Coronation Crown of George IV
The Coronation Crown of George IV is an elaborate coronation crown made specially for King George IV in 1821.
At 40 cm (16 in) tall and decorated with 12,314 diamonds, it was said to make him look like a "gorgeous bird of the east".[1] The innovative gold and silver frame, created by Philip Liebart of Rundell, Bridge & Rundell,[2] had been designed to be almost invisible underneath the diamonds. A plan to remove the traditional fleurs-de-lis and introduce the rose, thistle and shamrock, the floral emblems of England, Scotland and Ireland, was abandoned following objections by the College of Heralds. As a general rule, the maintenance caps in British crowns are made of crimson or purple velvet, but this crown differed in having a dark blue cap.[3]
Because of the postponement of George IV's coronation due to the trial of his wife, Queen Caroline, the final bill for the hiring of the stones came to £24,425.[4] After his coronation, the king was reluctant to part with his new crown, and lobbied the government to buy it outright so he could use it for the annual State Opening of Parliament, but it was just too expensive. The crown was dismantled in 1823 and has not been worn by any other monarch since then.[4]
He did purchase a bronze life-sized model of his crown for £38, on which the inscription reads: "Cast of the Rich Imperial Diamond Crown with which His Most Sacred Majesty King George IV was crowned on 19 July 1821".[5]
The frame, next to diamonds worth £2 million on loan from De Beers, is on display in the Martin Tower at the Tower of London.[6]
See also
References
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- ↑ The Diamond Diadem at the Royal Collection.
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- ↑ Cast of George IV's crown at the Royal Collection.
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