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Sonata Cathedral

Rare & Collectible! Kremlin Set

GMT Perpetual Calendars
GMT +/- Perpetual 38.5mm
GMT +/- Perpetual 40mm
GMT +/- Perpetual 42mm - Limited

GMT Dual Time & Big Date
New! Executive Dual Time 43mm
GMT Big Date 40mm
GMT Big Date 42mm
GMT Lady Dual Time 37mm

New! Quadrato Series
Quadrato Dual Time Perpetual
Quadrato Dual Time

Marine Series
Ladies Marine Diver 40mm
Maxi Marine Chronograph 41mm
BLUE SEAL Limited Edition - Maxi Marine Chrono
Maxi Marine Chronometer 41mm
Maxi Marine Chronometer 43mm
Maxi Marine Diver Chronograph
New! Maxi Marine Diver Titanium 45mm
Maxi Marine Diver 42.7mm
Marine Diver 40mm
Marine Aqua Perpetual
Anniversary 160 Limited Edition

Macho Palladium 950

Caprice - Ladies

Ulysse
Ulysse I
Ulysse I Limited Edition

Michelangelo
Michelangelo Chronograph
Michelangelo Big Date
Michelangelo UTC Dual Time
Michelangelo Lady
Michelangelo Mid size

Michelangelo Gigante
Michelangelo Gigante Chronometer
Michelangelo Gigante UTC

Ludovico Perpetual

Minute Repeater & Hour Striker - Specialties

The Freak 28'800
 
Ulysse Nardin was born in Le Locle, Switzerland in 1823. Following in his father's footsteps, he trained as a "remonteur" and eventually set up his own workshop. In 1846, the Ulysse Nardin Company was founded. Little more than a counter, its watches displayed high-quality craftsmanship and were signed by their maker. It was the beginning of an enterprise that has lasted more than 150 years. Nardin's first watches were sold in Central and South American through a Paris go-between, Lucien Dubois, who was Nardin's only customer for two years. In 1860, Nardin moved into a larger factory and the firm became known as "Ulysse Nardin, fabricant d'horlogerie sur les Recues 33". He also acquired a high-precision astronomical regulator to rate his pocket chronometers. This is the well-known regulator constructed by Jacques-Frederic Houriet in 1768. It is now in a museum in Le Locle. Minute repeaters, highly complicated watches and pocket chronometers carry the reputation of the House far and wide, so much so that the United States became a viable market for the young firm's products in the early 1860's.

In 1862, Nardin received the "Prize Medal" - the highest possible honor - at the London International Exhibition, in the category of "complicated watches, pocket chronometers". This award put the watchmaker in the lead internationally among pocket chronometer makers. Three years later, the company moved again, this time to its present location at 3 Rue du Jardin. Thanks to its reputation as the leading maker of chronometers, the business expanded. Unfortunately, Nardin was felled by a heart attack in 1876, prompting his 21 year old son, Paul-David Nardin, to take control of the company. Paul-David Nardin proved himself an able leader, as the firm won a Gold Medal at the Paris Universal Exhibition in 1878, was awarded two Swiss patents in 1890, won First Prize at the Chicago Universal Exhibition in 1893 with a magnificent chronometer made of silver and gold, constructed nine pocket chronometers with tourbillion escapements - the list goes on and on. By 1915, the standards of the firm was so high that at the Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C., Ulysse Nardin took first place among 60 marine chronometers entered. In the same trial, the company took three of the first five places among 217 deck watches entered. To put the accomplishments of this firm into proper perspective, the Neuchatel Observatory published its last official publication concerning the performance of chronometers in 1975. (The performance of mechanical timepieces was no longer relevant when quartz watches became commercially available.) According to the official reports during this period, Ulysse Nardin obtained: 4,324 certificates of performance for mechanical marine chronometers out of a total of 4,504 awarded (approximately 95%); 2,411 prizes of which 1,069 were First Prizes and which include four series prizes awarded to chronometers heading the list; 747 First Prizes in the categories deck watch, pocket chronometer and wristwatch; and lastly, in various exhibitions. Like many great Swiss brands, the 1970's were not kind to Ulysse Nardin and the firm fell on hard times. But in 1983, an investment group headed by Rolf Schnyder purchased Ulysse Nardin and launched the famous Astrolabium Galileo Galilei series. Named after the great physicist, astronomer and humanist, the watch was a remarkable improvement on the perpetual calendar and allowed the firm to recapture its past glory. The watch even made it into the Guinness Book of World Records in February, 1989. Since then, Ulysse Nardin has produced the San Marco, a limited edition minute repeater wristwatch available in gold or platinum, as well as the Tellurium Johannes Kepler and the patented GMT watch, which is intended for frequent travelers. In 1996, the company's 150th Anniversary was celebrated with the introduction of the marine Chronometer 1846 as a wristwatch and the revolutionary Perpetual Ludwig was named after its creator, the brilliant and talented watchmaker/scientist, Dr. Ludwig Oechslin, the man behind the Astolabium series. The single-button chronograph "Pulsometer" to commemorate Ulysse Nardin's birth in 1823 was introduced in 1998, yet this was eclipsed the following year when the firm debuted the GMT Perpetual, two unique and exclusive Ulysse Nardin creations integrated into one watch. No doubt the future will bring more delightful innovations from this highly prestigious watch manufactory, but what is certain to remain consistent is the company's dedication to producing only the finest quality timepieces.