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St Edward's Crown

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Part of the Crown Jewels of the United Kingdom

St Edward's Crown
St Edward's Crown in 2022
Heraldic depictions
Details
CountryUnited Kingdom
Made1661
OwnerCharles III in right ofthe Crown[1]
Weight2.23 kg (4.9 lb)
Arches2
Material22-carat gold

St Edward's Crown is thecoronation crown of theCrown Jewels of the United Kingdom.[2] Named after SaintEdward the Confessor, versions of it have traditionally been used to crown English and British monarchs attheir coronations since the 13th century. It is normally on public display in theJewel House at theTower of London, and is widely regarded as one of the most important pieces of regalia in theBritish monarchy.

The original crown was a holy relic kept atWestminster Abbey, Edward's burial place, until the regalia were either sold or melted down when Parliament abolished the monarchy in 1649, during theEnglish Civil War. The current St Edward's Crown was made forCharles II in 1661. It is 22-carat gold, 30 centimetres (12 in) tall, weighs 2.23 kilograms (4.9 lb), and is decorated with 444 precious and fine gemstones. The crown is similar in weight and overall appearance to the original, but its arches areBaroque. It was recognised byGuinness World Records as the most valuable crown in the world.[3]

After 1689, owing to its weight, the crown was not used to crown any monarch for over 200 years. In 1911, the tradition was revived byGeorge V and has continued ever since. It was placed on the high altar and formally used again at the 2023coronation of Charles III, marking its return as the principal coronation crown of the sovereign.[4]

History

[edit]

Origin

[edit]
An early 12th-century portrait ofEdmund the Martyr,[5] wearing a crown similar in appearance to St Edward's.[6]

Some sources date the crown to the reign ofAlfred the Great. The crown was kept in a box in Westminster Abbey with an inscription on its lid, translated from Latin, 'This is the chief crown of the two, with which were crowned Kings Alfred, Edward and others'.[7] Alfred was the first English king to receive a coronation (earlier terms being 'election' and 'consecration'), and, therefore, succeeding Anglo-Saxon monarchs may have wished to preserve it and be crowned with it themselves.[7]Robert of Gloucester claimed thatPope Leo IV had blessed Alfred's crown and that the same crown was still in England during the reign ofHenry III in the 13th century.James Planché noted that if the crown was indeed Alfred's then it would also have been used to crown Edward. He therefore asserts that St Edward's Crown had indeed been Alfred's and had merely descended to Edward.[7] However, the historian Martin Holmes stated that there is no evidence to support its dating from Alfred's reign.[8] The crown was referred to as simply 'the crown' in the oldest description of an English coronation service, that ofRichard I. It was not recorded as St Edward's Crown until the coronation ofEdward II.[7]

Edward the Confessor wore his crown atEaster,Whitsun, andChristmas.[9] In 1161, he was canonised, and objects connected with his reign becameholy relics. The monks at his burial place ofWestminster Abbey claimed that Edward had asked them to look after his regalia in perpetuity for the coronations of all future English kings.[10] Although the claim is likely to have been an exercise in self-promotion on the abbey's part, and some of the regalia probably had been taken from Edward's grave when he wasreinterred there, it became accepted as fact,[10] thereby establishing the first known set of hereditary coronation regalia in Europe.[11][a] A crown referred to as St Edward's Crown is first recorded as having been used for the coronation ofHenry III in 1220, and it appears to be the same crown worn by Edward.[13] It is believed Edward was the first English king to wear a crown with arches, known as an imperial or "closed crown", symbolising subservience to no one but God, in the tradition ofByzantine emperors.[14] Edward's regalia kept in Westminster Abbey was recorded in an inventory made in circa 1450 by a monk of the abbey, Richard Sporley.[15] There it is recorded as 'an excellent golden crown'.[15] The 17th century historianJohn Spelman described the crown as 'of a very ancient work, with flowers adorned with stones of somewhat a plain setting.'[7]

