(Photo taken by KC Photography; the copyright belongs to us, and the photo may not be reproduced) |
(Photo taken by KC Photography; the copyright belongs to us, and the photo may not be reproduced) |
Don’t Miss a Single Sparkling Moment! Sign up for The Court Jeweller Newsletter
Sparkling Royal Jewels From Around the World
(Photo taken by KC Photography; the copyright belongs to us, and the photo may not be reproduced) |
(Photo taken by KC Photography; the copyright belongs to us, and the photo may not be reproduced) |
Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
Today, the Earl and Countess of Wessex celebrate their twentieth wedding anniversary, a milestone that they marked on Tuesday with a new set of official portraits.
Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
The images of Edward and Sophie were taken at Royal Ascot. Sophie wore pearl drop earrings, a diamond tennis bracelet, and a diamond rose brooch with her ensemble, while Edward donned a tie pin featuring the cap badge of the Rifles.
Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
Edward is the second of the Queen’s four children to celebrate a twentieth wedding anniversary. His sister, the Princess Royal, has been married to Sir Timothy Laurence for twenty-six years.
MARTYN HAYHOW/AFP/Getty Images |
Prince Edward, the youngest of the four children of the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, married Sophie Rhys-Jones at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle on June 19, 1999. Their wedding, which fell in the midst of the busy Order of the Garter/Royal Ascot season in Windsor, featured Garter-themed outfits for their young attendants. Sophie wore a diamond tiara given to her by her new mother-in-law, as well as a suite of black and white pearl jewelry designed by the groom.
VICTORIA JONES/AFP/Getty Images |
Recently, Sophie debuted a new setting of her wedding tiara, which many have deemed a major improvement to the piece.
Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
Sophie and Edward have two children, Louise and James. The entire family recently gathered with the Windsors on the balcony of Buckingham Palace for the Queen’s annual birthday celebrations.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images |
In honor of the Duke of Edinburgh’s 98th birthday, which he celebrated privately yesterday, we’ve got a look at one of the jewels he introduced into the royal vaults: the Edinburgh Wedding Bracelet.
Elizabeth and Philip pose for their engagement photos, 1947 |
When Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten — or, as he was formerly known, His Royal Highness Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark — proposed to Princess Elizabeth of the United Kingdom in the 1940s, he had to find a way to present his bride with jewels appropriate for a future queen while earning a sailor’s paycheck.
Princess Alice wears the now-dismantled tiara |
Help came in the form of a diamond tiara owned by his mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg. She offered him a grand diamond and aquamarine tiara that had been one of her own wedding presents, a gift from her uncle and aunt, the late Emperor Nicholas II and Emperor Alexandra Feodorovna of Russia. Alice had kept the Romanov tiara for years, long after she regularly wore gala jewels, and she handed it over to her son to have it dismantled. Some of the stones were used to create Princess Elizabeth’s engagement ring, while others were used to make the piece we’re discussing today: the diamond bracelet he offered his new wife as a wedding present.
The Queen wears the bracelet to the Royal Film Performance in Leicester Square, 1952 (Reg Speller/Fox Photos/Getty Images) |
Philip went to a London-based jewelry firm, Philip Antrobus Ltd., to create the new diamond pieces in 1947. The engagement ring claimed a three-carat brilliant, plus several smaller stones; the new bracelet also includes three large brilliant-cut diamonds. The bracelet’s design is geometric, almost Art Deco-inspired. It features three large, square links connected by vertical sections. Like the engagement ring, the bracelet is set in platinum.
The Queen wears the bracelet as she opens parliament in Ottawa, October 1957 (ARNOLD SACHS/AFP/Getty Images) |
From the start, Elizabeth chose the new bracelet for significant white-tie events. She has also worn it for numerous portraits throughout her reign, from the earliest images to photographs taken to mark her Diamond Jubilee in 2012. It can sometimes be a little challenging to spot the bracelet in photographs, as the Queen’s collection includes a number of diamond bracelets of a similar shape and size to this one, including Queen Mary’s chain link bracelets and the diamond and gold bracelet that belonged to Queen Victoria.
The Queen wears the bracelet during the American state visit in 2003 (JOHN STILLWELL/AFP/Getty Images) |
But while those other pieces have major historical and family importance, the sentimental value of the Edinburgh Wedding Bracelet is pretty hard to deny. It’s no wonder that it has remained a staple in the Queen’s jewelry box for nearly seventy years.
Kate wears the bracelet for the Chinese state banquet, October 2015 (Dominic Lipinski – WPA Pool /Getty Images) |
In 2015, the Queen loaned the bracelet to another member of the family: the Duchess of Cambridge. She debuted it on her left wrist at a state banquet given in honor of the President of China. The loan was a significant one — the sentimental bracelet had never been worn in public by anyone but the Queen. For the banquet, Kate paired it with another diamond bracelet made from a choker necklace that had belonged to Queen Mary.
Kate wears the bracelet to the BAFTAs in London, February 2017 (DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP/Getty Images) |
Kate has continued to wear the wedding bracelet regularly since that initial loan. I can’t blame her: if my husband’s grandmother offered me the chance to wear a bracelet set with Romanov diamonds that had been a wedding gift from her husband, I’d wear it literally everywhere.