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(RM) 609542742
MARRIAGE OF THE COUNT DE PARIS WITH THE PRINCESS ISABELLE D'ORLEANS: TRIUMPHAL ARCH AT ESHER, 1864. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
Marriage of the Count de Paris with the Princess Isabelle d'Orleans: triumphal arch at Esher, 1864. '...Louis Philippe Albert d'Orleans, the Count de Paris, son of the Duke of Orleans and grandson of King Louis Philippe, was married to his first cousin, Princess Maria Isabella Francesca d'Assisi, daughter of the Duke de Montpensier, and niece, by her mother's side, to the Queen of Spain...After the ceremony...the young Count and Countess de Paris entered their carriage to return to Claremont, amidst all manner of festive demonstrations - cheering, and firing of cannon, and ringing of bells - in the little town of Kingston-upon-Thames. The road all the way from Kingston, through Esher, to Claremont was crowded with people; and in some places it was adorned with banners and triumphal arches, one of which, that near Esher, was of a costly as well as tasteful design...[Our illustration] is a view of this triumphal arch, with the carrriages approaching from Claremont on their road to Kingston...The guests, about one hundred in number, were entertained at breakfast under a marquee at the back of Claremont House; after which the bride and bridegroom left home to spend their honeymoon in the north of England'. From "Illustrated London News", 1864. Marriage of the Count de Paris with the Princess Isabelle d'Orleans: triumphal arch at Esher, 1864. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
(RM) 609540373
NATIONAL TOKEN FROM SOUTH WALES TO THE PRINCESS OF WALES, 1864. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
National token from South Wales to the Princess of Wales, 1864. '...the badge and its casket...[were] manufactured by Messrs. Hunt and Roskell...The upper part of it, composed of emeralds, diamonds, and pearls, is shaped like a bouquet...The centre of the bow is transfixed with a diamond pin, from which the leek (the badge of Wales) is suspended by a gold chain. The leek is mounted on a ground of diamonds thrown out in high relief, and the leaves and bud are formed of emeralds of various tints...The whole is inclosed in a richly-wrought frame of gold and enamel in cinque-cento style, studded with diamonds and emeralds, to which there are three pendants with enamel pictures, in frames enriched with emeralds and diamonds. The centre pendant represents St. David, Archbishop of Caerleon, the patron saint of the Principality...The right-hand pendant represents the dragon of Wales, the banner and crest of the Principality...The pendant on the left side contains the arms of Wales in enamel...[At the centre of] the bracelet...is a fine emerald surrounded by diamonds, the circlet formed of leeks entwined with a scroll...The leaves and buds of the leeks are composed of emeralds, the bulbs of pearls, the fibres of gold set with fine brilliants'. From "Illustrated London News", 1864. National token from South Wales to the Princess of Wales, 1864. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
(RM) 609487180
WEDDING GIFT TO THE PRINCESS OF WALES FROM THE LADIES OF VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA, 1864. CREATOR: UNKNOWN.
Wedding gift to the Princess of Wales from the ladies of Victoria, Australia, 1864. 'It was determined that this gift should be of colonial material and workmanship and, after much deliberation, a graceful design, by Mr. Chevalier, for a flower-stand, 22 in. in height, was approved, the construction being intrusted to Messrs. Kilpatrick and Co., of Collins-street, Melbourne. Gold is the metal principally employed, but Victoria silver from the St. Arnaud district has been introduced into the base. The latter is triangular, each face presenting an enamelled shield with the arms of the Prince of Wales, of Denmark, and of Victoria respectively. At the angles are represented a bale of wool, a bunch of grapes, and a nugget, as typical of colonial industry; whilst higher up, as representing the fauna of the country, an emu, a kangaroo, and a lyre bird are grouped round the foot of "a tree fern." The stem of this fern is encircled by a clematis, and the expanding fronds which rise from it serve as a support for the flower-vases. These consist of five emu eggs arranged in the form of a star, each bordered by a wreath of leaves from the native flora, wrought in gold filigree. This wedding present was brought to England by the last Australian mail'. From "Illustrated London News", 1864. Wedding gift to the Princess of Wales from the ladies of Victoria, Australia, 1864. Creator: Unknown. (KEYSTONE/HERITAGE IMAGES/THE PRINT COLLECTOR)
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