Creation: This tiara was made in the early 1800s.
Materials: steel and gold
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Crown Princess Victoria
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Crown Princess Victoria
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Provenance:
- Queen Hortense of Holland née Beauharnais
- Princess Eugénie of Hohenzollern-Hechingen née Princess of Leuchtenberg; inherited from her aunt in 1837
- Empress Amélie of Brazil née Princess of Leuchtenberg; inherited from her sister in 1847
- Queen Joséphine of Sweden & Norway née Princess of Leuchtenberg; inherited from her sister in 1873
- Queen Sophia of Sweden & Norway née Princess of Nassau; inherited from her mother-in-law in 1876
- Queen Victoria of Sweden née Princess of Baden; from her mother-in-law
- Queen Louise of Sweden née Lady Louise Mountbatten; from her mother-in-law
- Princess Sibylla of Sweden née Princess of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha; from her step-mother-in-law
- Queen Silvia of Sweden née Sommerlath; inherited by her husband, King Carl XVI Gustaf, from his mother in 1972
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Crown Princess Victoria
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Crown Princess Victoria
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Other Wearers:
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Queen Silvia
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Princess Christina
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Questions:
- When was this tiara created?
- Which jeweler created this tiara?
- Did Queen Silvia really find this tiara in a cupboard while exploring the palace?
- Does this tiara belong to the Bernadotte Family Foundation?
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Princess Lilian
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Princess Désirée |
Links:
Photos: Kungliga Smycken
Here's a link concerning the topic but not the specific tiara. http://www.wolverhamptonhistory.org.uk/work/industry/steel_jewellery/index.html?sid=14a2c844895e2979b387a11ac313170b
ReplyDeleteAnd another great article. http://www.langantiques.com/university/index.php/Cut-Steel_Jewelry
ReplyDeleteLove this tiara! Even though it has no diamonds or jewels, it sparkles under the lights.
ReplyDelete