Andreas Rentz/Getty Images |
Archduchess Marie Valerie’s Pearl Tiara
Dorotheum |
At the end of October, an Austrian auction house announced the upcoming sale of an exciting suite of royal jewelry: a tiara and corsage ornament that belonged to the youngest daughter of one of Austria’s last emperors.
Dorotheum |
Both jewels were made around 1890 by Kochert, the firm that served as court jeweler to the Austrian imperial family. The tiara is set with around 25 carats’ worth of diamonds and 15 pearls, some of them baroque. The large brooch is set with six more pearls and more old-cut diamonds. The tiara was made by Wilhelm Friedrich Haarstrick, one of the managers of the Kochert atelier, while the brooch was constructed by A.E. Kochert himself.
Archduchess Marie Valerie, ca. 1890 (Wikimedia Commons) |
Both jewels were made around 1890, the same year that their first owner was married. Archduchess Marie Valerie of Austria was the youngest of the four children of Emperor Franz Josef and Empress Elisabeth of Austria. Born a decade later than the rest of her siblings, Valerie was the treasured baby of the family, indulged by her mother and allowed to marry a husband of her own choosing. She selected a second cousin, Archduke Franz Salvator, part of the Italian branch of the Habsburg family. They were officially engaged on Christmas Eve in 1888.
Marie Valerie and Franz Salvator (Wikimedia Commons) |
But fate and tragedy intervened shortly afterward. A month after Valerie’s engagement was officially announced, Crown Prince Rudolf of Austria killed himself and his mistress, Baroness Mary Vetsera, at his hunting lodge, Mayerling. The death of Rudolf, who was Valerie’s only brother, plunged the family into despair and left the imperial succession perilously resting on the shoulders of a cousin, Archduke Franz Ferdinand. (And we all know how that turned out, sadly.) Valerie stayed by the side of her grieving mother, Empress Elisabeth, for months, postponing her wedding until the summer of 1890.
Dorotheum |
Valerie and Franz Salvator were finally wed in July 1890, and the wedding presents lavished on the bride were incredible. One newspaper article noted that the display of the gifts took up an entire apartment in the imperial palace, with “three beautiful diadems, with brooches to match” among the splendor. The notes from the auction house do not specify whether this tiara and brooch were among those wedding presents, but the date of their creation certainly makes that a real possibility.
Dorotheum |
In their report on Valerie’s wedding, the London Times made it clear that Valerie herself was the brightest jewel present on the day: “Little more remains to be said of the wedding except this — that no Archduchess on her marriage day ever carried more truly with her the good wishes of a whole people. The Archduchess Marie Valerie has been her mother’s constant companion and will be most sadly missed by her. To her father she has ever been all that a daughter should be, the delight of his home and his comfort in days of sorrow. A good, brave-hearted girl, gifted with many talents and with a bright, winning face, the young Archduchess deserved to make, as she has made, a pure love match. The other day the Emperor said, with a mixture of joy and sadness, ‘This marriage will be my last happiness.’ Everybody will hope for many years of happiness to the bride, to her husband, and to the parents whom she loves so well.”
Franz Salvator and Marie Valerie with eight of their children, ca. 1905 (Wikimedia Commons) |
The marriage was a happy one to start. Valerie and Franz Salvator were genuinely in love, and they had ten children together over the following two decades. They raised their family in Schloss Wallsee (which they purchased from Queen Victoria’s second son, Prince Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha) on the Danube. But more losses and disappointments followed. Valerie’s mother, Empress Elisabeth, was murdered in Switzerland in 1898. And Franz Salvator turned out to be perhaps not the wisest choice for a spouse after all. He was frequently unfaithful, even formally acknowledging an illegitimate son during his marriage to Valerie.
Marie Valerie, ca. 1912 (Wikimedia Commons) |
Valerie’s father died in 1916, and at the end of World War I, the Habsburg dynasty in Austria officially ended. Valerie and her family were permitted to keep their home and stay in the country — but only after she formally recognized the end of the monarchy. (She’d already given up her personal succession rights years earlier, as part of her marriage ceremonies.) She died of cancer at Schloss Wallsee in 1924. The tiara and brooch were left to her descendants.
Dorotheum |
According to the literature provided by the Dorotheum, the tiara and brooch stayed in the family until this year; they are being offered for sale by some of Valerie’s descendants. The tiara is estimated to sell for between 100,000-200,000 euros (about $110,000-$220,000 USD), while the brooch is expected to fetch between 60,000-100,000 euros (around $66,000-$110,000 USD). The auction will be held in Vienna on November 27.
