Wikimedia Commons |
The Vladimir Sapphire Kokoshnik
Queen Marie of Romania wears the Vladimir Sapphire Kokoshnik (Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons) |
The jewel collection of Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna (the Elder) of Russia — better known to many as Grand Duchess Vladimir — was the royal gift that just seemed to keep on giving in the wake of the Russian Revolution. But although some of her tiaras, including the famous Vladimir Tiara, were sold off after the family had gone into exile, this sapphire kokoshnik was the tiara that MP the Elder used to buy her way out of Russia as many of her family members were being murdered by the Bolsheviks. The buyers weren’t just jewel collectors — they were the Romanian royal family.
Queen Marie of Romania, ca. 1914 (Grand Ladies Site) |
Quick backstory: when the political situation in Romania became precarious during World War I, Queen Marie of Romania’s jewels, along with an incredible number of treasures and valuables from the country, were sent to Moscow for safekeeping. Marie had important ties to the Romanovs: her mother was Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia, who married Queen Victoria and Prince Albert’s son, Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh (later Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha). Marie wasn’t the only one who sent her jewels to Russia thinking they’d be safe there: members of the grand ducal family of Hesse did as well. (The tsarina was, after all, born a Hessian princess.)
Queen Marie wears her diamond loop tiara, which was lost in Russia during the 1917 revolution |
And that’s where things went sour. We all know what happened in to the Romanovs after the Russian Revolution in 1917. The change of government in Russia meant that the Romanian royal jewels were in peril, too. During the war, the Romanians invaded territory held by Russia, the Soviets cut off all diplomatic ties, and the treasures were stranded. Some of the valuables have been returned over time, but many pieces, including Marie’s jewels, were never been repatriated to Romania. Marie was understandably very upset about the loss of her jewels, many of which she had received from her Russian mother. The tiara she received as a wedding gift from her parents was gone; so were her diamond loop tiara and the magnificent Massin tiara that had been in the family for a generation.
Grand Duchess Vladimir wears the sapphire kokoshnik in a portrait, ca. 1911 (Wikimedia Commons) |
To help rebuild her collection, Marie’s husband, King Ferdinand, gave his wife money to purchase new jewels to replace the ones that had been lost. But unlike most of us, Marie didn’t have to go to a jewelry store to find a new tiara. Instead, she had merely to look to the collection of her aunt, Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna (aka Grand Duchess Vladimir), for a new diadem. The one she purchased was this sapphire and diamond kokshnik tiara, which was made in 1909 by Cartier. The largest central sapphire, a cushion-cut gem weighing more than 137 carats (!), had been previously set in a brooch. The other sapphires, which were smaller cabochons, were nineteenth-century Romanov heirlooms; they had originally belonged to Tsarina Alexandra Feodorovna, the wife of Tsar Nicholas I.
Queen Marie wears the sapphire kokoshnik, ca. 1920s (Library of Congress/Wikimedia Commons) |
The tiara was one of the more extravagant pieces in the truly remarkable Vladimir jewel collection, but when the revolution happened, the need to escape from Russia was greater than the need to retain the diadem. Maria Pavlovna sold the tiara to her niece, the queen of Romania, in 1917. Maria Pavlovna used the money to buy her passage out of Russia and into exile; Marie of Romania used the tiara as the cornerstone of her replacement collection. Her husband later purchased an astonishing sapphire pendant from Cartier as a coordinating piece.
Queen Marie wears the tiara in a portrait by Philip de László |
Queen Marie’s tiara was an important part of her new collection; she underscored this when she chose to wear the tiara when she was painted by Philip de László. She often used the tiara as a part of the theatrical royal portraits that she loved so much. But there came a time when she decided to hand it along to the next generation. She passed the tiara on to her daughter, Princess Ileana, when she married an Austrian archduke in 1931. Four years later, Ileana actually lent the tiara back to her mother to wear for the Silver Jubilee of King George V of the United Kingdom. At that point, political tensions were already strong in Romania, so Marie left the tiara in her London bank for safekeeping, probably mindful of what had happened to her wedding jewels. Ileana was only able to reclaim the tiara shortly before the outbreak of World War II.
