A genuine Stradivarius? No way

Published: Friday, Aug. 31 2007 12:32 a.m. MDT

The 'Stradivarius model' violin was probably made in Germany at the turn of the 20th century or later. Its value is about $300.

Scripps Howard News Service

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Dear Helaine and Joe: My mother's father found this violin while cleaning out a house in 1961. Inside the violin, there is a label that reads "Antonius Stradivarius Cremonensis Faciebat Anno 1716" followed by a symbol. I would like to know the value and whether it is authentic.

Thank you. — B.P., Melrose, Ill.

Dear B.P.: Even though no one is sure of the exact month and day, Antonio Stradivari is said to have been born in 1644. Some believe he might have learned his craft from Nicolo Amanti, but again, no one is sure, and this detail is hotly contested.

In any event, Stradivari set up his own shop in 1680 in the town of Cremona, Italy, as a "luthier" — or maker of stringed instruments. We tend to think of Stradivari as being a maker of violins, but he also created cellos, violas, guitars, mandolins, and there is even one extant example of a small harp (he is said to have made three).

His earlier instruments (made from 1680 to 1700) are thought to be inferior to his later pieces, and the so-called "Golden Age" of Stradivari-made stringed instruments is said to be from 1700 to 1720 (he died on Dec. 18, 1737). Stradivari used spruce, willow and maple to make his pieces, and he treated the wood with a variety of minerals including "bianca," which is a varnish composed of egg white, gum Arabic and honey.

Over the years since the master made them, these instruments have developed so that they produce a superior tone that many have tried to emulate.

Because of this superior tone and workmanship, musicians want to own a Stradivarius and they are willing to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for examples made before 1700 and millions for those made during the 1700 to 1720 golden age.

In 2006, a Stradivarius (the Latinized form of Stradivari's surname) known as "The Hammer," which was made in 1707, sold at auction for $3,544,000. It is reported that other Stradivarius instruments have sold privately for more.

OK, what are the chances of B.P.'s violin being an authentic "Stradivarius?" worth big bucks? The answer is simple — absolutely none whatsoever. This is a Stradivarius model violin that was probably made in Germany at the turn of the 20th century or even a bit later.

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