St Edward's Crown rarely left Westminster Abbey, and there are no certain visual records of it.[16] On Henry III's expedition to Britany in 1230, the nobles and theabbot of Westminster refused to allow the Crown of Saint Edward to leave the kingdom with Henry, a tradition which has continued.[17] When Henry III created a new treasury at the Tower of London to hold his own regalia, that of earlier monarchs, including Saint Edward, remained at the abbey in the Pyx Chamber ("pyx" denoting a small box).[17][18] In 1303,Richard of Pudlicott attempted a burglary of the treasury at the abbey, though most of the lost treasure was recovered.[17]

WhenRichard II was forced to abdicate in 1399, he had the crown brought to the Tower of London, where he symbolically handed it over to his successorHenry IV, saying "I present and give to you this crown with which I was crowned King of England and all the rights dependent on it".[19] It was used in 1533 to crown the second wife of Henry VIII,Anne Boleyn, which was unprecedented for aqueen consort.[20]

Henry VII or his son and successorHenry VIII commissioned an elaborate crown, now known as theTudor Crown, which is first described in detail in an inventory of royal jewels in 1521.[21] Henry VIII wore the Tudor Crown duringcourt ceremonies, in particular at Christmas when Henry would process to chapel in his coronation regalia.[22] BothEdward VI andMary I were crowned with three crowns in succession: first St Edward's Crown, second the Tudor Crown (termed the 'Imperiall crowne' in contemporary accounts) and finally in 'very rich' crowns made specifically for each of their coronations.[23] Three crowns were also present at the coronation ofElizabeth I, and she was probably crowned in the same fashion as her predecessors.[23] After theEnglish Reformation, theChurch of England denounced the veneration of medieval relics and, starting with the coronation ofEdward VI in 1547, the significance of the crown's link to Edward the Confessor was downplayed.[24]James I reverted to the tradition of being crowned with St Edward's Crown only before donninghis own crown to depart Westminster Abbey.[25]

Destruction

[edit]

During theEnglish Civil War and followingCharles I's flight from London in 1642, rumours circulated in London (which held some truth) that the king was attempting to sell the crown jewels in Holland in order to fund a war against parliament.[26] Parliament declared that anyone trafficking the crown jewels—which were the property ofthe Crown and not the king personally—was an enemy of the state.[26] In 1643, suspicions arose in parliament that the coronation regalia had been taken from Westminster Abbey to York by the royalistDean of Westminster,John Williams. When the sub-dean refused to allow access for the regalia to be checked, a motion was brought before parliament to force the opening of the abbey treasury.[26] The first motion failed, but a second motion passed which ordered the locks to be opened, an inventory made, and the locks changed. The inventory was taken byHenry Marten andGeorge Wither, who were reported byPeter Heylyn to have mocked the regalia, with Marten having dressed Wither in St Edward's Crown and robes, who then, 'marched about the room with stately garb and afterwards with a Thousand Apish and Ridiculous Actions exposed these sacred ornaments to contempt and laughter'.[26] Parliament ordered that the regalia be removed from the abbey and taken to join the rest of the crown jewels and plate at the Tower of London.[26]

As parliament became more desperate for funds to maintain its forces against the king, theHouse of Commons passed a motion to melt down the king's plate and turn it into coinage, though theHouse of Lords objected.[26] Following theexecution of Charles I in 1649, parliament ordered that the regalia, then under the supervision of SirHenry Mildmay,Master of the Jewel Office, 'be totally broken, and that they melt down all the gold and silver and sell all the jewels to the best advantage ofthe Commonwealth.'[26] Henry Mildmay stayed away, but his nephew and Clerk of the Jewel House,Carew Mildmay, returned the instructions 'not obeyed', for which he was jailed atFleet Prison.[26] Nonetheless, an inventory and valuation was taken, and the reglia was broken up and sold or turned into coinage. St Edward's Crown was described in the inventory as, 'King Alfred's Crown of gold wire-work set with slight stones and two little bells', weighing 79.5 ounces (2.25 kg), valued at £3 per ounce, total value£248 10s 0d.[27][28]