Princess Ileana of Romania (Wikimedia Commons) |
After the war was over, the monarchy in Romania was pretty much over, too. The young King Michael I was forced to abdicate in 1947, and the royal family went into exile. Ileana ended up in the United States, and initially, she took the sapphire tiara with her. The princess’s autobiography includes fascinating descriptions of the tiara and her journey with it from country to country. Ultimately, though, she also decided to part with the piece. In the early 1950s, she sold the tiara back to its original maker, Cartier. She used the funds she received for more practical purposes: to put a down payment on a new home and to pay the travel costs that enabled her to bring her children to America. Cartier, sadly, apparently chose to dismantle the tiara entirely. Another grand Romanov piece lost to history…
Queen Marie’s Diamond Loop Tiara
Among the grand tiara-wearing royals of the twentieth-century, few are more dramatic and intriguing than Queen Marie of Romania. Today, we’re looking at one of her most beloved — and lamented — sparklers, her diamond loop tiara.
The provenance of this tiara has proven tough to untangle, but we know a few things about the piece for sure. For one, we know that it is very close in design to the loop tiara owned by Grand Duke and Grand Duchess Vladimir, which was created around 1890, although this tiara has small diamond “tails” inside the loops rather than drop pearls. It’s also close in design to the small Russian looped bandeau that belonged to Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent. The similarities lead me to wonder whether this loop tiara may also be a Russian creation.
We also know that the tiara was acquired around the time of Marie’s 1893 wedding to Ferdinand of Romania, though to my knowledge, a tiara of this exact description isn’t listed among her wedding gifts. She wore it in several photographs taken in the early years of her marriage. In the photo above, she poses beside her sister, Princess Victoria Melita (also known as “Ducky”); this would have been taken around the time of Ducky’s 1894 wedding to Grand Duke Ernst of Hesse. (Ducky is wearing the grandest Hesse family diadem, the Strawberry Leaf Tiara, in the portrait.)
Marie also wore her loop tiara at the wedding of another sister, Princess Alexandra, in 1896. The photo above depicts Marie in the tiara, standing among the other wedding guests, all close family members.
(Just for fun, here’s another portion of the same image. Eagle-eyed royal jewel lovers will note something very significant: Grand Duchess Vladimir, wearing her famous loop tiara, stands beside the future Queen Mary — who would one day purchase the Vladimir Tiara for herself!)
Anyway, though: back to Marie’s loop tiara. We know for certain that Marie loved the theatrical aspects of royalty, and she chose this tiara to wear in a series of dramatic portraits taken during her tenure as Romania’s crown princess. The photographs were taken in the Silver Room at Cotroceni Palace in Bucharest.
We also know that Marie’s tiara was included in an exhibition in Coburg in 1903, which consisted of jewels owned by Marie, her mother, and her three sisters. (Marie is pictured above wearing the tiara beside her sister, Sandra.) So, ultimately, we’ve got a diamond loop tiara that looks like it might have been either made in Russia (or inspired by a Russian piece) and was probably constructed sometime between 1890 and 1893, ten years before it went on display in Germany.
Marie continued to wear the diamond loop tiara even after becoming Romania’s queen. She had put aside a number of tiaras worn during her youth (including her turquoise tiara), but this tiara remained a favorite.
We also know, sadly, know one more thing: that this tiara was sent to Moscow with the rest of Marie’s jewels for safekeeping during the war. The jewels were confiscated by the Bolsheviks and have never been returned. When she sent them to Russia, Marie had every reason to believe that her jewels, including this tiara, would eventually be coming home to her. Instead, this loop tiara has apparently disappeared into the mists of history, while the Vladimir tiara sits regularly atop the head of the British monarch. Ah, the tiara ironies…
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 9
- 10
- 11
- 12
- 13
- …
- 22
- Next Page »