Catherine Pavlovna’s Diamond Tiara (Image: Wikimedia Commons) |
Belgian-Dutch State Visit: Concert and Utrecht Visit
Maxima and Mathilde in Utrecht (Photo: OLAF KRAAK/AFP/Getty Images) |
Queen Maxima and Queen Mathilde are in Utrecht today for the final day of the Belgian state visit to the Netherlands. We’ve got plenty of photos of today’s daytime jewels later in the post, but let’s kick things off with a view of last night’s concert jewels.
Both queens went all out for the black-tie event, which was held in Amsterdam.
Mathilde wore her lovely diamond fringe earrings with the Brabant Laurel Wreath Tiara, worn in its necklace form.
Maxima added her tutti-frutti necklace and emerald drop earrings to her green gown.
Both women also wore bracelets: Mathilde selected Queen Fabiola’s ruby and diamond bracelet, while Maxima wore the bracelet from her tutti-frutti set. We also see a hint of Mathilde’s ruby engagement ring and (I think) the ring from the emerald parure on Maxima’s right hand.
Princess Beatrix wore pearls for the occasion, including the family’s large nineteenth-century pearl and diamond bracelet.
Princess Margriet and Princess Laurentien were also both present with their spouses.
Photo: REMKO DE WAAL/AFP/Getty Images |
This morning in Utrecht, earrings were the accessory of the day. Mathilde wore a major pair of diamond earrings with an abstract, looping pattern. (As an aside: I love this coat on her!)
Photo: OLAF KRAAK/AFP/Getty Images |
Maxima chose diamond pendant earrings with amethyst drops to coordinate with her ensemble. She also added a pearl bracelet on her right wrist.
Photo: OLAF KRAAK/AFP/Getty Images |
Here’s a better look at both outfits.
The Antique Corsage Tiara
The Antique Corsage Tiara (Photo: Chris Jackson/Getty Images) |
The vaults of the former Greek royal family are filled with heirloom jewels, but a number of the pieces they own today came from the Danish royal family through Queen Anne-Marie. Today’s tiara, the Antique Corsage Tiara, was the first tiara she ever owned.
The tiara that was given to the future Greek queen began its life as another piece of jewelry: a corsage ornament (or stomacher) that belonged to Queen Victoria of Sweden, Anne-Marie’s great-grandmother (hence the piece’s usual name).
The corsage was inherited by Victoria’s granddaughter (and Anne-Marie’s mother), Queen Ingrid, who was born a Swedish princess. Ingrid wore the piece, which is made of diamonds and pearls, as a necklace and as a brooch; it was she who had the piece mounted on a tiara frame as a gift for her daughter.
Anne-Marie received the tiara on her eighteenth birthday in 1964. But not even three weeks later, she wasn’t a Danish princess anymore — she turned eighteen on August 30 of that year and married King Constantine II of Greece in Athens on September 18.
Photo: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images |
But although as queen she had access to many of the large and historical diadems of the Greek royal family, Anne-Marie still wore her birthday tiara on occasion. When her own daughters, Alexia and Theodora, grew to adulthood, they too wore their mother’s tiara at various royal events. In the photo above, Princess Theodora wears the tiara at the wedding of her cousin, Prince Joachim of Denmark, in 2008.
Photo: ANDREW WINNING/AFP/Getty Images |
In recent years, the tiara has also become something of a secondary wedding tiara for the family (with the Khedive tiara, of course, on reserve as the wedding tiara for all of Queen Ingrid’s female descendants). Above, Marie-Chantal Miller wears the tiara at her wedding to Crown Prince Pavlos, Anne-Marie’s eldest son, in 1995.
Photo: Nikolas Kominis – Pool/Getty Images |
Anne-Marie’s other daughter-in-law, Tatiana Blatnik, also wore the tiara on her wedding day; she married Anne-Marie’s second son, Prince Nikolaos, in 2010. I imagine we might see it once more on a bride if Prince Philippos, her youngest son, marries in an elaborate ceremony.
Photo: Chris Jackson/Getty Images |
We also saw this tiara on Princess Tatiana in 2013 at the wedding of Princess Madeleine of Sweden — an event that brought the tiara back to one of its earlier royal homes.