Queen's Jubilee: Faberge Pieces On Display

Faberge Display To Mark Diamond Jubilee

A Faberge notebook in which Queen Victoria recorded her diamond jubilee celebrations is to go on public display as part of this year's jubilee festivities.

The book, which is signed and dated by the monarch, contains signatures of the guests, including crowned heads of europe, who attended a dinner on the eve of the official jubilee commemoration of 22 June 1897.

Britain's longest-serving monarch later wrote down her thoughts on the evening in the journal.

She wrote: "The dinner was in the Supper Room. All the family, foreign royalties, special ambassadors & envoys were invited. I sat between the Arch Duke Franz Ferdinand & the Pce of Naples."

The notebook, made by Russian jeweller Carl Faberge, will go on display in the Treasures From The Queen's Palaces exhibition at the Queens Gallery in the Palace of Holyroodhouse, Edinburgh, from 16 March.

It is one of around 20 pieces of Faberge works in the exhibition which marks the Queen's own diamond jubilee this year.

Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II are the only two sovereigns in the history of the British monarchy to have reached the 60-year milestone.

The exhibition, said to reflect the tastes of monarchs and other family members who have shaped the royal collection over the past 500 years, will feature a total of 100 paintings, drawings, miniatures, manuscripts, pieces of furniture, ceramics and items of jewellery from nine royal residencies. Many of the items will be shown in Scotland for the first time.

The Faberge notebook is said to have been bought in St Petersburg in December 1896 and given to Queen Victoria as a Christmas present by Tsar Nicholas II and his wife Alexandra Feodorovna. The Russian pair had visited Balmoral Castle earlier that year.

An inscription in the book says: "For Dearest Grandmama from Nicky and Alix. Xmas 1896."

Two of Faberge's imperial Easter eggs are part of the exhibition, one of which is a mosaic egg featuring portraits of the Tsar's five children.

The egg was the Tsar's Easter gift to his wife in 1914 and was bought by King George V in 1933.

Treasures From The Queen's Palaces runs until 4 November.

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