State Crown of George I

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A watercolour painting of the crown in its original form by Bernard Lens III, 1731

The State Crown of George I is the state crown manufactured in 1714 for George I. It replaced the state crown of Charles II (also used by his successors, James II, William III and Queen Anne) and incorporated some of the jewels and pearls from the old crown, with the addition of 2 new sapphires, 6 emeralds, 160 diamonds and 265 pearls, at a total cost of £1,440.[1] Very little change was made to either the shape of the crown or the arrangement of the stones.[2]

The crown is vibrantly depicted in a watercolour by Bernard Lens III, the miniature painter to the court of George II, dated 1731. This date suggests that Lens had made a sketch of the crown before it was entirely reset in 1727 for George II but did not finish it until some time afterwards.[2] The inscription reads:

The crown with which George I, King of Great Britain, was crowned on 20 October 1714. The cap is of crimson velvet or purple; welt of ermine; circle and arches of beaten gold. The ornaments are silver and set with diamonds; the larger stones are sapphires and emeralds, and a few small rubies. The balas in the cross in front was given to the crown by James II. The ball on which the upper cross is fixed is an aquamarine but the lower part is gold enamelled green. It is worn when the king goes to parliament, is made new for every coronation, and kept at the Tower of London.[3]

The "balas" mentioned here is the Black Prince's Ruby,[2] a large spinel that was actually in the state crown of Charles II,[4] and is first mentioned in Tudor inventories as being set in a crown used by Henry VIII.[5] The "aquamarine" dates from 1685, when it replaced the original monde in the state crown of Charles II, and was later found to be paste or coloured glass.[6]

George I's state crown was subsequently used at the coronations of George II, for whom the arches were pulled upwards, and George III. In 1821, because it was seen as being a "very poor affair", the crown underwent extensive changes, including the replacement of the rhombus-shaped monde with a globe of diamonds.[2] Although the crown was present at the coronation of George IV, he was crowned using a new coronation crown made especially for him. William IV is the last monarch to ever use the crown.

Before her coronation, Queen Victoria had a new Imperial State Crown made, using precious stones from George I's state crown. The obsolete frame of the 1714 crown, along with the frames of the coronation crowns of George IV and Queen Adelaide, the wife of William IV, were sold to Garrard & Co, the Crown Jewellers. In 1995, all the old frames were donated to the Royal Collection, and they can be seen in the Martin Tower at the Tower of London.[7]

References

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