Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara

Today marks the 170th Anniversary of the Birth of Queen Lovisa of Denmark, who was born on this day in 1851! The Swedish Princess who became the Queen of Denmark and the mother of Danish and Norwegian Kings, Queen Lovisa had a legendary jewellery collection and to mark the anniversary, we are featuring the spectacular Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara that has passed through the Swedish, Danish, and Norwegian Royal Families for the past 200 years!

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Pearl Poiré Tiara | Danish Ruby Parure | Danish Crown Diamond Parure | Pearl Poire Brooch | Diamond Brooches | Antique Diamond Parure

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But first, lets learn about Queen Lovisa! The only surviving child of King Charles XV of Sweden and Norway and Princess Louise of the Netherlands, Princess Lovisa could not be recognized as the Heir to the Thrones of Sweden and Norway, which went to her uncle, but grew up at the centre of the Swedish Royal Court in Stockholm. In 1869, Princess Lovisa married Crown Prince Frederick of Denmark, the eldest son and Heir of King Christian IX of Denmark who was also the brother of King George I of GreeceEmpress Maria Feodorovna of Russia, and Queen Alexandra of the United Kingdom. The couple had eight children, including King Christian X of DenmarkKing Haakon VII of Norway, and Princess Ingeborg of Sweden, and while Crown Princess Lovisa/Louise (as she was known in Denmark) was popular with the Danish public, she was not well-liked among the extended Danish Royal Family. During her decades as Crown Princess, she founded many charitable and religious organizations and rafter the death of her parents, remained close with the Swedish Royal Family, especially when her daughter, Princess Ingeborg, married her cousin, Prince Carl. When her son, Prince Carl, was appointed King of an independent Norway in 1905, it fulfilled her King Charles XV’s wish to see his descendent on one of his thrones. Crown Prince Frederick finally succeeded to the Danish Throne in 1906, and the new Queen Louise continued her patronage of art, literature and charity during their short reign until 1912, and afterwards as a widow, the Queen Dowager built Egelund Slot, where she resided until her death in 1926, a few months before her 75th birthday. Her descendents include Queen Margrethe II of DenmarkKing Harald V of NorwayQueen Anne-Marie of GreeceKing Philippe of Belgium, and Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg.

Composed of floral motifs and laurel wreaths depicted in diamonds and mounted in gold and silver, the Tiara likely originates from the reign of Emperor Napoleon, though an erroneous provenance often claims that it was a wedding gift to Désirée Clary (Napoleon’s former fiancee) and General Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte (who later became King Karl XVI Johan of Sweden and Norway) in 1798. First depicted on Queen Josefina of Sweden and Norway, who was the granddaughter of Napoleon’s Empress Josephine, the tiara was likely a Wedding Gift to her from her parents, the Duke and Duchess of Leuchtenberg, or in-laws, King Karl XVI Johan and Queen Desiree. Princess Josefina likely wore the Tiara at her Wedding to Crown Prince Oscar of Sweden in 1823, and was portrayed wearing the Tiara as Queen in a State Portrait by Friedrich Dürck in 1849.

After Queen Josefina’s death in 1876, the Diamond Tiara was left to her granddaughter, Princess Lovisa, who was then Crown Princess of Denmark, who had brought so many jewels to Denmark from Sweden that “if it was all laid out on a card table, you could not see the fabric underneath”. Despite the legendary jewellery collection, Crown Princess and later Queen Lovisa was not depicted wearing many jewels, an exception being this Diamond Tiara, which was worn in many portraits, including Laurits Tuxen’s State Portrait in 1911-1912, when it was paired with the Danish Crown Diamond Parure.

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Queen Louise left Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara to her youngest son, Prince Gustav, at the time of her death in 1926, who was unmarried and loaned the Tiara to to his sister, Princess Thyra, also unmarried, for the Wedding Gala of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Princess Ingrid of Sweden in 1935, King Christian X’s Silver Jubilee in 1937, and King Gustav V’s 80th Birthday in 1938.

