Interfoto/Alamy |
Archives for September 2019
Tiaras of Mary, Duchess of Roxburghe
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
With the recent death of the 10th Duke of Roxburghe, it seems like an appropriate time to turn our attention to some of the jewels once worn by members of the Innes-Ker family. Today, we’re looking at a selection of jewels owned by a well-connected Roxburghe duchess: Lady Mary Crewe-Milnes, the first wife of the 9th Duke.
Mary, Duchess of Roxburghe at Floors Castle, January 1953 (Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) |
Born in 1915, Lady Mary was a daughter of the 1st Marquess of Crewe; she was also a granddaughter of the 5th Earl of Rosebery and, therefore, a descendant of the wealthy Rothschild family. (King George V and Queen Mary were her godparents.) In 1935, Lady Mary climbed the aristocratic social ladder to even greater heights when she married the 9th Duke of Roxburghe at Westminster Abbey in the most fashionable society wedding of the year. Mary, only twenty, became the youngest duchess in the nation. Two years later, she was one of Queen Elizabeth’s attendants at her coronation. Eventually, though, the marriage fell apart. In early 1953, the Duke made headlines around the world when he tried to have Mary evicted from the family’s ancestral Scottish home, Floors Castle. She dug in, refusing to leave for months, even when he had the electricity and telephone disconnected. Eventually, she fled the castle and filed for divorce, citing adultery.
The 9th Duke of Roxburghe and his second wife, Margaret, with their infant son, Guy, at his christening in 1955. Guy, who later became the 10th Duke of Roxburghe, died in August 2019 at the age of 64 (Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) |
The divorce was finalized at the end of 1953. The Duke remarried less than a month later, producing a pair of sons with his second wife, Margaret McConnel. (The 10th Duke, who recently passed away, was their elder son.) Mary, however, remained unmarried for the rest of her life, settling in a 16th-century estate in Surrey that she inherited from her mother.
SHAUN CURRY/AFP/Getty Images |
The house and lands weren’t the only things Lady Mary inherited. The country house, West Horsley Place, was packed with treasures, including rare works of literature, paintings, furniture, and jewelry. In 2009, she auctioned a gorgeous set of ruby and diamond jewelry at Sotheby’s that came from her mother’s family. The diamond and ruby necklace and the coordinating earrings were made by Garrard in 1884 and purchased by Lady Mary’s grandfather, Lord Rosebery, for his wife, Hannah. The pale turquoise case that accompanied the rubies is emblazoned with Rosebery’s monogram under the coronet of an earl.
Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images |
The jewels were inherited by Lady Mary’s mother, the Marchioness of Crewe, who then presumably passed them along to Mary. When Mary sold the jewels in Geneva in November 2009, the necklace fetched nearly $4.3 million USD, while the earrings commanded more than $1.4 million USD.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
When Lady Mary died in 2014 (at the remarkable age of 99), the lion’s share of her estate was left to her great-nephew, the writer and television presenter Bamber Gascoigne. He decided to auction many of his late great-aunt’s possessions to fund much-needed renovations for West Horsley Place. Several remarkable pieces of jewelry were included in the sale, including a trio of gorgeous, fascinating tiaras.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The earliest tiara included in the sale is this unusual diamond and ruby diadem, made during the second half of the nineteenth century. Sotheby’s describes the airy, delicate piece as “a series of foliate sprays set with circular-cut, cushion-shaped and rose diamonds, later embellished with circular-cut rubies centred on a similarly set lyre motif.” The rubies photograph with a distinctly pinkish hue.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The auction estimate for the tiara was set between around $80,000 to $100,000. When the piece sold in May 2015 in Geneva, those estimates turned out to be right on the money: the tiara sold for a little over $107,000 USD.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The auction also included a pair of all-diamond tiaras. The first, this convertible tiara/necklace, was made in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Sotheby’s describes the piece as “composed of fleurs de lys and confronting scroll motifs, swing-set with a graduated row of twenty pear-shaped diamond, on a band composed of lozenge and trefoil motifs, set throughout with cushion-shaped and rose diamonds.” The maker’s identity is not included in the notes, but given the design (especially of the detachable “diamond and dot” bandeau base), my money’s on Garrard. The construction date — and the possibility that Garrard may have been involved — suggests to me that this tiara may have also been part of the Rosebery legacy.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The tiara brought a handsome sum at auction, doubling its estimate to fetch just under $850,000.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The second all-diamond tiara, though, was the showstopper of the sale. The stunning Art Deco-era tiara was made by Cartier in the 1930s, right around the time that Lady Mary married the 9th Duke of Roxburghe. The tiara was described in the lot notes as having a “geometric design, set throughout with circular-cut diamonds surmounted by a graduated series of thirty-one collet-set diamonds.” (The notes don’t include this, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the central element at least was detachable for wear as a clip brooch, and perhaps some of the side elements, too.) The tiara was accompanied by a fitted case featuring the Roxburghe monogram and ducal coronet.
JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/Getty Images |
The tiara was estimated to fetch between around $300,000 to $550,000, but when the hammer fell, it blew those estimates out of the water, commanding an astonishing $2.5 million USD.
Princess Ingrid Alexandra’s Confirmation Jewels
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Princess Ingrid Alexandra, the future Queen of Norway, was confirmed as a member of the Church of Norway on Saturday, and we’ve got a closer look at the royals and jewels involved…
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Princess Ingrid Alexandra is the daughter of Crown Prince Haakon and Crown Princess Mette-Marit of Norway (and, therefore, the granddaughter of King Harald V and Queen Sonja of Norway). She turned 15 in January. When she eventually becomes Norway’s queen regnant, she’ll be the first female monarch of the country since the fifteenth century, thanks to succession laws that changed in 1990. For her confirmation, the princess wore bunad, a traditional national costume. The ensemble was a gift from her royal grandparents.
TERJE BENDIKSBY/AFP/Getty Images |
The princess’s confirmation took place in the chapel of the Royal Palace in Oslo, with her family and godparents in attendance.
VIDAR RUUD/AFP/Getty Images |
The Norwegian royals in attendance included King Harald, Queen Sonja, Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit, Prince Sverre Magnus, Marius Borg Hoiby, Princess Martha Louise, and Princess Astrid.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
(Since Princess Astrid was unkindly cropped in half by that image, here’s another view of her with Princess Martha Louise!)
VIDAR RUUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Ingrid Alexandra was confirmed by Vicar Karoline Astrup and Bishop Kari Veiteberg.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Ingrid Alexandra has five royal godparents, three of whom are foreign monarchs or monarchs-in-waiting. King Felipe VI of Spain was present for his goddaughters’ confirmation; he had been unable to attend her baptism in 2004, because the date conflicted with events scheduled in preparation for his wedding to Queen Letizia.
TERJE BENDIKSBY/AFP/Getty Images |
Crown Princess Victoria, the future Queen of Sweden, wore a lovely lavender dress and headpiece for the confirmation, as well as silver jewelry.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
And Crown Prince Frederik, the future King of Denmark, was also present to celebrate his goddaughter’s confirmation.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Like King Felipe, Crown Prince Frederik was unable to attend Ingrid Alexandra’s baptism because of his impending wedding to Crown Princess Mary. This time around, she accompanied Frederik to Norway for the ceremony, as did their elder son, Prince Christian (who, like Ingrid, is also a future Scandinavian monarch). Mary wore her gorgeous earrings with the rectangular pink gemstone drops for the occasion.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Christian will turn fourteen in a few months, and he’s suddenly looking very grown up. He’s as tall as his parents!
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
Formal portraits were also taken to mark the occasion. Here, Ingrid Alexandra is surrounded by all of her godparents: King Harald V of Norway (her grandfather), King Felipe, Crown Princess Victoria, Princess Martha Louise (her aunt), Crown Prince Frederik, and Marit Tjessem (her grandmother).
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
She also posed with her parents, Crown Prince Haakon and Crown Princess Mette-Marit, and her brothers, Marius Borg Hoiby and Prince Sverre Magnus.
LISE AASERUD/AFP/Getty Images |
And we also got a new three-generations picture, featuring King Harald, Crown Prince Haakon, and Princess Ingrid Alexandra.
TERJE PEDERSEN/AFP/Getty Images |
The day’s festivities also included a balcony appearance, where Ingrid Alexandra greeted well-wishers outside the palace beside her father…
TERJE BENDIKSBY/AFP/Getty Images |
…and a luncheon at the palace. Above, Queen Sonja delivers a speech to celebrate her granddaughter.
King Felipe of Spain gifted his goddaughter, Princess Ingrid Alexandra a beautiful bracelet for her Confirmation pic.twitter.com/kvejSGL51M— UFO No More (@ufonomore) August 31, 2019
Ingrid Alexandra’s jewelry box also received a little boost from her confirmation. Among her gifts was this bejeweled bracelet, presented to her by King Felipe.
Among the presents Princess Ingrid Alexandra of Norway received for her confirmation on Saturday was Queen Maud’s badge of the Order of Victoria and Albert, which was given to her by her great-aunt Princess Astrid. https://t.co/gfVeq0px9K pic.twitter.com/tOfhxOLHNw— Majesty/Joe Little (@MajestyMagazine) September 2, 2019
Even more thrilling was her gift from Princess Astrid. Historian Trond Noren Isaksen, an authority on Norwegian royal jewelry, revealed that Astrid offered her great-niece the badge of the Order of Victoria and Albert that originally belonged to Queen Maud. Astrid has often worn the badge, which features a double cameo portrait of Victoria and Albert, attached to a gold bracelet. Isaksen writes that Astrid gave Ingrid Alexandra the badge with its original silk ribbon rather than the gold bracelet. It’s so wonderful to see this piece of family history return to the main line of the royal family.