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#swedish royal jewels
europesroyals · 1 month
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04/03 - Favourite Swedish tiara
Aquamarine Kokoshnik Tiara
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tiaramania · 4 months
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TIARA ALERT: Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden wore Crown Princess Margaret's Connaught Tiara for the King's Dinner for Nobel Laureates at the Royal Palace in Stockholm on 11 December 2023.
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europesroyalsjewels · 2 months
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Emerald Brooch ♕ Swedish Royal Jewel Foundation
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sophiebernadotte · 4 months
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Prince Daniel's Crown
Prince Wilhelm's Crown, made by C. G. Hallbergs Guldsmeds AB in 1902, is the crown of Prince Daniel. Little Prince Oscar shares the crown with his father. This is the most recent addition to the Royal House's collection of crowns and, therefore, the most recent addition to Sweden's state regalia.
Photos: The Royal Court of Sweden
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remembertheredheads · 2 months
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Royal Tiara Challenge: Day 4
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Favorite Swedish Tiara: The Modern Fringe Tiara
This is such a gorgeous piece and it truly flatters everyone who wears it. It's also gorgeous as a necklace (Our first convertible tiara!). My only mild complaint is the height at the base, so that it seems to float a little bit above the head (even on the Swedish ladies and their amazing tiara hair).
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charlotte-of-wales · 1 year
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Royal Tiara Highlights: Swedish Amethyst Tiara
This tiara is apart of a set that includes drop earrings, two bracelets, and a devant de corsage and it was initially a necklace made of diamonds surrounding fitfteen large amethysts. The dark purple amethysts are set in gold, while the diamonds are set in silver. 
The original owner of the set is believed to be Empress Joséphine of France, the first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte. Joséphine gave the parure to her daughter-in-law, Princess Augusta of Bavaria who then passed it on to her own daughter, Joséphine of Leuchtenberg, when she married the future King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway in 1823. The jewels have been in the Swedish Royal Vault ever since.
When Queen Silvia married King Carl XVI Gustaf in 1976, she realized the set needed a tiara. Since the original necklace was too heavy and uncomfortable to wear, Silvia decided to turn it into a tiara. She also altered the parure bracelets so they could be worn as necklace; all these alterations are not permanent and the set can still be worn in its original form. 
via The Court Jeweller 
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tiny-librarian · 2 years
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A diamond-set tiara in the form of loops of forget-me-not flowers secured by bows, from which hang diamond drops. Given by Their Royal Highnesses the Duke and Duchess of Connaught to their daughter Princess Margaret when she married Hereditary Prince Gustav Adolph of Sweden on 15 June 1905. It was made by E. Wolff & Co. and was probably supplied by Garrard.
Tiaras: A History of Splendour - Geoffrey C. Munn
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royal-confessions · 2 months
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“Thank God for the Swedish royal family and their white tie events, these people bring out their jewels every chance they get and I’m here for it” - Submitted by Anonymous
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I like the Dutch and Swedish royals. Great fashion and Jewels, all the while doing their duties:).
Yes!
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royalpain16 · 1 month
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Royal Tiara Challenge 2024
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Day 13 - Favorite Amethyst Tiara
The Napoleonic Amethyst Tiara
Hands down, the Swedish Napoleonic amethyst tiara is the most beautiful amethyst tiara in my opinion.
The family that currently sits on the Swedish throne has genealogical ties to Swedish kings from centuries ago, but they’re more immediately descended from French nobility. Because of this, the family’s jewel coffers are full of trinkets with connections to the French imperial court of Napoleon Bonaparte. The [tiara] from the family’s amethyst parure, is just such a piece.
The tiara actually didn’t start out as a tiara at all; in fact, it’s only been a tiara for a few decades. Instead, the piece was original a necklace made of diamonds surrounding fifteen large amethysts. The demi-parure also included drop earrings, two bracelets, and a devant de corsage. The dark purple amethysts are set in gold, while the diamonds are set in silver. Princess Christina wearing the tiara in its original state as a necklace in 1968:
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The original owner of the jewels is said to have been Joséphine de Beauharnais, the first wife of Napoleon Bonaparte. Lots of royal jewels are said to have belonged to the empress, but this suite apparently actually did. Joséphine gave the amethyst parure to her daughter-in-law, Princess Augusta of Bavaria, who had married Eugène de Beauharnais in 1806. (Augusta’s father, King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria, later made the couple the Duke and Duchess of Leuchtenberg.) In turn, Augusta passed the suite along to her own daughter, Joséphine of Leuchtenberg, when she married the future King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway in 1823. - the court jeweller.com
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europesroyals · 1 month
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20/03 - Tiara you most want to see Princess Estelle wear
Cameo Tiara
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tiaramania · 4 months
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TIARA ALERT: Princess Sofia of Sweden wore her Emerald Palmette Tiara for the Nobel Prize ceremony at Stockholm Concert Hall and banquet at Stockholm City Hall on 10 December 2023.
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europesroyalsjewels · 2 months
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Emerald Necklace♕ Swedish Royal Jewel Foundation
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sophiebernadotte · 3 months
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The Crown Prince's Sword
This sword was presented to the Treasury in 1810 by King Karl XIII to be used as a crown prince's sword. The signed blade was taken from a rapier King Gustav II Adolf commissioned in The Hague in 1620.
Made: The blade is signed by Arnoldt Bracht. Material: Hilt and scabbard made from gold-plated silver, richly set with precious stones. The scabbard and the grip, which are covered in blue velvet with embroidered open crowns, were made by Christoffer Sergel.
Photo: The Royal Palaces
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steliosagapitos · 2 months
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~ "Pair of antique amethyst and diamond ear pendants, part of the Swedish Royal amethyst parure, early 19th Century, designed as a pair of pear cut amethysts within old cut diamond surround, alternate by a foliate shaped motif, mounted in gold and silver. The parure has an interesting provenance, it was a gift by Napoleon to his first wife Empress Josephine. Joséphine de Beauharnais gave the amethyst parure to her daughter-in-law, Princess Augusta of Bavaria, who had married Eugène de Beauharnais in 1806, who became the Duke and Duchess of Leuchtenberg. Because Augusta’s father, King Maximilian I Joseph of Bavaria, gave the couple this name. Augusta passed the suite along to her own daughter, Joséphine of Leuchtenberg, when she married the future King Oscar I of Sweden and Norway in 1823. The amethysts have been in the Swedish royal collection ever since; today they are a part of the Bernadotte family jewel foundation, and so they cannot be sold." ~
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charlotte-of-wales · 1 year
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Royal Tiaras Highlights: Queen Silvia’s Modern Fringe Tiara
The tiara is believed to have been given as a 10th wedding anniversary from King Carl XVI Gustaf to Queen Silvia of Sweden in 1986. It’s possible that it once belonged to the Countess of Tankerville (the wife of a British aristocrat) who was pictured wearing a nearly identical piece. The Tankervilles are loosely related to the Swedish Royals, although the tiara could have been purchased through an auction or it could be an entirely different piece altogether, done in similar style.
The tiara can be turn into a necklace and it was worn publicly by Queen Silvia for the first time in 1991. The piece has been frequently worn by Queen Silvia and her daughters Crown Princess Victoria and Princess Madeleine. In fact, it was this tiara that Princess Madeleine choose to wear in her wedding day to Christopher O’Neil in 2013. It has been speculated that Queen Silvia gave the tiara to Madeleine but no official announcement has been made.
via The Court Jeweller
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