Restoration

[edit]
St Edward's Crown as it looked according toFrancis Sandford at the English coronation ofJames II in 1685

The monarchy wasrestored in 1660, and in preparation for the coronation ofCharles II, who had been living in exile abroad, a new St Edward's Crown anda new state crown were ordered from the Royal Goldsmith, SirRobert Vyner.[29] The new St Edward's Crown was fashioned to closely resemble the medieval crown, with a heavy gold base and clusters of semi-precious stones, but the arches are decidedlyBaroque.[30] In the late 20th century, it was assumed to incorporate gold from the original St Edward's Crown, as they are almost identical in weight, and no invoice was produced for the materials in 1661. A crown was also displayed at thelying in state ofOliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of England from 1653 until 1658. On the weight of this evidence, writer and court historian Martin Holmes, in a 1959 paper forArchaeologia, concluded that in the time of theInterregnum St Edward's Crown was saved from the melting pot and that its gold was used to make a new crown at the Restoration.[31]

His theory becameaccepted wisdom, and many books, including official guidebooks for the Crown Jewels at the Tower of London, repeated his claim as fact. In 2008, new research found that acoronation crown andsceptre were made in 1660 in anticipation of an early coronation, which had to be delayed several times. Charles II's other regalia were commissioned in 1661 after Parliament increased the budget as a token of their appreciation for the king. The crown at Cromwell's lying in state was probably made of gilded base metal such as tin or copper, as was usual in 17th-century England; for example, a crown displayed at the funeral ofJames I had cost only £5 and was decorated with fake jewels.[31]

A newmonde and cross were created for thecoronation of James II, but otherwise the crown was little altered for successive coronations beyond re-setting loaned jewels for each occasion (jewels were not set permanently in the crown until 1911).[32] After the coronation of William III in 1689, monarchs chose to be crowned with a lighter, bespokecoronation crown (e.g., theCoronation Crown of George IV)[33] or their state crown, while St Edward's Crown usually rested on the high altar.[34]

20th and 21st centuries

[edit]
Coronation of Charles III with St Edward's Crown

Edward VII intended to revive the tradition of being crowned with St Edward's Crown in 1902, but on coronation day he was still recovering from an operation forappendicitis, and instead he wore the lighterImperial State Crown.[35]

Jewels were hired for use in the crown and removed after the coronation until 1911, when it was permanently set with 444 precious and semi-precious stones. Imitation pearls on the arches and base were replaced with gold beads which at the time were platinum-plated.[36] Its band was also made smaller to fitGeorge V, the first monarch to be crowned with St Edward's Crown in over 200 years, reducing the crown's overall weight from 82 troy ounces (2.6 kg) to 71 troy ounces (2.2 kg).[35] It was used to crown his successorGeorge VI in 1937, and QueenElizabeth II in 1953.

On 4 June 2013, St Edward's Crown was displayed on the high altar inWestminster Abbey at a service marking the 60th anniversary ofElizabeth II's coronation, the first time it had left the Tower of London since 1953.[37] In December 2022, the crown was removed from the Tower of London to be resized ahead of its use in thecoronation of Charles III on 6 May 2023.[38] Its circumference was enlarged by sawing the base into four pieces and welding 7mm-wide strips of gold into the gaps. Eight new gold beads were then added to the rim.[39]

Description

[edit]
External videos
video icon2023 video of St Edward's Crown by the Royal Collection Trust (1:36)

St Edward's Crown is 22-carat gold,[40] measures 30 cm (12 in) tall, and weighs 2.23 kg (4.9 lb). It has fourfleurs-de-lis alternating with fourcrosses pattée, which support two dipped arches topped by amonde and cross pattée. Its purple velvet cap is trimmed withermine.[29] The crown features 444 precious and fine gemstones including 345 rose-cutaquamarines, 37 whitetopazes, 27tourmalines, 12rubies, 7amethysts, 6sapphires, 2jargoons, 1garnet, 1spinel, 1carbuncle and 1peridot.[36]

