art1701–175535% confidence

The Amber Room

by Andreas Schlüter (design), Gottfried Wolfram and Ernst Schacht (craftsmanship)

Reconstruction of The Amber Room
AI-assisted reconstruction — confidence: 35%

A chamber decorated with six tonnes of amber panels backed with gold leaf and mirrors, originally installed in the Catherine Palace near Saint Petersburg. Often called the "Eighth Wonder of the World," the room was a masterwork of Baroque decorative art.

Confidence Map

Each section of this reconstruction is graded by the strength of its supporting evidence. Hover over a section to learn why.

General Description

speculative

A chamber decorated with six tonnes of amber panels backed with gold leaf and mirrors, originally installed in the Catherine Palace near Saint Petersburg. Often called the "Eighth Wonder of the World,...

Based on 3 cited source(s) and overall exhibit confidence of 35%.

Historical Context

high

Commissioned in 1701 by Friedrich I of Prussia and designed by German Baroque sculptor Andreas Schlüter, the Amber Room was initially installed in the Berlin City Palace. In 1716, Prussian King Friedr...

Supported by multiple scholarly references.

Circumstances of Loss

medium

Looted and disassembled by Nazi Germany in 1941; lost during or after the fall of Königsberg in 1945

Loss date is documented, lending credibility to the account.

High — direct evidenceMedium — reasonable inferenceSpeculative — limited evidence

The Story of Loss

Cause: Looted and disassembled by Nazi Germany in 1941; lost during or after the fall of Königsberg in 1945

Circumstances: Last confirmed sighting in Königsberg Castle before Soviet forces captured the city. Whether destroyed by Allied bombing, hidden in underground tunnels, or lost at sea remains one of the great unsolved mysteries of World War II.

Date of loss: 1945

Historical Context

Commissioned in 1701 by Friedrich I of Prussia and designed by German Baroque sculptor Andreas Schlüter, the Amber Room was initially installed in the Berlin City Palace. In 1716, Prussian King Friedrich Wilhelm I gifted it to Tsar Peter the Great to cement a Russo-Prussian alliance against Sweden. Relocated to the Catherine Palace at Tsarskoye Selo, Italian designer Bartolomeo Francesco Rastrelli expanded the room to cover over 55 square metres. When Nazi forces occupied the palace in 1941, they disassembled the room in 36 hours and shipped it to Königsberg Castle. After Allied bombing in 1944 and the Soviet capture of Königsberg in April 1945, the room vanished. Despite decades of searches, its fate remains unknown. A painstaking reconstruction completed in 2003 now occupies the original site.

Reconstruction Methodology

This exhibit's reconstruction was generated using AI analysis of historical records, scholarly references, and contextual evidence from the 1701–1755 period. Each section of the reconstruction is tagged with a confidence level reflecting the strength of the underlying evidence.

Vestige reconstructions are scholarly tools, not definitive claims. They represent our best understanding given available evidence and are always presented with transparent methodology.

Cited Sources

  1. 1

    The Amber Room: The Fate of the World's Greatest Lost Treasure

    Catherine Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy (2004)

  2. 2

    Das Bernsteinzimmer: Drei Jahrhunderte Geschichte

    Guido Hinterkeuser (2003)

  3. 3

    The Mystery of the Amber Room

    Smithsonian Magazine (2007)