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  1. Sep 23, 2024 · She gave the new tiara to her youngest daughter, Princess Anne-Marie, as an eighteenth-birthday present. Anne-Marie took the tiara and its coordinating jewels with her to Athens a few weeks later when she married King Constantine II of Greece in 1964.

  2. Sep 24, 2024 · The Spencer Tiara is one of the most famous tiaras in modern history since it was worn by Diana, Princess of Wales, on her wedding day in 1981. The tiara is reported to have been created originally in 1767 for Viscountess Montagu and remodelled by Garrard in the 1930s.

  3. Sep 17, 2024 · Since then, Queen Mary’s tiara has cemented itself as a well-loved wedding tiara, worn by Princess Anne in 1973 and Princess Beatrice in 2020. Valued at GBP 6.8 to 9 million, the special occasion accessory is seldom worn in public and is likely intended for significant occasions.

  4. Sep 28, 2024 · Princess Theodora’s mother, Queen Anne-Marie, wore both the tiara and veil for her wedding at the cathedral in Athens in September 1964, and Theodora’s sister, Princess Alexia, also wore both the veil and the tiara on her wedding day in London in 1999.

  5. Sep 25, 2024 · It was during the 19th century that brides began to wear tiaras over their veils for wedding ceremonies, again sparking a desperate desire to own one if not multiple parures to suit different occasions. Tiaras were not exclusively a fixture of French and English courts.

  6. Sep 29, 2024 · When Princess Theodora of Greece married her American fiancé, she did so in a familiar tiara. The Princess donned the Khedive of Egypt Tiara like her mother, Queen Anne-Marie and sister, Princess Alexia, before her. The tiara was also worn by Theodora’s maternal aunt, Queen Margrethe of Denmark, at her 1967 wedding.

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  8. Sep 18, 2024 · The tiara was also lent to Princess Anne who last wore the piece in public in the 1970s. Queen Elizabeth II only wore the tiara once – shortly after she received it, before she became Queen Consort. She never wore the tiara to a public event, as she preferred to wear larger, grander pieces.

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