One of Her Majesty’s Commonwealth brooch – the Canadian Maple-Leaf Brooch 1939


Queen Elizabeth II Brooch| Royal Brooches Collection, The Queen’s Brooches, royal,royalty, brooch, pin, stomacher, devante de Corsage, Brosche, Broschen, royal brooch, gold brooch, royal jewels, royal diamond brooch, brooch of diamonds, pearl and diamond brooch, ruby and diamond brooch, sapphire and diamond brooch, emerald and diamond brooch, emerald brooch, royal collection, royal brooches, royal Brooch Collection, brooch of rubies, brooch with rubies, rubybrooch, sapphire brooch, brooch with sapphire, Badge brooch, diamond pin, The Queen, The Queen’s jewels, The Queen’s brooch, The Queen’s brooches, ruby-brooch, gem brooch
royal jewel history
One of Her Majesty’s Commonwealth brooch – the Canadian Maple-Leaf Brooch 1939
On display for the first time is a group of four brooches belonging to Her Majesty, each representing a nation of the United Kingdom, with a sprig of shamrock for Northern Ireland,
Sprays of daffodils for Wales,
Thistles for Scotland
and roses for England.
The brooches are made of gold, set with white, pink and yellow diamonds and, for the shamrock, emeralds.
The Queen has worn these brooches on numerous occasions, often while visiting the nation represented by the emblem.
Special Coronation display opens at Windsor Castle to
celebrate Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee
Windsor Castle 7 July – 26 September 202
Special Coronation display opens at Windsor Castle to celebrate Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee
Continuing the celebration of Her Majesty’s Platinum Jubilee, a special display at Windsor Castle will
open to visitors on Thursday, 7 July .
Platinum Jubilee: The Queen’s Coronation explores
the Coronation through portraiture, photographs and items of Her Majesty’s dress and jewellery,
including the Coronation Dress, Robe of Estate and the Coronation Necklace and Earrings.
The Queen’s Coronation, which took place at Westminster Abbey on 2 June 1953, was one of the
most significant occasions of the 20th century. The event was a source of national celebration, seen to
usher in a new age of progress and a spirit of optimism in post-war Britain. Three million people lined
the processional route in London and many more took part in church services and street parties
across the country. An estimated 27 million people – over half of the UK population – watched the
Coronation service on television, while a further 11 million listened to the radio broadcast.
Her Majesty’s Coronation Dress and Robe of Estate are on display in the spectacular setting of
St George’s Hall, the largest room in the Castle. Designed by the British couturier Sir Norman
Hartnell, the Coronation Dress was created in the finest white duchesse satin, richly embroidered in a
lattice-work effect with an iconographic scheme of floral emblems in gold and silver thread and pastel-
coloured silks, encrusted with seed pearls, sequins and crystals. Hartnell, who had previously designed
The Queen’s wedding dress in 1947, submitted eight designs for consideration. Her Majesty selected
the eighth design but requested that the emblems of the seven independent states of which she was
monarch be incorporated, together with those of England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales. A colourful
sketch of Hartnell’s ninth and final design is on display alongside original embroidery samples, giving
visitors an insight into the process of designing the dress.
Her Majesty’s Robe of Estate was made by the royal robe-makers Ede & Ravenscroft of purple silk
velvet woven by the firm of Warner & Sons, and was embroidered at the Royal School of
Needlework. The goldwork embroidery design features wheat ears and olive branches, symbolising
prosperity and peace, surrounding the crowned EIIR cipher. It took 12 embroideresses, using 18
different types of gold thread, more than 3,500 hours to complete the work between March and May
1953.
Her Majesty’s Coronation Necklace and Earrings are on display in the Lantern Lobby. Originally made
for Queen Victoria in 1858 and comprising of 28 diamonds, the necklace was subsequently worn by
Queen Alexandra, Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth (The Queen Mother) at their coronations in
1902, 1911 and 1937 respectively. The Coronation Earrings had also been worn by Queen Mary and
Queen Elizabeth on their coronation days.
Also on display are brooches representing the emblems of some Commonwealth countries. These
include the Canadian Maple-leaf Brooch, worn by Her Majesty (then Princess Elizabeth) on her first
visit to Canada in 1951; the Flame-Lily Brooch, the emblem of Zimbabwe, which was pinned to
Queen’s mourning clothes when she returned to Britain from Kenya after the death of her father in
1952; the New Zealand Silver Fern Brooch, the Australian Wattle Brooch, and the Sri Lanka Brooch.
