Initial pieces , the chaton necklace, and the earrings, as well as a shorter emerald necklace, by
Christian Franzen (1922). Queen Victoria Eugenie listed in her will eight pieces of jewellery: • , designed by the Spanish jeweller Ansorena. King Alfonso XIII gave it to Princess Victoria Eugenie for their wedding in 1906. It is made of diamonds and mounted in platinum. It forms three
fleurs-de-lis, the heraldic emblem of the
Bourbons, joined by scrolls and leaves. In 1910 it was modified so that it could also be worn open. The fleurs-de-lis can also be used independently as
brooches. It is known within the family as (). As their most ostentatious tiaraalthough not the most valuable, it has only been worn by the wives of the heads of the house. Queen Victoria Eugenie wore it and was portrayed with it on numerous occasions. Her daughter-in-law María de las Mercedes wore it at the
Coronation of Elizabeth II in 1953, as one of the very few occasions she used it. Queen Sofía and Queen Letizia have worn it on exceptional solemn occasions, especially in state visits of foreign heads of state to Spain or in state visits to foreign monarchies. Queen Letizia wore it at the state banquet for the
Enthronement of Emperor Naruhito in 2019. • The largest chaton
necklace, designed by Ansorena. Also given by King Alsonso XIII to Princess Victoria Eugenie for their wedding. It was originally composed of thirty collets –rounded shape
brilliant-cut diamonds set in Russian style with a platinum claw–. Since then, King Alfonso XIII gifted her two new diamond collets in every celebration –such as her birthday, the birth of a child, an anniversary or Christmas– to add to the necklace. The necklace became so long that she divided it into two, one with thirty-eight collets and the other with twenty-seven, which she used to wear at the same time. • The necklace of thirty-seven large
pearls. Originally it was the engagement gift that
Francisco de Asís gave to his cousin and fiancée, Queen
Isabel II, in 1846. A year after her death in 1904 in exile, her jewelry was auctioned. King Alfonso XIII managed to acquire the necklace and give it to Princess Victoria Eugenie for their wedding. • A diamond brooch from which hangs a pear-shaped pearl called . Originally, a plump pear-shaped pearl hung from the thirty-seven pearl necklace, which in 1878 was separated from the main piece so that it could be sold separately. King Alfonso XIII managed to acquire it after the Queen's death and gave it to his fiancée Princess Victoria Eugenie mounted on a
Louis XV style bow-shaped diamond brooch. • A pair of
earrings with a large diamond surrounded by smaller diamonds, designed by Ansorena. Also given by King Alsonso XII to Princess Victoria Eugenie for their wedding. • Two exact diamond
bracelets. They come from a small
Cartier diamond tiara that King Alfonso XIII gave it to his fiancée upon her arrival in Spain in 1906. After her departure from Spain in 1931, she commissioned
Bulgari to transform the tiara into two twin bracelets. • Four short strands of large pearls. These pearls belonged to Infanta Isabel. It is unknown when the Infanta gave them to Victoria Eugenie. • A brooch with a pale gray pearl surrounded by diamonds and from which a pear-shaped pearl hangs. It is a circular pin set with diamonds with a large pearl in the center and from which hangs a pear-shaped pearl that also belonged to Infanta Isabel.
Later pieces Over the years other pieces have been added to the royal jewellery collection: • Shell tiara, designed by
Mellerio dits Meller in 1867, also known as the diadem, the nickname of Infanta Isabel. King Alfonso XIII gave it to Princess María de las Mercedes for her wedding with Infante Juan. • Cartier pearl and diamond tiara, designed by Cartier in 1920 for Queen Victoria Eugenie. It is art-deco inspired and is fringed with diamonds and six large pearls on a platinum base. Initially it had a seventh pearl that crowned it and which was later removed. After her death, her daughter Infanta
María Cristina received the tiara. King Juan Carlos I, María Cristina's nephew, bought it from her later. • Maria Christina's pearl and diamond loop tiara, designed by Cartier in
Kokoshnik style, for Queen
Maria Christina, second wife of King
Alfonso XII. It is made of platinum, diamonds and two rows of pearls, and is known within the family as (). King Alfonso XIII gave it to Princess María de las Mercedes for her wedding with Infante Juan. It was worn by Infanta
Pilar in her wedding in 1967. • Prussian tiara, designed by Koch in 1913, given by Kaiser
Wilhelm II to his daughter, Princess
Victoria Louise, for her marriage. It was a gift to Princess Sofía from her mother, Queen
Frederica, for
her wedding in 1962, where she wore it. It was also worn by Letizia in
her wedding in 2004. • Floral tiara, designed by J.P. Collins in 1879, originally gifted to Queen Maria Christina, it was sold after her death in 1929. It was bought later by the Spanish Government and given to Princess Sofía for her wedding in 1962. It was worn by Infanta
Cristina in her wedding in 1997. • Princess tiara, designed by Ansorena in 2010 for Princess Letizia. It is a diamond diadem with a fleur-de-lis and pearls. Although at first the tiara was believed to be a gift from Prince Felipe to his wife, it was the jeweler itself that confirmed to
¡Hola! that the gift came from themselves. == Examples of use in state visits ==