed back to France by a crew from the charter company a few days ago. The incident has led British and French immigration authorities to sound the alarm over French charter yachts being targeted to bring migrants into the UK. A 'high alert' has been sent out by the French customs authority to all charter boat companies along the Brittany coast, warning them to be vigilant about migrant- smuggling gangs who may try to hire, or simply steal, their yachts. Meanwhile, British Border Force is using extra surveillance to check pleasure craft arriving at UK ports, private marinas and remote inlets from France, Belgium and the Netherlands. The force is responsible for securing the 11,000 miles of British coastline. 'We patrol 24/7, carrying out proactive, as well as reactive, operations,' Charlie Eastaugh, its director of maritime, told the BBC after the Tacoma incident. But he added that there are hundreds of harbours and marinas in the UK, and it would not be a reasonable expectation to have a 'fixed presence' in all of them. A recent BBC exposé about a British ex-soldier and yachtsman known by the pseudonym of Nick, who smuggled hundreds of clandestine passengers – many Albanian and Vietnamese – into private marinas at seaside towns across south-east England, had also identified 'vulnerabilities' in the system, said Mr Eastaugh. A Home Office statement about the Tacoma migrants explained: 'This case shows that while small-boat Channel crossings remain under close scrutiny, people- smuggling gangs are adapting their methods, using pleasure craft to try to evade detection.' The Mail has discovered that this vessel is not the only Brittany yacht used for migrant journeys this spring. 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They are likely to face deportation. Meanwhile, an investigation is under way into the crew who sailed the boat to Britain. Two of them are Albanian men in their 30s who have been named publicly and pleaded guilty in April at Bodmin magistrates' court to breaching previous UK deportation orders. They are due to be sentenced in the near future. As for the missing 'Austrian' mastermind of the Tacoma operation (which stood to reap £250,000 from the migrants on board), he may never be found. The passport and maritime certificate he handed over to Mr Roue's charter boat company could have been faked or stolen. 'They looked genuine, but we just don't know,' Mr Roue said. 'Although I was the person who alerted your British Border Force, it has charged us for every day the Tacoma was impounded in Cornwall during a police investigation. 'When we sailed the yacht back, she was in good order considering how many Albanian migrants were found below deck on a sea journey that takes at least 20 hours.' His company has been operating boat charters for nearly 40 years. 'This is the first time that we have had a yacht taken by gangsters.


The Independent
5 hours ago
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Telegraph
5 hours ago
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I've lost everything, says Romanian wrongly arrested for Ballymena attempted rape
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