Yesterday, we surveyed a decade of Queen Silvia’s tiaras at the annual Nobel Prize ceremony; today, let’s have a look at what her elder daughter, Crown Princess Victoria, has worn at the event over the past ten years
(2013: Did not attend ceremony)
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Sparkling Royal Jewels From Around the World
Yesterday, we surveyed a decade of Queen Silvia’s tiaras at the annual Nobel Prize ceremony; today, let’s have a look at what her elder daughter, Crown Princess Victoria, has worn at the event over the past ten years
The annual Nobel Prize ceremony will be held in Stockholm on Thursday, and the Swedish royals are expected to be out in bejeweled force to greet the prize winners. To help us predict which jewels we’ll see on the 10th, here’s a look back at the tiaras and jewelry worn by Queen Silvia at the Nobels over the last ten years. (Stay tuned throughout the week for a look at more royal Nobel jewels!)
We’ve talked at length here on the blog about the magnificent gems owned and worn by the Bernadotte family in Sweden. But they have a few petite royal tiaras in their jewelry boxes, too, including today’s tiara, which belonged to Queen Louise.
The tiara, which is made of diamonds, seems to have been worn first by Louise. She was born Princess Louise of Battenberg — she was a great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria — but she became Lady Louise Mountbatten when her family renounced their German titles in 1917. Even without their royal titles, the Mountbattens were extremely well-connected. Louise’s siblings included Lord Louis Mountbatten and Princess Andrew of Greece and Denmark (which means that Prince Philip was her nephew).
When she was a young woman, Louise was engaged several times, including once to Prince Christopher of Greece (who ended up marrying the heiress Nancy Leeds). Louise once famously announced that she would never marry a widower or a king, but in 1923, she did both. At St. James’s Palace, she married Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf of Sweden, the widower of her cousin, Princess Margaret of Connaught. When her husband ascended to the throne as Gustaf VI Adolf, Louise became a queen.
Louise wore this tiara both as a young crown princess and a mature queen, and four of her step-granddaughters — Margaretha, Birgitta, Désirée, and Christina — have been photographed in the piece as well. (Above, Margaretha wears it at the opening of parliament in 1956.)
Specific provenance information on this one has proven tough to come by, but I’d wager that it was made around the time that Louise was married, judging by the Art Deco-esque style of the tiara. Louise is generally said to have been the first owner of the piece, and she wore it both atop her head and across her forehead in ’20s bandeau style.
Queen Louise died in 1965, the year after Princess Désirée married Baron Nils-August Silfverschiöld. It’s said that the tiara was a wedding gift to Désirée from her grandfather and step-grandmother. Désirée has worn the tiara at major royal occasions, including the wedding of her cousin, Princess Benedikte of Denmark, in 1968, and the wedding of her sister, Princess Christina, in 1974. She has also occasionally worn the tiara at other white-tie events in Sweden.