Royal Tour Jewels: The Duchess of Cornwall in Canada
Much of the royal attention over the past two weeks has been focused on a series of anniversaries — milestone wedding anniversaries in Denmark and Spain, and an important constitutional anniversary in Norway — but in the midst of all of that, the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall made a trip across the pond to Canada. The nation’s future king and his wife visited three provinces and met lots of Canadians along the way. Let’s have a look at the jewelry that Camilla packed in her hand luggage for the tour, shall we?
The royal couple landed on Sunday in Halifax to begin their four-day visit. With a pair of small pearl pendant earrings, Camilla wore a pair of brooches that she’s donned at some important occasions for the royal family. The diamond brooches are shaped like four-leaf clovers. She wore them at Prince William’s wedding in 2011, and for her first Christmas as a member of the royal family at Sandringham in 2005.
The tour kicked into high gear on Monday with a series of military-related events in Halifax. While Camilla kept her pearl necklace covered with a warm scarf for several events, she showed it off during the official welcome ceremony at the Cenotaph. Camilla has several pearl necklaces; this one has four strands of pearls connected by a clasp that features several circular rows of diamonds. She wore no brooch with the coat, probably so that the Nova Scotia tartan could take center stage. The Duchess of Cambridge is often praised for planning tributes to the areas she visits into her wardrobe choices; she’s not the only lady in the family who does so. In this case, the lapels and the cuffs of Camilla’s coat are embellished with the local tartan. (Let’s not talk about the dumb feather on the hat. *shudder*)
Here’s a close-up look at the bracelets and rings that Camilla wore on Monday during a visit to a family resource center in Halifax. On her right wrist, she wears her watch and a Rainbow Loom bracelet, surely a gift from an admiring young Canadian. On her left wrist, she wears a gold bracelet with cabochon stones that often features in her daytime jewelry, as well as a more delicate gold chain bracelet. She’s also wearing her platinum and diamond engagement ring, an heirloom that once belonged to the Queen Mother, and her wedding ring, made from part of a nugget of Welsh gold.
On Tuesday, the royal couple moved on to Prince Edward Island. The brooch she wore for the day’s engagements, including a visit to Cornwall United Church, belonged to the Queen Mother. It’s the white gold and diamond Lily of the Valley Brooch, made by Fabergé, that was presented to the Queen Mum by Nikita Khrushchev during his visit to the UK in 1956. Camilla has worn it at a number of important occasions, most importantly her daughter’s wedding in 2006.
Wednesday’s events were held in Manitoba, where Camilla made a visit to the Winnipeg Ballet. Her choice of brooch for the engagement was especially appropriate:
This is her ballerina brooch, made by Van Cleef & Arpels. The piece is made of gold and set with sapphires, rubies, and diamonds.
The tour came to a close on Tuesday with an investiture at Winnipeg’s Legislative Chamber. Camilla changed her outfit, as well as her jewels, for this final engagement. With her usual pearl earrings, she wore a single-stranded pearl necklace. She also paid tribute to one of the military regiments for which she serves as Colonel-in-Chief: The Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada. The pin she wears on her lapel is the diamond cap badge of the regiment, which features a bold number two in its center. Camilla has worn this piece in Canada before, and before her, it was worn by other royal Colonels-in-Chief (including Princess Alexandra). During the 2012 tour, she donned it for a luncheon in Toronto, and at a muster at Fort York commemorating the War of 1812, she affixed it to her hat.
And that’s it from Canada! Hope you enjoyed this rundown of royal tour jewels — Camilla may be less newsworthy than Kate, but she certainly can bring the bling. Stay tuned tomorrow for a special “Sunday” Sparkler post!
Bridal Jewels: The Princess of Asturias
Ten years ago today, the biggest royal wedding to be held in Spain in nearly a century took place in Madrid, when Letizia Ortiz Rocasolano, a Spanish journalist and television news anchor, married the heir to the throne, Prince Felipe. Because the wedding was a daytime affair, the guests weren’t dripping in jewels as they had been in Denmark a few days before (when the Danish crown prince was married — see here and here for a recap of that wedding!).
Instead, the jewelry focus was mainly on the bride, who wore an heirloom tiara from her new husband’s family for the occasion. (Want more on the wacky hats worn by the guests? Head over to The Royal Roundup to see a classic Mad Hattery! post on the majestic millinery in all its glory!)
Victoria Louise received the diamond and platinum tiara, which features both meander and laurel-leaf elements, as well as a central pear-shaped diamond mounted en tremblant, as a wedding present from her father in 1913. It was made for the princess by Koch, a jeweler that often did work for the German imperial family. (We’ve seen several examples of Koch tiaras on the blog this year — see here and here for two of them.) Victoria Louise wore the tiara on her wedding day; her new husband was Prince Ernst August of Hanover, Duke of Brunswick. She’s also wearing the tiara in the wedding souvenir postcard pictured above.
The next owner of the tiara was Ernst August and Victoria Louise’s daughter, Friederike. When she traveled to Greece to marry the country’s crown prince (later King Paul) in 1938, she was given the diamond tiara to take along. Friederike and Paul’s elder daughter, Sophia, wore the sparkler to some of her first white-tie events. When she married the future king of Spain — and changed the spelling of her name to Sofia — she wore the Prussian tiara with her veil. (You can see her wearing it in the picture above, in the midst of her wedding ceremony in Athens.)
Both of Sofia’s daughters, Elena and Cristina, have worn their great-grandmother’s tiara, but the piece did not grace another royal bride’s head until 2004. Letizia wore the petite diamond sparkler with her veil on her wedding day. It was a neat homage to her new family, paying tribute to the wedding of her parents-in-law and to her husband’s regal heritage. It was also a good choice because (unlike her extremely tall husband) Letizia is a small woman, and a larger bridal tiara might have overwhelmed her.
Since the wedding, Letizia has been the primary wearer of the tiara. She’s not been given the tiara outright — it still resides in her mother-in-law’s collection, but Sofia is quite generous in lending jewels to her daughters and daughter-in-law for major occasions, like weddings and banquets. It wouldn’t surprise me a bit if this is one of the first tiaras that we see one day on Letizia’s daughters, the future Queen Leonor and her younger sister, Infanta Sofia, continuing the family tradition for yet another generation [1].
NOTES, PHOTO CREDITS, AND LINKS
1. A version of this post originally appeared at A Tiara a Day in September 2013.