After Prince Gustav’s death in 1944, Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara was inherited by his niece, Crown Princess Märtha of Norway, daughter of his sister, Princess Ingeborg of Denmark and Sweden, and the daughter-in-law of his brother, King Haakon VII of Norway. Crown Princess Märtha, who had earlier worn the Tiara at the Wedding of Prince Christian of Schaumburg-Lippe and Princess Feodora of Denmark in 1937, claimed the piece upon the Royal Family’s return to Europe in 1945, following World War II, and because Queen Maud’s jewels remained in England throughout the Norwegian Royal Family’s exile during WWII, and were only reclaimed during a visit for the Queen’s Coronation in 1953, Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara along with the Napoleonic Emerald Parure, which she had been given by Princess Ingeborg to sell in case of financial difficulties during exile, became Crown Princess Märtha’s only Tiaras in the years leading up to her death, notably worn for an Official Portrait, Queen Juliana’s Inauguration Gala in 1948 and Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation Gala at Covent Garden in 1953, which came less than a year ahead of her own untimely death from cancer.

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After Crown Princess Märtha’s death, her daughter, Princess Astrid became the leading lady of the Norwegian Royal Court first for her grandson, King Haakon VII, and then also for her father, King Olav V, also getting access to the Emerald Parure and Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara, which she wore for the British State Visit to Norway in 1955Crown Prince Harald’s 21st Birthday in 1957, and the Danish State Visit to Norway in 1960. It was only in 1968, that the Norwegian Royal Jewellery Collection, consisting of the jewels of Queen Maud and Crown Princess Märtha, were divided up between the three siblings following the wedding of then Crown Prince Harald.

As the grandest two Tiaras in the collection, the Emerald Parure and Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara came to Crown Prince Harald and were worn by the then Crown Princess Sonja as the leading lady of the Norwegian Royal Family, first for a series of Official Portraits taken soon after her wedding, and then for a variety of Gala events, including the Icelandic State Visit to Norway in 1971, the Swedish State Visit to Norway in 1974, and the Wedding of Princess Christina of Sweden in 1974.

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During the 1980s, Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara continued it’s use as the second grandest Tiara of the Norwegian Royal Family, being worn for a variety of Return Banquets and secondary Galas, including for the Spanish State Visit to Norway in 1982Princess Märtha Louise’s Confirmation in 1986, and Crown Prince Harald’s 50th Birthday in 1987, a pattern which continued after the Accession of King Harald V of Norway in 1991, with Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara being worn atCrown Prince Haakon’s 18th Birthday in 1991, the Norwegian State Visit to Denmark in 1991King Harland and Queen Sonja’s Silver Anniversary in 1993, and on the Iceland State Visit to Norway in 1997, among a series of events.

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Queen Sonja has usually paired Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara with Queen Alexandra’s Diamond Chandelier Earrings and two diamond rivieres, and this combination was worn for Queen Margrethe’s 60th Birthday in 2000, the Norwegian State Visit to Japan in 2001, the Wedding of Princess Märtha Louise of Norway in 2002, the Wedding Gala of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark in 2004, and the Norwegian State Visit to Britain in 2005. As State Visits and most other Gala events only have one Gala event as opposed to multiple events in days of yore, the status of Queen Josefina’s Diamond Tiara as a secondary Tiara has meant that is has been worn quite sparsely in recent years, with a recent appearance at the Stortingsmiddag in 2018 coming after a gap of many years. However, earlier this week (long after this article had been pre-written and scheduled), Queen Sonja wore the Tiara for the annual Gala Dinner for Members of Parliament (Stortingsmiddag), the first Gala event in Norway after the pandemic. With a State Visit from The Netherlands next month and two Gala events for Queen Margrethe’s Golden Jubilee, as well as a likely Gala for Princess Ingrid Alexandra’s 18th Birthday, in January, lets hope the spectacular Heirloom makes another reappearance soon!

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