Grand Duchess Maria Pavlovna of Russia wearing her famous Grand Duchess Vladimir Tiara. Image: Wikimedia |
This
is the first of a two-part article about Grand Duchess Marie Pavlovna and her
famous tiara that now belongs to the British Royal Family. You can read the second part here.
On March 28, 1874, twenty-year-old Marie of
Mecklenburg-Schwerin tied the knot with Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovitch of
Russia, the imposing and bear-like third son of Czar Alexander II. The princess was transformed into an elegant Russian
grandduchess who took the name Maria Pavlovna, a tribute to her Russian
heritage (her great-grandmother was Grand Duchess Elena Pavlovna of Russia).
She was born to the Grand Ducal House of
Mecklenburg-Schwerin, a small German state ruled by her father Grand Duke Friedrich
Franz II. Her mother, the grand duke’s first wife, was Princess Augusta Reuss
of Kostritz. Duchess Marie was already engaged to George Albert, Prince of
Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt, when she met Grand Duke Vladimir Alexandrovitch. Perhaps,
she thought she’d be better off as a Russian grand duke’s wife rather than
being another obscure German princess. Her engagement was broken off and she
was betrothed to Vladimir. Her refusal to convert from Lutheran to the Russian
Orthodox Church prolonged their engagement, but they married, anyway, in a
style befitting a Russian grand duke’s station.
She only converted to Orthodoxy when her eldest son, Kirill, became
closer to the line of succession to the imperial throne.
Maria Pavlovna set out to become the grandest
of all the grand duchesses, so grand that she rivaled her sister-in-law, the
glamorous Czarina Maria Feodorovna,
and her niece, the aloof Czarina Alexandra Feodorovna. She wanted only the
finest clothes and she had to have only sparkling jewelry to match her expensive gowns.
Grand Duke Vladimir wanted to give her a
tiara for a wedding gift . Court jeweler Carl Edward Bolin was commissioned to
design a diamond-studded tiara of 15 gold- and silver-circlets. Fifteen tear-shaped
pearl drops served as the tiara’s masterpiece and it cost 48,200 rubles—already a huge
fortune at that time! But never mind, the Romanovs had all the money in the world. Bolin
created a tiara that was flexible enough for alteration, and yet a standout even if the pearl drops are taken.
The Vladimir Tiara was a novelty in
that era that even Cartier made three copies of it when it was sent
there for cleaning. It was
clearly a favorite of the grand duchess’ since many of her official potraits
were taken featuring her wearing this stunning piece.
The grand duchess became more and more
ambitious and wanted to advance her status in the court. As Empress Alexandra withdrew
from society, the Grand Duchess Vladimir emerged as the leading court hostess. Her residence, the Vladimir Palace, turned out as St. Petersburg’s most
cosmopolitan and most sought after grand ducal court of all the Russias. What better way to amaze Russian aristocrats
than flaunt her stunning collection and she acquired more and more jewels. As
Luis Miguel Howard puts it, she “preferred artists and revolutionary styles of
her day,” acquiring “wonderful stones then considered slightly inferior such as
cat’s eyes and tourmalines.” Maria Pavlovna grew accustomed to acquiring jewels,
which eventually included a 100-carat emerald once owned by Catherine the Great
and the 5-carat ruby of Josephine de Beauharnais.
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