Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images |
Mourning Jewels: Prince Henrik of Denmark
LISELOTTE SABROE/AFP/Getty Images |
A small private funeral was held on Tuesday to celebrate the life of Prince Henrik of Denmark, who died last week at Fredensborg Castle. The jewels worn by the women of his family for the occasion were deeply meaningful and sentimental.
MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/AFP/Getty Images |
Queen Margrethe II, Henrik’s widow, wore a heart-shaped brooch with a cypher in its center. She often wears the brooch for funerals and memorials.
MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/AFP/Getty Images |
She also wore a pair of lovely pearl drop earrings. These are the same earrings she wore on her wedding day.
HENNING BAGGER/AFP/Getty Images |
Brooches and pearls were, as usual, the choice for many members of the family. Two of the youngest Danish royal ladies, Princess Isabella and Princess Josephine, each wore a brooch borrowed from their mother, Crown Princess Mary. Isabella wore her mother’s daisy brooch, a reference to her grandmother. (Queen Margrethe’s nickname is “Daisy.”)
MADS CLAUS RASMUSSEN/AFP/Getty Images |
Mary wore a lovely two-stranded pearl necklace that served as a quiet tribute to her late father-in-law. The black and white pearl necklace, which has a sapphire clasp, was Prince Henrik’s engagement present to her in 2003.
LISELOTTE SABROE/AFP/Getty Images |
She also pinned her small round diamond brooch, another gift from Henrik, to her coat. Princess Marie also wore a subdued brooch for the service.
No foreign royals attended the very small service, but both of Henrik’s royal sisters-in-law were present. Queen Anne-Marie wore pearls and a small round brooch.
So did Princess Benedikte. The guest list for the service was so limited that Henrik’s royal nieces and nephews did not attend. The small funeral was held at the chapel of Christiansborg Palace. According to his wishes, Henrik will be cremated; a portion of his ashes will be buried on the grounds of Fredensborg, and the rest will be scattered in the sea.
The Vladimir Fringe Tiara
Princess Nicholas of Greece and Denmark wears her mother’s diamond fringe tiara, ca. 1910 |
Lots of royal families have diamond fringe tiaras in their jewelry collections, but how many still own fringes that come directly from their Romanov ancestors? Today we’re chatting about one of the fringe tiaras that remains with its original family: the Vladimir Fringe Tiara.
Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna wears the tiara |
The original owner of the fringe tiara was Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia, the German-born wife of Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovich. The Vladimirs never ascended to the Russian throne, but they were extremely well connected: Vladimir was the son of Tsar Alexander II, the brother of Tsar Alexander III, and the uncle of Tsar Nicholas II. Appropriately, his wife had an astonishing collection of jewelry, including the standard diamond fringe owned by nearly every Romanov woman. Above, Maria Pavlovna, in traditional Russian court dress, wears hers backed by a fabric kokoshnik.
Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna wears her diamond fringe |
Maria Pavlovna, who went by the nickname “Miechen,” was also known to innovate and experiment with her jewels. Above, she wears her diamond fringe twisted in a circle, forming a sort of sunray ornament. This setting of the fringe emphasizes the short height of the smaller fringe pieces, a detail that helps when identifying the tiara in various photos.
Princess Nicholas wears her mother’s fringe tiara (Wikimedia Commons) |
Vladimir and Miechen had one daughter, Grand Duchess Elena Vladimirovna; she was the next owner and wearer of her mother’s diamond fringe tiara. The portrait above was taken at some point after her marriage to Prince Nicholas of Greece and Denmark. Miechen was one of the Romanovs who escaped Russia during the revolution, and some of her jewels made it out, too. (One her tiaras was smuggled out of Russia by a British diplomat and was later purchased by Queen Mary; it’s currently worn by Mary’s granddaughter, Queen Elizabeth II.)
Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent wears the tiara on her wedding day (Wikimedia Commons) |
Two of Elena’s daughters honored their Russian imperial heritage by wearing the fringe as a wedding tiara. Princess Marina, who married the Duke of Kent in November 1934, wore the fringe for her two wedding services: an Anglican service at Westminster Abbey and a Greek Orthodox service at the private chapel in Buckingham Palace. Marina also received a fringe tiara as one of her wedding presents, but she borrowed her mother’s fringe tiara for her bridal diadem. The short spikes, which make the lower half of the Vladimir Fringe look so solid, help differentiate the two fringes.
Princess Elizabeth,Countess of Törring-Jettenbach wears the tiara (Wikimedia Commons) |
A few months earlier, Marina’s elder sister, Princess Elizabeth, also wore the Vladimir Fringe for her wedding to Count Carl Theodor of Törring-Jettenbach, a member of the extended Bavarian royal family. Both Marina and Elizabeth paired the fringe tiara with a simple diamond riviere necklace.
Princess Elizabeth,Countess of Törring-Jettenbach wears the tiara (Wikimedia Commons) |
Elizabeth is the one who inherited the fringe tiara from her mother, and her descendants still have it today. In Elizabeth’s branch of the family, the tiara has continued to serve as a wedding tiara. Elizabeth’s daughter Helene wore the tiara when she married Archduke Ferdinand of Austria in 1956, and their daughter, Sophie, also wore the tiara when she married Mariano Hugo, Prince of Windisch-Graetz in 1990. The tiara was used most recently at a family wedding in 2005, when Elizabeth’s grandson, Archduke Maximilian, married Maya al-Askari.
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