Usage

[edit]

Although St Edward's Crown is regarded as the official coronation crown, only seven monarchs have been crowned with it since the Restoration:Charles II (1661),James II (1685),William III (1689),George V (1911),George VI (1937),Elizabeth II (1953) andCharles III (2023).Mary II andAnne were crowned with small diamond crowns of their own;George I,George II,George III andWilliam IV with theState Crown of George I;George IV with a largenew diamond crown made specially for the occasion; andQueen Victoria andEdward VII chose not to use St Edward's Crown because of its weight and instead used the lighter 1838Imperial State Crown. When not used to crown the monarch, St Edward's Crown rested on the high altar; however, it did not feature at all in Queen Victoria's coronation.[41]

Heraldry

[edit]
Royal cypher of Elizabeth II

After therestoration of the monarchy, Charles II based theheraldic crown on the new St Edward's Crown of 1661. It had four crosses pattée alternating with four fleurs-de-lis; the number of arches was reduced to two and the curvature of the arches was depressed at the point of intersection. On this pattern the royal crown was depicted until the reign ofQueen Victoria.[42] AlthoughFox-Davies states that the St Edward's Crown is supposed to be heraldically represented over theRoyal Arms and other insignia because "it is the 'official' crown of England", various other crowns were depicted under Victoria, whose coronation, unusually, did not feature the St Edward's Crown at all.[43][44]Early depictions of the Royal Arms during her reign featured the Imperial State Crown which wascreated for Victoria's coronation in 1838 and was similar to the St Edward's Crown but with a flatter top.[42][45] However, depictions varied depending on the artist.[43]

In 1876, Victoria was proclaimedEmpress of India, and in 1880, the heraldic crown was altered to give it a more imperial form by making the arches semi-circular.[42][46] However, Victoria had favoured aTudor style crown since at least the 1860s.[47][48][b] After the accession ofEdward VII, theWar Office raised the issue of a standardised design of the crown for use by theBritish Army, there being in use several crowns of different patterns.[52] On 4 May 1901, the king approved a single Tudor Crown design based on thecrown of Henry VII, as "chosen and always used by Queen Victoria personally".[43][52]

George VI had ceased to use the style "Emperor of India" in 1948 following India's independence in 1947,[53] and on the accession ofElizabeth II in 1952, she opted to change from the 1901 Tudor Crown to a design resembling St Edward's Crown, similar to that last used before the reign of Victoria.[42][54]Charles III adopted the Tudor Crown on his accession in 2022, similar to that last used under George VI but with some differences.[55][56] The cap of the heraldic crowns is always represented as crimson, regardless of the colour of any actual crowns.[43]

