Queen Mary loved jewelry and had exquisite taste. From The Court Jeweller:
To tell the story of the shamrock brooch, we need to travel back in time to the earliest stages of Queen Mary’s jewelry collection. When Princess May of Teck, as she was then, married the Duke of York in the summer of 1893, she received a treasure trove of jewelry gifts. Among these were multiple trefoil and shamrock brooches. On the Monday after the royal wedding, the Daily Telegraph described many of the jewels in detail, including “an emerald and diamond trefoil brooch,” the gift presented to the bride by the Royal St. George Yacht Club.Share
Royal jewelry writers, including Beth at the History of Famous Jewels and Collections, have argued that the yacht club’s trefoil brooch is the one shown in detail above. The jewel features a three-leafed shamrock outlined in diamonds, with a large diamond brilliant set in the center of the jewel. Inside the open leaves are a trio of emeralds on knife-edge settings. Shamrocks and trefoils were popular jewelry motifs in the Victorian era, and of course they have special meaning in Ireland. The Royal St. George Yacht Club was (and still is) located in Dublin. (Read more.)
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