Archives for 2017
Jewels of Holyrood Week
Mark Runnacles/Getty Images |
The Queen is in Scotland for her annual week-in-residence at the Palace of Holyroodhouse, the official residence of the British monarch in Edinburgh. Here’s a look at the jewels she wore during the first three days of Holyrood Week.
Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images |
On Monday, the Queen attended the traditional Ceremony of the Keys at Holyroodhouse, where she inspected the guard of honor, Balaklava Company, The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 5th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland.
Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images |
For the engagement, she wore a jewel-encrusted military badge. This is the cap badge of the Royal Regiment of Scotland. HM is their Colonel-in-Chief.
JANE BARLOW/AFP/Getty Images |
The Duke of Edinburgh accompanied the Queen to a garden party at Holyroodhouse on Tuesday. As you can see above, the Duke of York also attended, as did Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon. Andrew’s regular presence with his parents these days seems like something akin to job shadowing, as I expect him to accompany his mother on many of her engagements after his father’s retirement later this year.
JANE BARLOW/AFP/Getty Images |
For the garden party, the Queen wore the Centenary Rose Brooch, which she gave to her late mother, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, in honor of the latter’s hundredth birthday. When the Queen Mother died less than two years later, the Queen inherited the brooch.
JANE BARLOW/AFP/Getty Images |
Here’s a closer look at the brooch. The rose on the brooch is hand-painted on a rock crystal background, and the frame is set with exactly 100 diamonds. The piece was made by Harry Collins.
Mark Runnacles/Getty Images |
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh visited Stirling and Falkirk on Wednesday, stopping by to see a new section of the Queen Elizabeth II Canal, built as part of the Helix project, which features the internationally-acclaimed Kelpies sculptures.
Mark Runnacles/Getty Images |
The Queen wore two military badges for the engagements. She repeated the cap badge of the Royal Regiment of Scotland from earlier in the week, supplementing it with the cap badge of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, which was headquartered at Stirling Castle until 2006.
ANDREW MILLIGAN/AFP/Getty Images |
Also on Wednesday, the Queen had an audience at Holyroodhouse with her Canadian Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau.
ANDREW MILLIGAN/AFP/Getty Images |
Trudeau stopped over in Scotland to visit with the Queen before heading on to this week’s G20 summit in Hamburg.
ANDREW MILLIGAN/AFP/Getty Images |
The Queen wore a brooch that many had expected to see on the Duchess of Cornwall during last week’s Canadian tour: the Diamond Maple Leaf Brooch, which belonged to the late Queen Mother. (You can read more about the brooch over here!)
Jewel History: First Royal Court in Scotland in 34 Years (1937)
King George VI, Queen Elizabeth, Princess Elizabeth, and Princess Margaret at the Palace of Holyroodhouse, July 1937 (Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) |
Edinburgh, July 6 — King George [1] paid tribute to his Scottish consort [2] tonight by holding the first Royal Court Scotland has seen since 1903. The oak-panelled throne room of Holyrood House [3], where Bonnie Prince Charlie [4] danced 200 years ago, was a brilliant setting for the modern court.
The King, on a state visit with his Queen to their “ancient and hereditary kingdom of Scotland,” wore the uniform of the colonel-in-chief of the Scots Guards.
Queen Elizabeth wears her diamond and ruby circlet with the crown ruby suite in an official coronation portrait, taken in the spring of 1937 (AFP/Getty Images) |
A gold brocade gown in a scroll design and with an Indian-embroidered gold train was worn by Queen Elizabeth, whose father is the Scottish Earl of Strathmore [5]. Upon her head glittered a diamond and ruby tiara.
Nearly 500 attended the function. More than 200 were presented to Their Majesties, the majority of them Scottish debutantes who usually must journey to London for presentation at court. Men of Scotland’s ancient families appeared either in their colorful tartan kilts or in the uniforms of Highland regiments.
The Royal Company of Archers, the King’s ancient body guard in Scotland, was on duty in the state chambers in green cloth uniforms embroidered with golden thistles and wearing cocked hats decorated with cock feathers.
The Palace of Holyroodhouse (J. Pugh/Central Press/Getty Images) |
Turreted Holyrood will be the scene of other brilliant functions, including a garden party, daytime receptions, and other affairs during the state visit which will end Sunday when the King and Queen turn south for a similar state visit to Wales. Later they will visit Belfast, capital of Northern Ireland.
NOTES
1. King George VI of the United Kingdom (1895-1952), who reigned from 1936 until his death in 1952, was the father of the present monarch, Queen Elizabeth II.
2. Queen Elizabeth of the United Kingdom (1900-2002), previously Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, was the wife of King George VI. Although she was born in England, her father was an aristocrat who held a Scottish title and owned large states in Scotland, including Glamis Castle.
3. The Palace of Holyroodhouse is the official residence of the British monarch in Scotland. Located on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, the current palace largely dates to the 16th and 17th centuries. The palace was a residence of many of Scotland’s kings and queens, including Mary, Queen of Scots. The Queen spends one week in residence at Holyrood every summer.
4. During the Jacobite Rising in 1745, Charles Edward Stuart (1720-1788), grandson of King James VII and II and Jacobite pretender to the throne, held court at Holyrood for five weeks in September and October.
5. Claude Bowes-Lyon, 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne (1855-1944), grandfather of Queen Elizabeth II, succeeded to the Strathmore and Kinghorne earldom (in the peerage of Scotland) in 1904. When his son-in-law, King George VI, was crowned in 1937, Claude was also created Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne in the peerage of the UK, which allowed him to sit as an earl in the House of Lords. So, technically, Claude was both the 14th and the 1st Earl.
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