Coronet and case Queen Victoria’s sapphire and diamond coronet, designed by Prince Albert, made by Joseph Kitching, London.
April 11th 2019 shall be thus far for the Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) to reopen the doors of its jewellery gallery rebranded as “The William and Judith Bollinger Gallery” since 2008.
More than 80 new items, including Queen Victoria’s sapphire
Amongst the museum’s most popular galleries, more than 4,2 million people have visited the William and Judith Bollinger Gallery’s treasure trove of historic and contemporary jewels. In itself the gallery charts the history of jewellery from Ancient Greece through to the present, featuring pieces once worn by a host of powerful women including Queen Elizabeth I, Catherine the Great or Beyoncé, who gifted
The unveiling of the coronet, one of Victoria’s most important jewels, shall kick off a year of bicentenary celebrations by the museum to mark the 200th bicentennial of Queen Victoria and Prince Consort Albert, the royal couple from whom it takes its name. Prince Albert designed the piece for Victoria in 1840, the year of their marriage.
Created by her jeweller Joseph Kitching, the young queen wore the newly completed coronet in
The newly refurbished gallery, which is closed until it reopens on 11 April, marks the first time it will go on permanent public display.
For further information:
Victoria & Albert Museum: https://www.vam.ac.uk
https://diplomatmagazine.eu/2019/02/24/200-years-victoria-albert/