Creation:  This tiara made in 1810 by Francois Regnault Nitot.  In the 1950s, Van Cleef & Arpels removed the emeralds and replaced them with turquoises.  The emeralds were set into other pieces of jewellery and sold separately. 
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| Empress Marie Louise | 
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| Shirley Harmon | 
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| Princess Alice | 
Materials:  79 emeralds and 1,006 diamonds set in silver and gold, later the emeralds were replaced with 79 Persian turquoises
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| unknown model | 
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| Princess Alice | 
Provenance: 
- Empress Marie Louise of France née Archduchess of Austria; from Emperor Napoleon on the occasion of their 1810 marriage 
- Archduke Karl Ferdinand of Austria-Teschen; inherited from his cousin in 1847 
- Archduke Karl Stephan of Austria-Teschen; inherited from his father in 1874 
- Archduke Karl Albrecht of Austria-Teschen; inherited from his father in 1933 
- Prince Karl Stefan of Altenburg; inherited from his father in 1951 
- Van Cleef & Arpels; purchased in 1953 and replaced the emeralds with turquoises 
- Marjorie Merriweather Post; bought in 1971 
- Smithsonian Institution: National Museum of Natural History; donated by Marjorie Merriweather Post 
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| Marjorie Merriweather Post | 
Other Wearers: 
- Princess Alice Elisabeth of Altenburg 
- Shirley Harmon 
Links: 
Photos:  Van Cleef & Arpels/Smithsonian Institution 
 
Oh no! It looks awful without the emeralds!
ReplyDeleteTiara Mania I love your site! Thanks for posting this stuff I loooove it!
ReplyDeleteI must post this or bust... What a horror! Those beautiful emeralds replaced by those AWFUL turquoise stones.
Blasphemy! LOL!