Queen Mary of Denmark inspects the guard during an event to mark the 75th anniversary of the establishment of the National Guard at The Freedom Museum on 3 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Portrait of Queen Mary I of England by Hans Eworth Mary was born at the Palace of Placentia at Greenwich on February 18, 1516, the only surviving child of King Henry VIII of England and Catherine o…
The Australian-born royal, 52, appearance comes after a flag was raised at Amalienborg Castle - meaning that a senior royal had stayed home from their break.
Queen Mary of Denmark attends the event marking the 20th anniversary of the “The Specialists”, organisation that promotes social inclusion for people with autism, at the National Museum on 9 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The mother-of-four, 52, whose husband King Frederik X of Denmark, 55, ascended the throne last month, has debuted a refreshed appearance.
The couple, who took over the Danish throne in January appeared very frosty with one another during a March trip to Verbier, an exclusive ski resort in Switzerland.
Queen Mary of Denmark attends the event marking the 20th anniversary of the “The Specialists”, organisation that promotes social inclusion for people with autism, at the National Museum on 9 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The mother-of-four, 52, whose husband King Frederik X of Denmark, 55, ascended the throne last month, has debuted a refreshed appearance.
They were her big jewelry statement during the Boston trip
Queen Mary of Denmark inaugurates the the southern part of Jægersborg Hegn as untouched forest and releases deer at Naerum Port on 7 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
On this day in 1953, the public mourned the death of a much-loved and respected member of the British royal family – Queen Mary
It's easy to forget that some royal women had very impressive careers before their roles carrying out public duties. Here are the cleverest royals in Europe - but how do the UK royals measure up?
Royals have been marrying their cousins since time immemorial, traditionally as a means of strengthening political alliances. What might be surprising though is that members of the royal family have continued to marry their cousins, right up to the present day!
We witnessed history in Copenhagen today—Queen Margrethe II of Denmark abdicated in favor of her son, King Frederik X of Denmark. And, as you might have expected, there were plenty of very special royal jewels
Queen Mary of Denmark inspects the guard during an event to mark the 75th anniversary of the establishment of the National Guard at The Freedom Museum on 3 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
The couple, who took over the Danish throne in January appeared very frosty with one another during a March trip to Verbier, an exclusive ski resort in Switzerland.
In our weekly roster of the world’s best dressed, a panel of Vanity Fair editors selects the most fashionable members of royal families. Is Kate Middleton tops again?
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Queen Mary of Denmark inaugurates the the southern part of Jægersborg Hegn as untouched forest and releases deer at Naerum Port on 7 April 2024 in Copenhagen, Denmark.
Everything you need to know about the stylish new queen, from her background and her friendship with the Princess of Wales, to her coronation outfit.
Portrait by Arthur Trevethin Nowell, 1927. During her time, Queen Mary - the consort of George V, grandmother of the present queen - oversaw a great wealth of jewelry being added to the already brimming royal coffers of the United Kingdom. Both in the collection of "crown jewels", and those held in private possession of the Windsor ladies. Many pieces were new-made, other were redesigns of earlier pieces. And she also purchased important pieces from those royals who had not fared so well post-WWI, most notably, the surviving members of the Russian Imperial family. (Though the Queen was a notorious magpie and "bargain-hunter" - perhaps the lingering result of a royal but embarrassingly debt-ridden childhood - rumors that appeared a few decades back that, during the Thirties, she bought up her Russian relatives' jewelry for less than market value, appear to have been proven false.) Detail of above. The Queen is wearing the "Lover's Knot" tiara she had had made by Garrard in 1914, copied from a tiara owned by her aunt and godmother, Augusta, Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. The uppermost pearls removed, it was later famously worn by Diana, Princess of Wales. During her husband's reign and as a dowager, she was not afraid to display this ever-accumulating bounty on her person and, like her mother-in-law Queen Alexandra before her, she was quite impressive in the sheer quantity of ornamentation she could carry. Indeed, even more so than her petite predecessor, Queen Mary's height and the great expanse of her famously prodigious bosom were able to accommodate a truly mighty jeweled burden. And her husband and the British people took great delight in their queen "all got up like a Christmas tree." This was true even after the Edwardian age that was her heyday had passed, after the fashions changed - and she stayed the same. She was reliably bejeweled and immovable. And has thus remained a royal icon. Portrait by Richard Jack, 1927. The Queen wears the diamond and pendant pearl tiara that had belonged to the Grand Duchess Vladimir of Russia. The large brooch centered on the Garter Riband is made up of the third and fourth cuttings from the famous Cullinan diamond; the present Queen has referred to them as "Granny's Chips". Portrait by Simon Elwes, 1933-34. Queen Mary wears the Vladimir tiara with the brooch from the Garrard suite of 1863 which was given as a wedding present to the future Queen Alexandra by her fiancé, then Prince of Wales. A colored illustration from a contemporary periodical, circa 1902. Portrait by Sir William Samuel Henry Llewellyn, 1914. The queen, dressed in Garter robes, wears the "Girls of Great Britain and Ireland" tiara. The upstanding pearls later removed, it has become iconic as worn by her grand-daughter, especially early in her reign. Portrait by Arthur Trevethin Nowell, 1935. She again wears the "Lover's Knot" tiara. Portrait by Simon Elwes, 1938. Dressed for the coronation of her son, George VI, she again wears the Cullinan III and IV brooch. Portrait by David Jagger, 1930. A bit more understated, this, the queen is only wearing a few rubies and some pearls. A watercolor sketch done from the group portrait of 1913, by Sir John Lavery, 1914. Oil sketch of the Queen, by Sir John Lavery, done in preparation for or commemoration of the group portrait seen below, 1913. "The Royal Family at Buckingham Palace", by Sir John Lavery, 1913. Portrait by Leonard Campbell Taylor, 1928. The diamond choker was later shortened into a bracelet by her successor, Queen Elizabeth. Coronation portrait by Sir William Samuel Henry Llewellyn, 1911-12. The State Diadem was actually made for the coronation of George IV - though, as it happened, it went unused - but since then has only been worn by queens, consort and regnant. Dressed for the coronation of Edward VII, circa 1902. Miniature based on a photograph by W. & D. Downey. Portrait by Sir Oswald Birley, 1934. The Queen wears the choker as in the portrait by Taylor, above, as well as the "True Lover's Knot" brooch.