Use of the crowns for commercial purposes is specifically restricted in the UK (and in countries which are party to theParis Convention) under sections 4 and 99 of theTrade Marks Act 1994, and their use is governed by theLord Chamberlain's Office.[57][58][59] It is also an offence under Section 12 of theTrade Descriptions Act 1968 to give a false indication that any goods or services are supplied to the monarch or any member of the royal family.[60][59]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Edward's grave was opened three times: in 1102, 1163 and 1269. In addition, the coffin was found to be broken in 1685 and some items were removed. Edward was found wearing a coronet of gold about one inch broad but this was left undisturbed and remains in the tomb.[12]
  2. ^Victoria had featured inWilliam Wyon's gothic crown coin in 1847,[49] and thePalace of Westminster, rebuilt from 1840 to 1876, makes extensive use of a gothic style crown. The British had assumeddirect rule over India in 1858, and theOrder of the Star of India, created in 1861, depicted a Tudor Crown from its inception.[50] Victoria had anew crown made in 1870 which resembled the Tudor Crown,[51] declining to wear the Imperial State Crown which she found heavy and uncomfortable.[43]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Crown Jewels".Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). Vol. 211. United Kingdom: House of Commons. 16 July 1992. col. 944W.
  2. ^The Royal Household."The Crown Jewels". The Official Website of the British Monarchy. Archived fromthe original on 8 October 2015.
  3. ^"Most valuable crown".Guinness World Records. Retrieved26 October 2025.
  4. ^"Coronation order of service in full".BBC News. 5 May 2023. Retrieved6 May 2023.
  5. ^"Miscellany on the life of St. Edmund 044. MS M.736 fol. 22v".The Morgan Library & Museum. Retrieved4 September 2025.
  6. ^Strong, Roy (1990).Lost Treasures of Britain: Five Centuries of Creation and Destruction. pp. 122–123.ISBN 9780670833832. Retrieved2 September 2025.
  7. ^abcdePlanché, J.R. (1838).Regal Records: Or, A Chronicle of the Coronations of the Queens Regnant of England. London: Chapman and Hall. pp. 64–65. Retrieved28 September 2025.
  8. ^Holmes, p. 216.
  9. ^H.R. Luard, ed. (1858).Life of St Edward the Confessor. Longman. pp. 215, 273, 281.
  10. ^abKeay, pp. 18–20.
  11. ^Rose, p. 13.
  12. ^Twining, Edward Francis (1967).European Regalia. London: B T Batsford Ltd. p. 303.ISBN 9780713407075. Retrieved30 September 2025.
  13. ^Ronald Lightbown in Blair, vol. 1. pp. 257–353.
  14. ^Rose, p. 24–25.
  15. ^abLegg, L.G. Wickham (1901).English Coronation Records. Westminster: A. Constable & Co. p. 191. Retrieved1 April 2025.
  16. ^Strong, Roy (1990).Lost Treasures of Britain. London: Viking. p. 122.ISBN 0-670-83383-5.
  17. ^abcBarker, Brian (1979).The Symbols of Sovereignty. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Littlefield. pp. 39–42.ISBN 9780715376492. Retrieved6 April 2025.
  18. ^"History of the Chapter House and Pyx Chamber, Westminster Abbey".English Heritage. Retrieved6 April 2025.
  19. ^Steane, p. 34.
  20. ^Alice Hunt (2008).The Drama of Coronation: Medieval Ceremony in Early Modern England. Cambridge University Press. p. 93.ISBN 978-1-139-47466-5.
  21. ^John Plowfeld (1521)."King Henry VIII's Jewel Book". In Edward Trollope (ed.).Associated Architectural Societies Reports and Papers. Vol. 17. James Williamson. pp. 158–159.
  22. ^The making of Henry VIII's Crown. Historic Royal Palaces. 30 October 2012. Retrieved4 February 2025 – via YouTube.
  23. ^abSt John Hope, William Henry (July 1902)."The King's Coronation Ornaments".The Ancestor; A Quarterly Review of County and Family History, Heraldry and Antiquities.II. Westminster: Archibald Constable & Co:63–81. Retrieved1 April 2025.
  24. ^Ronald Lightbown in MacGregor, p. 257.
