Saturday Sparkler: Alexandra Feodorovna’s Emerald Tiara
This July marks the 96th anniversary of the assassination of the last tsar of Russia, Nicholas II, and his family. In the century that has nearly passed since their deaths, the court of the tragic Romanovs has become the stuff of history and legend, and the jewels that adorned the Romanova women have become objects of significant fascination. Today, we’re looking at an emerald tiara that was created for the country’s last empress: Alexandra Feodorovna.
The emerald and diamond tiara was part of a larger parure that Alix ordered from a pair of famous Russian jewelers — Bolin and Faberge — in 1900. Sophia Schwan, a jeweler working for Bolin, was responsible for creating the parure’s tiara and necklace, while Oscar Piel, working for Fabergé, made a large coordinating devant-de-corsage. The tiara is also sometimes referred to as a “coronet” or a “circlet,” because it piece forms a complete circle. In Jewels of the Romanovs, Stefano Papi notes that the tiara and necklace were “made in great haste” by Schwan, but doesn’t clarify the reasons why.
The diamonds used in the tiara were sourced from South Africa; some sources have suggested that the large emeralds used were from Colombian mines. (You’ll sometimes see this called the “Colombian tiara” for that reason.) The largest emerald is the one set in the front of the circlet; Papi notes that this “quadrangular sugarloaf cabochon emerald” measures approximately “23 carats.” The tiara includes alternating ribbon and scroll motifs, with emerald and diamond floral elements set in the center of each scroll. The necklace, pictured above, also featured ribbon and scroll designs.
The Bodarevsky portrait (source)
Alix was painted in the tiara and devant-de-corsage from the parure in 1907 by Nikolai Bodarevsky. (She did not wear the complete parure in the portrait; the Bolin necklace is not included.) Although this portrait is perhaps the only extant image of the tsarina wearing pieces from her emerald parure, we know a little bit more about the circlet’s eventual fate.
Sadly, the tiara and the necklace are visible among the pieces pictured on the famous “table” inventory illustration made by the Soviets in 1922. (The emeralds are the sixth set of jewels from the left. The devant-de-corsage is probably among the rest of the pieces depicted.) Nearly all of the jewels on the table were either auctioned or broken up. The emeralds haven’t been seen in public since they were photographed and catalogued in the mid-1920s by A.E. Fersman. It would be nice to hope that they’re lurking somewhere in the shadows, hidden away in a private collection. Unfortunately, though, I think it’s much more likely that they were eventually dismantled.
This Week in Royal Jewels: July 11-17
9. Victoria wasn’t the only member of the family who picked up some jewelry on Monday morning. Could her daughter, Princess Estelle, be any cuter in her bracelets?
8. The Swedish royal matriarch, Queen Silvia, went for more traditional elegance with her jewelry on Monday, wearing a pearl necklace and earrings. But even she added a whimsical touch with her hair ornament. Anyone else suspect that Estelle may have had a role in the placement of that little bauble?
7. Another member of the Swedish royal family, Sofia Hellqvist, attended her first official event at Monday evening’s concert. Rain caused the royal ladies to seek the safety of ponchos for much of the event, but she still managed to keep her bracelet visible. Sofia often wears a bracelet in support of her charity, Project Playground, but this looks to be a different piece.
6. King Felipe and Queen Letizia of Spain embarked on another of their introductory visits this week, this time to Morocco. Letizia kept her jewelry minimal while visiting a cancer research center on Tuesday, but Lalla Salma, the wife of the Moroccan king, wore an eye-catching brooch.
Doña Letizia y Lalla Salma. Comenta con nosotros la Visita. http://t.co/LdDdvv2JJd
#LosReyesenMarruecos pic.twitter.com/u4WPuV8t6N
— Foro Dinastías (@ForoDinastias) July 14, 2014
5. Lalla Salma also stole the show at a dinner held for the Spanish royals, wearing a gorgeous set of emeralds. But Letizia didn’t wholly forego the bling, wearing her wedding earrings and her Cartier diamond bracelet on her left wrist.
Princess Alexandra opens refurbished day hospice at St Giles http://t.co/VpN6AtHt8z #royal pic.twitter.com/faLwQiOzAU
— JB (@Royal_beans) July 11, 2014
4. One of the unsung workers of the Windsor clan, Princess Alexandra, opened a hospice center in Lichfield on Friday. She wore a pair of stunning sapphire earrings, plus a golden tortoise brooch. It makes sense that Alexandra knows her bling; after all, she’s descended from the Romanovs and the Greek royal family as well as the Brits!
3. The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall have been busy in Devon and Cornwall this week. In Axminster on Tuesday, Camilla donned a delicate floral brooch with some serious history: it’s a Faberge piece that was given to the Queen Mum by Nikita Khrushchev.
2. The dress code was rather relaxed for the christening of Princess Amalia of Nassau on Saturday, but the baby’s grandmother, Grand Duchess Maria Teresa of Luxembourg, still managed to add a bit of sparkle with earrings and a pendant necklace.
1. Does it get much better than this? Queen Elizabeth II held a reception at Buckingham Palace on Monday for the winners of the Queen’s Awards for Enterprise, and she wore one of her rarely-seen treasures: the brooch made of the Cullinan VI and Cullinan VIII stones. (Need a refresher on the Cullinan? Here you go!)