
“Always remember to keep your crown polished.”
That message rang louder than ever last night as Queen Camilla stepped into Windsor Castle’s glittering Diplomatic Reception wearing one of the rarest pieces in the royal vault: the Greville Emerald Kokoshnik tiara.
The seldom-seen tiara — a breathtaking emerald-and-diamond piece inspired by the Russian Romanov kokoshnik headdress — has appeared publicly only once before. And that occasion was highly symbolic: Princess Eugenie’s 2018 royal wedding. By choosing that exact tiara at a moment when Eugenie and Princess Beatrice are navigating the fallout of their father Prince Andrew’s latest scandal, Camilla appears to be sending a quiet but pointed message of solidarity.
Paired with a white embroidered gown, the Garter sash, and an array of historic pieces — including pear-shaped diamond jewels, her grandmother’s Van Cleef & Arpels serpent necklace, and the Queen Mother’s Cartier art deco bracelets — Camilla’s look was a masterclass in royal storytelling through jewelry. A tradition Princess Kate is also known for.
A Treasure Few Have Seen
The tiara comes from the legendary Greville Bequest — a private inheritance of over 60 pieces of extraordinary jewelry left to the Queen Mother in 1942. When she received the trunk marked “MHG,” she discovered a trove of masterpieces by the world’s finest designers. Yet many of those jewels have rarely, if ever, been seen in public.
Princess Eugenie became the first British royal to wear the Greville Emerald Kokoshnik at her wedding in St George’s Chapel. Her sister, Princess Beatrice, followed suit in sentiment by wearing Queen Elizabeth II’s vintage Norman Hartnell gown for her 2020 pandemic wedding. Both sisters have long honored their grandmother’s legacy through fashion and symbolism.

Support in a Turbulent Moment
Camilla’s choice arrives at a delicate time: Prince Andrew was formally stripped of his Royal title at the end of October. Days later, it was announced that Beatrice and Eugenie would retain their Princess titles, though their mother, Sarah Ferguson, may no longer use “Duchess of York.”
Despite not being working royals, the sisters continue to appear at family events — and family members, it seems, are rallying quietly around them.
A Queen Who Speaks Through Jewels
As Queen, Camilla often reaches deep into both the palace archives and the private family collection for pieces rich in history and meaning. From the Queen Mother’s Raspberry Pip Brooch at Christmas 2023 to Queen Elizabeth II’s sapphire suite gifted by King George VI in 1947, she frequently uses jewelry to honor legacy, tradition, or individuals.
With access to such extraordinary treasures, it’s no surprise Camilla uses them to send messages uniquely her own.
And last night, that message was clear:
Her crown — and her support — are polished, purposeful, and unmistakably regal.