Royal Wedding Jewels: Jean-Christophe, Prince Napoleon and Countess Olympia of Arco-Zinneberg
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Royals from all over Europe gathered in Paris for something special this weekend: the wedding of a member of one of France’s former reigning families to a descendant of German, Italian, and Austrian royalty.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
On Saturday, 33-year-old Jean-Christophe Bonaparte, Prince Napoleon married 31-year-old Countess Olympia of Arco-Zinneberg. Jean-Christophe is a Harvard-educated investment banker who works in the private equity field in London. As his name and title suggest, he’s also the descendant of the former French imperial family. Olympia has degrees in political science and art history from Yale and Columbia. The pair met while Olympia was studying in Paris, and they became engaged in Switzerland earlier this year.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Jean-Christophe can claim impressive, extensive royal heritage on both sides of his family. On his father’s side, he is the senior male descendant of the Bonaparte family; he’s the great-great-great-grandson of Jerome Bonaparte, Napoleon’s youngest brother. His great-grandmother was Princess Clementine of Belgium, the youngest daughter of the notorious King Leopold II, which means that Jean-Christophe also related to the royal families of Belgium, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom. Jean-Christophe’s mother is Princess Beatrice of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. She’s the daughter of the late Prince Ferdinand, one of the claimants to the headship of that former royal house.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Countess Olympia is the daughter of Count Riprand of Arco-Zinneberg (pictured above escorting his daughter), who is a great-grandson of the last King and Queen of Bavaria. Her mother is Archduchess Maria Beatrice of Austria-Este; she’s a daughter of the late Archduke Robert and his wife, Princess Margherita of Savoy-Aosta. Olympia’s maternal great-grandparents were Emperor Karl and Empress Zita of Austria-Hungary and Prince Amedeo, 3rd Duke of Aosta and his French royal wife, Princess Anne of Orleans. Her royal connections are also far-ranging; among other links, she is the niece of Prince Lorenz and Princess Astrid of Belgium.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Olympia wore a modern, avant-garde wedding gown from Oscar de la Renta’s Fall 2019 bridal collection.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Olympia’s youngest sister, Countess Giorgiana, helped her wrangle the dress as she arrived for the ceremony.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The gown featured a matching capelet, a lengthy train, and a matching cathedral veil.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Olympia wore a bandeau-style tiara set with diamonds for the wedding. Royal jewel historian Vincent Meylan writes that the tiara belongs to Olympia’s grandmother, Princess Margherita. The piece can also be worn as a necklace — and, indeed, it was worn that way by Olympia’s aunt, Archduchess Isabella, when she wed Count Andrea Czarnocki-Lucheschi in 1997.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The grand sapphire and diamond earrings that Olympia wore were loaned to her by her mother, Archduchess Maria Beatrice. The earrings were a wedding gift to Maria Beatrice from her parents. She wore them for her wedding to Olympia’s father in 1980, and more recently, they were worn by Olympia’s elder sister, Countess Anna Theresa, when she married Colin McKenzie. (I covered that wedding in an earlier post here!)
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Olympia wore her incredible diamond engagement ring on her right hand for the wedding ceremony. The 40-carat ring made news earlier this year when it was stolen in Paris; police were able to track other property stolen during the same theft and happily recovered the ring.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The couple wed in a civil ceremony on Thursday. On Saturday, a grand religious wedding ceremony was held in the Cathedral of Saint-Louis-des-Invalides, part of the enormous complex of Les Invalides in Paris’s 7th arrondissement. The cathedral is located directly beside the Dome of Les Invalides, which houses the tombs of numerous Bonapartes, including Napoleon I and the groom’s direct ancestor, Jerome.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The couple emerged in the grand court of honor after the ceremony. They’ll now be known by (some) Bonapartists as Prince and Princess Napoleon.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
As you’d expect from such a royally-connected couple, the guest list for the wedding was extensive. Here’s a look at the lovely pearls worn by the groom’s mother, Princess Beatrice of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. Interestingly, she and the groom’s father, Prince Charles, never had a religious wedding ceremony, a decision that reportedly irked both of their families. She and Jean-Christophe’s father divorced in 1989.
Prince Charles also attended his son’s wedding. You might wonder why/how Jean-Christophe could be the head of the house when his father is still living — it all stems from Charles and Beatrice’s divorce and Charles’s subsequent remarriage. To put a long story short: Charles’s father, Prince Louis, was upset by his son’s decision to remarry without his permission (as well as Charles’s republican tendencies), and he decided to make Jean-Christophe his direct heir in his will. Charles has maintained that he’s still the current head of the House of Bonaparte. Happily, Charles and Jean-Christophe’s relationship doesn’t seem to have been damaged by Louis’s decisions.
Anyway — that’s Charles attending the wedding, with the bride’s mother, Maria Beatrice of Arco-Zinneberg, on his arm.
Jean-Christophe’s grandmother, the Dowager Princess Napoleon, also attended the wedding. Born Alix de Foresta, she comes from a long line of French and Italian aristocrats.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Members of several reigning royal families were also in attendance. The newly-engaged Princess Beatrice of York attended alongside her fiance, Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi. (Sadly, she wore no jewelry of note, and even her engagement ring was hidden in most photos.)
