
With its wave-like diamond pattern and its seafoam-colored central aquamarine, the Duchess of Edinburgh’s most modern tiara is a striking piece. Even better: it’s convertible!
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Sparkling Royal Jewels From Around the World

With its wave-like diamond pattern and its seafoam-colored central aquamarine, the Duchess of Edinburgh’s most modern tiara is a striking piece. Even better: it’s convertible!

Thanks to their French imperial heritage, the Bernadottes of Sweden have a jewelry collection that features pieces that date all the way back to the days of Napoleon and Josephine. But today’s jewels, the Vasa Earrings, have an even longer Swedish royal legacy.

March is the month of the aquamarine, and we’ll be celebrating some of the grandest royal aquamarine tiaras each Saturday this month. We’re kicking things off with one of my very favorites: the aquamarine kokoshnik owned by Sweden’s Princess Margaretha.

In 1858, Queen Victoria’s jewelry box went through a sudden and rather unexpected transformation. All of the jewels that had once belonged to her grandmother, Queen Charlotte, were awarded to her cousin, the King of Hanover, whose father had claimed them following the death of King William IV. She lost numerous pieces, including a set of diamond bow brooches. Today’s brooches are the trio that she had made to replace them.