  25. ^Nichols, John (1828).The Progresses of King James the First in Four Volumes. Vol. I. London: J.B. Nichols. pp. 232–233. Retrieved6 April 2025.
  26. ^abcdefghBarker 1979,pp. 49–59.
  27. ^Davenport, Cyril (1897).The English Regalia. Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. pp. 4–5.
  28. ^Brand, John (1806)."An Inventory and Appraisement of the Plate in the Lower Jewel House of the Tower, Anno 1649. Communicated by the Rev. John Brand, Secretary, from the original MS. in his Possession".Archaeologia.15. London: The Society of Antiquaries of London:271–290.doi:10.1017/S0261340900018415. Retrieved1 April 2025.
  29. ^ab"St. Edward's Crown".Royal Collection Trust. Inventory no. 31700.
  30. ^Holmes, pp. 213–223.
  31. ^abBarclay, pp. 149–170.
  32. ^Jones, Edward Alfred (1908).The Old Royal Plate in the Tower of London. Oxford: Fox, Jones & Co. pp. 63–67. Retrieved24 January 2025.
  33. ^Dixon-Smith, et al., p. 61.
  34. ^Mears, p. 23.
  35. ^abRose, p. 35.
  36. ^abRose, p. 29.
  37. ^Gordon Rayner (4 June 2013)."Crown to leave Tower for first time since 1953 for Westminster Abbey service".The Telegraph. Retrieved14 December 2015.
  38. ^"St Edward's Crown removed from the Tower of London ahead of the Coronation". 3 December 2022. Retrieved3 December 2022.
  39. ^Hardman, p. 194.
  40. ^Kathryn Jones (17 December 2014)."Royal Gold: Reflections of Power" (Podcast). Royal Collection Trust. 13:03 minutes in. Retrieved14 February 2018.
  41. ^Mears, et al., p. 23.
  42. ^abcdBoutell, Charles (1983).Brooke-Little, J. P. (ed.).Boutell's Heraldry (Revised ed.). London and New York: Frederick Warne. pp. 184–185.ISBN 0723230935.
  43. ^abcdeFox-Davies, Arthur Charles (1909)."Chapter 22" .A Complete Guide to Heraldry . London: T. C. & E. C. Jack. pp. 358–359 – viaWikisource.
  44. ^Mears, Kenneth J.; Thurley, Simon; Murphy, Claire (1994).The Crown Jewels. Historic Royal Palaces. p. 23.ASIN B000HHY1ZQ.
  45. ^"The Imperial Crown of Great Britain".Royal Collection Trust. Inventory no. 630740.
  46. ^"The Rose and Crown: Parliament's royal symbols, part one".SenCA+ Magazine. Senate of Canada. May 2023. Retrieved16 November 2023.
  47. ^Boutell, Charles (1864).Heraldry, historical and popular. London: Richard Bentley. pp. 320, 332.TheHeraldic Crown which enjoys the Royal favour, differs from both No. 562, and the State Crown, No. 624, and inclines to the type of an earlier time ; this Heraldic Crown of our Most Gracious Sovereign is represented in No. 334, page 332, ensigning the Royal Shield of Arms.
  48. ^Debrett's Illustrated Peerage of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. London: Bosworth. 1865. p. xix.
  49. ^Booth, James (19 March 2019)."Victoria Gothic Crown, 1847".Baldwin's. Retrieved29 June 2024.
  50. ^Boutell 1864,p. 352.
  51. ^"Queen Victoria's Small Diamond Crown".Royal Collection Trust. Inventory no. 31705.
  52. ^ab"The Royal Arms and Cypher for the Present Reign".The Genealogical Magazine.5:93–94. 1902 [First published July 1901]. Retrieved28 June 2024.
  53. ^"No. 38330".The London Gazette. 22 June 1948. p. 3647.
  54. ^Bedingfeld, Henry (1993).Heraldry. Leicester: Magna Books. p. 123.ISBN 978-1854224330.
  55. ^"Royal Cypher".College of Arms. 27 September 2022. Retrieved11 July 2024.
  56. ^"Symbols of State Guidance"(PDF).The Public Safety Foundation (UK). July 2023. Retrieved19 July 2024.
  57. ^"Trade Marks Act 1994: Section 4",legislation.gov.uk,The National Archives, 1994 c. 26 (s. 4), retrieved25 July 2024
  58. ^"Trade Marks Act 1994: Section 99",legislation.gov.uk,The National Archives, 1994 c. 26 (s. 99), retrieved25 July 2024
  59. ^ab"Use of Royal Arms, Names and Images".The Royal Family.The Royal Household. Retrieved19 July 2024.
  60. ^"Trade Descriptions Act 1968: Section 12",legislation.gov.uk,The National Archives, 1968 c. 29 (s. 12), retrieved25 July 2024

Bibliography

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