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Archives for 2017
The Greville Festoon Necklace
Pool/Getty Images |
Of all the diamond necklaces in the British royal vaults, few pack as much diamond firepower as the incredible Greville Festoon Necklace. Today, we’re taking a deep dive into the history of this fabulous royal jewel.
Pool/Getty Images |
The diamond and platinum necklace was part of the enormous jewelry bequest left by Mrs. Ronald Greville to the Queen Mother in 1942. Mrs. Greville was a voracious collector of jewels, and, much like Queen Mary, was prone to making and remaking pieces from her own collection. This necklace is one of those pieces. Made by Cartier in 1929, the original incarnation of the piece was a two-row necklace; that original necklace makes up most of the bottom section of the necklace that you see today.
ITN Source/Screencap |
But Mrs. Greville, always looking to amp up her jewels, went back to Cartier in 1938 to have the piece made even more magnificent. The jeweler added three more rows of diamonds and reworked the back chain sections of the piece. The result, according to Hugh Roberts, was “comparable in richness to some of the work carried out by Cartier for its Indian clients.” (For reference, see our recent post on Cartier’s Patiala Necklace.) The five-row necklace is the version that was left to the Queen Mother, who occasionally wore all five rows for major events. Above, she wears the complete necklace with the original version of the Greville Tiara during the state visit of Queen Juliana of the Netherlands to the UK in 1950.
RUSSEL BOYCE/AFP/Getty Images |
More often, though, the Queen Mother chose to wear just the three-row section from the remodeled necklace for gala events. The entire necklace is really enormous, basically a giant diamond bib, but the three-row section is a bit more forgiving and easier to wear. Above, the Queen Mother wears the three-row necklace during the German state visit in 1998. (It’s incredible to see her wearing a tiara and gala jewels at nearly 100!)
Pool/Getty Images |
When the Queen Mother died in 2002, the necklace was inherited by Queen Elizabeth II, who has never worn the piece in public. Instead, it’s one of the jewels she placed on loan to the Duchess of Cornwall. Camilla is particularly skilled at wearing spectacular necklaces — you can see our entire post on her necklace collection over here — and she managed to pull off the five-row version of the necklace during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in 2007. We haven’t seen her wear the necklace for quite some time; I’d love to see her try the smaller, three-row version soon!
Queen Victoria’s Sapphire Coronet Heads to the V&A!
Victoria and Albert Museum |
I get regular questions about the fate of Queen Victoria’s Sapphire Coronet, the historic jewel that nearly left Britain last year. Up until now, I haven’t had answers, but today, major news broke: the coronet has been acquired by the Victoria and Albert Museum!
Queen Victoria wears the coronet (Wikimedia Commons) |
Via their social media accounts, the museum made the following announcement on Sunday: “We are delighted to announce the acquisition of one of Queen Victoria’s most important jewels. The stunning sapphire and diamond coronet was designed by Prince Albert in 1840, the royal couple’s wedding year. The coronet, generously gifted to the V&A by William Bollinger, will go on display as the centre-piece of the Museum’s newly-refreshed William and Judith Bollinger Jewellery Gallery in 2019, the bicentenary year of the birth of both Victoria and Albert.”
Princess Mary, Princess Royal and Countess of Harewood wears the coronet |
Last August, I wrote a detailed timeline of the history of this important royal jewel. The story of its attempted foreign sale broke just as the first season of ITV’s Victoria debuted on television; this news broke on the same day that the second season began airing. (That second season airs in the USA on PBS in January.) Very, very interesting timing, hm?
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