A highlight of the display will be a 2.5-metre-tall portrait of The Queen by Sir Herbert James Gunn.
Commissioned to commemorate the Coronation, it continues a long tradition of formal portraiture of
new monarchs in their Coronation clothes, often referred to as ‘State Portraits’. Her Majesty is
depicted in the Throne Room at Buckingham Palace wearing the Coronation Dress, Robe of Estate,
Coronation Necklace and Earrings, Diamond Diadem and the Collar and Badge of the Most Noble
Order of the Garter. This badge, known as the Marlborough George, is also part of the display.
Originally made for George IV in 1828, the gold figure of St. George on a rearing horse slaying the
dragon, the emblem of the Order, is mounted in enamel and diamonds. The Collar and Badge are
worn by The Queen for the annual Garter Day service at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle and
for the State Opening of Parliament.
The leading British fashion and portrait photographer Cecil Beaton was chosen to take the official
photographs of the Coronation. These were taken inside Buckingham Palace after The Queen had
returned from Westminster Abbey. A three-quarter length portrait, on display in the Lantern Lobby,
shows Her Majesty wearing the Imperial State Crown and holding the sceptre and orb. Breaking with
tradition, Beaton added an air of theatricality and glamour by photographing the young Queen against
a painted backdrop of Henry VII’s Lady Chapel in Westminster Abbey. The use of the profile pose
provides a sense of tradition and continuity, as monarchs have been depicted in profile on coins,
medals, and stamps though the ages.
A digital event Royal Jewels: A Platinum Jubilee Celebration will take place at 19:00 on Thursday,
28 July. Caroline de Guitaut, Deputy Surveyor of The Queen’s Works of Art and curator of the
Platinum Jubilee display, will be in conversation with Carol Woolton, former Jewellery Editor of Vogue
to discuss items of The Queen’s jewellery on display at Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace this
summer. Tickets can be booked at www.rct.uk
Platinum Jubilee: The Queen’s Coronation will be part of a visit to Windsor Castle from 7 July – 26
September 2022 and is included in the price of a general admission ticket. Windsor Castle is open to
visitors Thursday to Monday, remaining closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays. For tickets and visitor
information: www.rct.uk, T. +44 (0)303 123 7304
August 1958
FIRST IN 400 YEARS The rose is the traditional „rent“ for the castle paid to the sovereign. The Queen was the first reigning monarch to visit this Argyllshire Resort in almost 400 years.
A number of gifts were presented to the Royal Couple
The Queen received a thistle brooch surmounted with hand-carved amethyst and set with diamonds from the town people of Dunoon. The naturalistic diamond thistle brooch is made with an emerald ribbon and carved amethyst bud.
…yesterday to welcome the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh when they visited the resorts on their way to Balmoral to begin their summer holiday. Crowds standing six deep on the pavement were soaked by heavy rain an hour before the Royal couple arrived in Dunoon, Argyllshire, but shortly before the Royal barge reached the pier the sun broke through, and there was brilliant sunshine for the remainder of the tour. Waves of cheering greeted the Queen and the Duke as they stepped ashore at Dunoon from the Royal barge, which had brought them from the Royal yacht Britannia. The Queen delighted the crowd by walking 200 yards from the pier to Dunoon’s new civic pavilion. …..
The Queen’s Jewellery Victoria’s bow brooches
This year marks 70 years since Her Majesty The Queen ascended the throne in 1952, the first time in British royal history that a Platinum Jubilee will be celebrated, we could see this follow brooch on display, the silver fern leaves – a New Zealand national emblem
The Queen’s jewellery to feature in Platinum Jubilee displays at the Official Royal Residences
The Queen often wears brooches that represent the emblems of Commonwealth countries while visiting or meeting their representatives.
the Canadian Maple-leaf Brooch, worn by Her Majesty (then Princess Elizabeth) on her first visit to Canada in 1951;
the Flame-Lily Brooch, the emblem of Zimbabwe, which was pinned to The Queen’s mourning clothes when she returned to Britain from Kenya after the death of her father in 1952;
the New Zealand Silver Fern Brooch, presented by the Women of Auckland on Christmas Day, 1953
the Australian Wattle Brooch, presented on Her Majesty’s first visit to Australia in 1954;
and the Sri Lanka Brooch, presented to The Queen during a State Visit to Sri Lanka in 1981.