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg attended without his grand duchess, as Maria Teresa is still recovering from her recent knee surgery.
But lots of other members of the grand ducal family were also in attendance, including Hereditary Grand Duke Guillaume and Hereditary Grand Duchess Stephanie. She wore a pair of sparkling earrings with her red and cream outfit.
Prince Felix and Princess Claire of Luxembourg were there, too. She wore a headband studded with crystals and pearls.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Prince Louis of Luxembourg made an appearance, too — he’s pictured here with a cousin, Prince Laurent of Belgium.
The extended Nassau family was also there. Princess Marie-Astrid attended with her husband, Archduke Carl Christian of Austria (a relative of the bride through her mother’s Habsburg family ties).
Prince Jean of Luxembourg was also there, along with his wife, Countess Diane.
So was Prince Jean’s daughter, Princess Marie-Gabrielle de Nassau, with her husband, Antonius Willms.
Prince Jean’s twin sister, Princess Margaretha, attended with her husband, Prince Nikolaus of Liechtenstein. They’re pictured here with Archduke Simeon of Austria, another grandson of Emperor Karl and Empress Zita, and his wife, Princess Maria of Bourbon-Two Sicilies. (She’s a cousin of the Spanish royal family through her late father, Infante Carlos, Duke of Calabria, and a member of the extended French royal family through her mother, Princess Anne of Orleans.)
Princess Margaretha and Prince Nikolaus’s elder daughter, Princess Maria Anunciata of Liechtenstein, also attended the wedding. (She’s pictured here with Prince Laurent of Belgium, who took pictures with a whole lot of other guests for reasons unknown.) Love those statement earrings!
Rounding out the grand ducal attendees: Prince Guillaume and Princess Sibilla, who wore a lovely crescent brooch for the ceremony.
Princess Astrid and Prince Lorenz helped represent the Belgian royal family, but they’re also the aunt and uncle of the bride. (Prince Lorenz is the younger brother of Countess Olympia’s mother.)
Princess Maria Laura of Belgium, first cousin of the bride, wore a sparkling headband for the wedding. These bejeweled headbands are really exploding in popularity, but they do look maybe a little to much like a bridal tiara for wedding-guest wear, don’t they?
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The princely contingent from Liechtenstein also included Prince Philipp (brother of Prince Hans-Adam II) and his wife, Princess Isabelle. She wore a very pearly necklace for the occasion, as well as a bold stack of bracelets.
We also saw a whole lot of guests who are either members of former reigning families or — as in the case of Jaime de Marichalar, former members of reigning families. (He’s the ex-husband of Infanta Elena of Spain.)
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The Duke and Duchess of Braganza, pretenders to the defunct throne of Portugal, were there. Isabel wore a four-stranded pearl necklace and pearl earrings.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
The former royal family of Greece was represented by Crown Prince Pavlos and his daughter, Princess Maria Olympia. She wore a small pair of hoop earrings for the wedding. (Pavlos’s brother, Prince Philippos, was also there with his partner, Nina Flohr.)
Another Greek royal cousin, Prince Michael, was at the wedding with his wife, Marina. Michael also has significant French royal ties, as his mother was born Princess Francoise of Orleans and he was raised in France.
Princess Maria Pia of Savoy, widow of the late Prince Michel of Bourbon-Parma, was accompanied to the wedding by her son, Prince Dimitri (who is a noted jewelry designer).
Archduke Rudolf of Austria, another Habsburg relative of the bride, attended with his wife, Archduchess Marie Helene. They live in Belgium and received Belgian titles in the 1970s.
Prince Charles-Henri de Lobkowicz attended the wedding with his mother, Princess Marie Francoise of Bourbon-Parma, whose father was the Carlist pretender to the Spanish throne.
The Countess of Paris, wife of the Orleanist pretender to the French throne, was also present for this Bonaparte wedding. Philomena brought along two of her daughters, Antoinette and Louise-Marguerite.
Prince Christian of Hanover, a member of the former royal family of Hanover, attended the wedding with his new wife, Alessandra.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Members of the groom’s extended maternal family were also present for the wedding. His aunt, Princess Anne of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, attended with her husband, Alexandre Ursulet and their family.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
And you’ll definitely recognize the groom’s uncle and his family! Yep, that’s Prince Carlo of Bourbon-Two Sicilies with his wife, Camilla, and their daughters, Maria Chiara and Maria Carolina.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
This really was an old-fashioned dynastic royal wedding, but the bride and the groom have insisted that it’s a love match. Given the likelihood of a French restoration (not exactly great odds for that!), that’s probably for the best.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT/AFP via Getty Images |
Here’s hoping for a happy future for this well-connected duo!
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