Sion Touhig/Getty Images |
5 Romantic Royal Jewels
Crown Princess Victoria wears the Cameo tiara and earrings at her wedding to Prince Daniel (Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images) |
Queen Silvia wears the Cameo tiara at her wedding to King Carl XVI Gustaf (AFP/Getty Images) |
The Bernadottes of Sweden have some serious royal jewelry in their vaults, but one of their most prized sets is the cameo parure. According to De Kongelige Juveler, a Danish documentary about royal jewels, the cameo set was made by Marie-Étienne Nitot for the first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte, Joséphine de Beauharnais, in 1809. The guide from the recent Swedish royal bridal exhibition noted that the tiara was a gift from Napoleon to Joséphine.
The first royal woman to be depicted wearing the parure in a portrait was Joséphine’s daughter, Hortense, who was briefly the Queen of Holland. It made its way into Swedish hands via Hortense’s niece, Joséphine of Leuchtenberg. The piece is especially romantic because of the designs depicted on the tiara’s cameos: mythological scenes featuring Cupid, the god of love. It’s also gained a romantic aura because of its use as an important Bernadotte family wedding tiara. Queen Silvia and her elder daughter, Crown Princess Victoria, are among the royal women who have been married in the cameos. Queen Silvia remarked in the jewel documentary that she focused on two things during Victoria’s walk down the aisle: “the beauty of the tiara and her happiness.”
Queen Elizabeth II wears her diamond engagement ring (Chris Jackson/Getty Images) |
Engagement rings are inherently romantic pieces of jewelry, and there are numerous famous royal examples. But for me, one of the most lovely is the diamond ring given by Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten (born Prince Philip of Greece and Denmark) to Princess Elizabeth of the United Kingdom. It’s not an especially unusual design: the ring consists of a three-carat diamond set in platinum and surrounded by five additional diamonds. But beyond the classic, elegant setting of the ring, and its status as a romantic gesture, the gems themselves have special significance: they were taken from a tiara once worn by Philip’s mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg.
That tiara was actually one of Alice’s own wedding presents, given to her by her uncle and aunt, Tsar Nicholas II and Tsarina Alexandra of Russia. Alice gave the tiara to her son, who helped design the engagement ring using his mother’s diamonds. (A bracelet, his wedding gift to Elizabeth, was also made using diamonds from the tiara.) Prince Philip had a difficult childhood to say the least, and it’s a lovely tribute to his mother to have her diamonds used for his wife’s ring. And clearly it was a good start to a marriage — the couple have been married for nearly 7 decades and have four children, eight grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren.
Princess Anne-Marie of Denmark wears the Khedive of Egypt Tiara at her wedding to King Constantine II of Greece (Central Press/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) |
Made by Cartier, this lovely diamond and platinum scroll tiara was one of the many wedding gifts given in 1905 to Princess Margaret of Connaught on her marriage to Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden. It’s not the most elaborate of the gifts she received, but it is one of the most romantic, largely because of the identity of the giver. Margaret and Gustaf Adolf had met, fallen in love, and become engaged in Cairo; he’d been singled out as a marriage prospect for Margaret’s sister, Patricia, but he fell in love with Margaret instead. The tiara was a gift from Abbas II, the last Khedive of Egypt and Sudan; the gift therefore commemorated the couple’s first meeting and their wedding. We’ve talked quite a bit about Margaret’s tragic story here at The Court Jeweller; her early death was one of the reasons that her daughter, Queen Ingrid of Denmark, took extra care to remember her mother by wearing her jewelry. The Khedive tiara has become the official wedding tiara of all of Ingrid’s female descendants, crowning Danish, German, and Greek brides at their royal weddings.
Nicholas II of Russia had to propose several times to Princess Alix of Hesse before she agreed to marry him, so it’s perhaps not surprising that once she said yes, he showered her with jewels. One of the most lovely of these tokens is an enormous aquamarine and diamond brooch, which he gave to her in August 1894. The brooch was purchased in St. Petersburg from Fabergé, and the beautiful aquamarine that dominates the piece was mined in Siberia. I’ve never seen an image of Alix wearing the brooch, but it’s a rare piece of her jewelry that still exists today. It was acquired by Wartski of London, a firm that specializes in Fabergé; they apparently didn’t know about its Romanov origins until they did additional research. Geoffrey Munn (he of the famous tiara tome), the managing director at Wartski, describes the provenance of the romantic engagement piece as “sort of stratospheric.”
The Vladimir Tiara with the Cambridge emerald drops (Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images) |
Our final romantic royal jewel story is a bit less conventional. The Cambridge emeralds weren’t worn at a wedding or given as an engagement present; instead, they were a gift from a prince to the mistress he loved. The deep green stones were won in a lottery by the Duchess of Cambridge. She gave them to her daughter, Princess Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck — better known to us as the mother of Queen Mary. But Mary didn’t inherit the emeralds from her mother; instead, when Mary Adelaide’s children divided her estate, the emeralds went to Prince Francis of Teck, one of Queen Mary’s younger brothers. Frank never married, but he was apparently very in love with his mistress, the Countess of Kilmorey (who was also reportedly one of the mistresses of King Edward VII).
When Frank died in 1910, he left Nellie Kilmorey all of the jewels he’d inherited from his mother, including the family emeralds, much to the shock and dismay of his sister. She was preparing for her coronation, and she wanted the Cambridge emeralds back. In the end, she had to purchase them from Lady Kilmorey; for good measure, she also had Frank’s will sealed to avoid public scandal. Shortly afterward, the emeralds were incorporated into the Delhi Durbar parure, worn by Mary at the coronation celebration in India in 1911. You’ll also see the some of the Cambridge emeralds, once gifted to a royal mistress, worn with the Vladimir tiara today by the current queen.
A Swedish Jewel Mystery Solved!
Torsten Laursen/Getty Images |
There are lots of unsolved mysteries surrounding the provenance of Sweden’s Modern Fringe Tiara: where’s it from? Is it really modern, or is it a century old? Did it have a royal or aristocratic owner before the Bernadottes? But this weekend, one of my lovely Twitter pals helped to answer one particular question: who exactly owns the tiara.
JESSICA GOW/AFP/Getty Images |
Five Swedish royal wedding ensembles — Queen Silvia’s, Crown Princess Victoria’s, Princess Madeleine’s, Princess Sofia’s, and Princess Lilian’s — are currently on display at the Royal Palace in Stockholm. One of my wonderful Twitter followers, @Hovikirjeenvaih, visited the exhibition recently and shared some very interesting information from the official exhibition guide.
Images from the exhibition guide, generously provided by |
The exhibition guide features photographs of each of the four bridal tiaras, along with information. Above, you see that the guide clearly states that King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia gave the Modern Fringe Tiara to Madeleine at some point as a present.
Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images |
We hadn’t seen anyone but Madeleine wear the tiara for about a decade, but it’s good to have confirmation that she does personally own the tiara now! We can definitely expect to continue to see her wear it for many years to come.
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