Tomorrow marks the 45th Anniversary of the Birth of Princess Victoria Louise, Duchess of Brunswick, who passed away in 1980! The Kaiser’s only daughter who married the Head of the House of Hanover and spent a long life at the centre of German Royal and Noble circles, to mark the anniversary, we are again featuring her iconic Brunswick Tiara!
An elaborate scrolling diadem with three large central diamonds in the centre and a laurel wreath border, the Tiara originates from Empress Josephine of France, making its way to Germany where in 1913, it was bought by the people of Brunswick and, after being extensively repaired by Court Jeweller Hermann Jürgens, given to Prince Ernst August of Hanover (later Duke of Brunswick) as a wedding gift for his bride, Princess Victoria Louise of Prussia, the only daughter of Kaiser Wilhelm II, in 1913.
The Brunswick Tiara was just one of many wedding gifts, which included the Prussian Diamond Tiara from her parents, the Kaiser and Empress Augusta (now belonging to their granddaughter, Queen Sofia of Spain), a Diamond Necklace/Tiara from the groom, and an Emerald Laurel Wreath Tiara, another gift from her parents (which belongs to Archduchess Francesca von Habsburg).
Princess Victoria Louise wore the Brunswick Tiara for her Wedding Portraits and her first Official Portraits as the Duchess of Brunswick with it remaining a favourite during and after the couple’s short reign as the Sovereign Duke and Duchess of Brunswick.
The Duchess of Brunswick wore the Tiara at royal events through the 1920s and 1930s, including for the Wedding of Prince Christian of Schaumburg-Lippe and Princess Feodora of Denmark in 1937 and the Wedding Gala of her daughter, Princess Frederica, to Crown Prince Paul of Greece in Athens in 1938.
After the family moved into Marienburg Castle in Hanover after being forced to abandon Blankenburg Castle in Brunswick at the end of the Second World War, the Duchess wore the Brunswick Tiara at the Wedding Ball of her son, Prince Ernest Augustus, and Princess Ortrud of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg in 1951 and for the Wedding Ball of Prince Wilhelm-Karl of Prussia in 1952.
By the time Princess Victoria Louise was widowed in 1953, the Prussian Diamond Tiara had been given to her daughter, Queen Frederica of Greece, while the Emerald Laurel Wreath Tiara was given to her daughter-in-law, Princess Sophie of Greece and Hanover, and the Diamond Necklace Tiara was given to Princess Ortrud, but Princess Victoria Louise retained the Brunswick Tiara, her grandest Tiara, for herself.
Remaining at the centre of German Royal and Noble circles for her entire life, the Duchess wore the Tiara at a variety of events, most notably the Wedding Ball of her grandson, King Constantine II of Greece, and Princess Anne Marie of Denmark in Athens in 1964, the Wedding Ball of the Margrave of Baden and Archduchess Valerie of Austria in 1966 and the Wedding Ball of Princess Marie Louise of Prussia and Count Rudolf of Schönburg-Glauchau in 1971.
When Princess Victoria Louise died on this day 45 years ago, the Brunswick Tiara was inherited by her eldest son, the Prince of Hanover, whose wife had died a few months previously. The Brunswick Tiara was not worn by the two successive Princesses of Hanover, until 2004, when Princess Caroline of Monaco, the Princess of Hanover, wife of Princess Victoria Louise’s grandson, wore the Brunswick Tiara at the Wedding of Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark in Copenhagen.
The current Prince and Princess are separated, but there are two more Princesses, Princess Ekaterina and Princess Alessandra, who have already worn the large Hanoverian Floral Tiara, so they may hopefully wear the heirloom Brunswick Tiara again soon!



























































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