The robbery at the Louvre has done what no marketing campaign ever could: It has catapulted France’s dusty Crown Jewel s — long admired at home, little known abroad — to global fame.
One week on, the country is still wounded by the breach to its national heritage — even as authorities Sunday announced arrests tied to the haul.
Yet the crime is also a paradox. Some say it will make celebrities of the very jewels it sought to erase — much as the Mona Lisa’s turn-of-the-20th-century theft transformed the then little-known Renaissance portrait into the world’s most famous artwork.
In 1911, a museum handyman lifted the Leonardo da Vinci masterpiece off its hook. The loss went unnoticed for more than a day; newspapers turned it into a global mystery, and crowds came to stare at the empt

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