Queen Mary’s quest to showcase heirloom jewels within the Danish
    Royal Collections continued in Estonia on Tuesday, as the Danish
    queen wore a nearly 200-year-old sapphire brooch as a spotlight
    piece of her outfit.

    King Frederik
    and Queen Mary arrived in Tallinn, the capital of Estonia, for a
    two-day state visit to the Baltic country on Tuesday morning. It’s
    part of a charm offensive in the Baltic States, which will see the
    royal couple also travel to Lithuania for a two-day state visit
    beginning Wednesday afternoon.

    The Danish royal couple arrived at the Town Hall Square in
    Tallinn and met with President Alar Karis and First Lady Sirje
    Karis at the welcoming ceremony. They laid a wreath at the Monument
    to the War of Independence and later visited the Memorial to the
    Victims of Communism in Maarjamäe.

    King Frederik and Queen Mary then traveled to the Estonian
    Statehood House for an official luncheon, and it was there that
    Queen Mary revealed that she was wearing a 186-year-old sapphire
    brooch on her dress.

    King Frederik and Queen Mary in EstoniaKing Frederik and Queen Mary in EstoniaKing Frederik and Queen Mary
    in Estonia Photo: Kongehuset ©

    According to the Danish Royal Family’s website, the Flood Sapphire
    Brooch was created around 1840 for Queen Marie Sophie Frederikke,
    consort of King Frederik VI. It left the royal collections in 1872,
    when Duchess Wilhelmine of Glücksborg, their daughter, donated it
    to raise money for flood relief in Lolland-Falster. Queen Louise,
    consort to King Christian IX would later repurchase the brooch and
    leave it to Crown Princess Alexandrine, and afterwards it was
    entrusted to the Danish Royal Family’s jewel vault by either Queen
    Alexandrine or Queen Ingrid.

    The Flood Sapphire is an emerald-cut sapphire surrounded by
    small diamonds and encircled by 22 larger diamonds.

    Flood SapphireFlood SapphireFlood Sapphire Photo:
    Kongehuset ©

    After lunch, King Frederik and Queen Mary met with Estonian
    Speaker of the Parliament, Lauri Hussar, at the Riigikogu. They
    then travelled to the Rakett69 Science Studios with the
    Presidential Couple to meet with girls interested in the
    sciences.

    In the evening, Queen Mary wore her
    wedding tiara at a state banquet hosted by Estonian President
    Karis at the St. Nicholas Church. The diamond tiara features
    scroll, fleur-de-lys, and festoon design elements, and can be worn
    as a necklace as well. It was a wedding gift from Queen Margrethe
    and Prince Henrik, and the provenance has never been definitively
    confirmed. Queen Mary had the tiara altered in 2011 so that pearls
    could be attached to the fleurs-de-lys and and row of pearls could
    be added to the base.

    Queen Mary wears her wedding tiara at Estonia State BanquetQueen Mary wears her wedding tiara at Estonia State BanquetQueen Mary wears her wedding
    tiara at Estonia State Banquet YouTube screenshot / Fair
    Use

    Since becoming Queen Consort, Queen Mary has delighted royal
    watchers with her penchant for digging heirlooms out of the jewel
    vaults.

    Last fall on a
    state visit to Latvia, Queen Mary wore the Pearl Poire brooch and
    earrings that were belonged to a parure created for the wedding
    of Princess Louise of Prussia and Prince Frederick of the
    Netherlands in 1825.

    King Frederik, in a dark suit, and Queen Mary, in a navy dress with pearl brooch, talk to the President of LatviaKing Frederik, in a dark suit, and Queen Mary, in a navy dress with pearl brooch, talk to the President of LatviaKongehuset ©️

    Their granddaughter, Princess Lovisa of Sweden, married Crown
    Prince Frederik of Denmark in 1869, and received parts of the Pearl
    Poire set on her wedding day and subsequent pieces later on. The
    newlyweds would later become King Frederik VIII and Queen Louise
    and reigned from 1906 to 1912; the pearls became part of the jewel
    vault and have been worn ever since.

    Queen Mary of Denmark wears a tiara filled with stones brought back from PompeiiQueen Mary of Denmark wears a tiara filled with stones brought back from PompeiiDet Danske Kongehus
    Instagram still/ fair use

    Queen Mary also debuted a
    200-year-old golden tiara during a state visit to Finland last
    March; wearing a golden tiara created for Queen Caroline Amalie
    in 1820 that features gemstones from Pompeii and Rome. Queen Mary’s
    golden bracelet also dated back to the 1820s and featured gemstones
    found around Mount Vesuvius.

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