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Dazzling diamond pieces for those with an April birthday Tatlerâs Jewellery Editor, Charlie Miller, showcases Aprilâs birthstone, the diamond, with 30 glittering pieces â one for each day of the month By Charlie Miller
After Josephineâs death, her younger son, Eugene, inherited the precious stones. Eugene became Duke of Leuchtenberg through marriage to Princess Augusta of Bavaria in 1806. It was when their son, Prince Maximilian, married the daughter of Nicholas I, Grand Duchess Maria Nikolaevna, that the two Imperial lines were reunited once more and Josephineâs briolettes were back with their Romanov roots.
Maximilian and Maria had seven children. Their son George married Princess Anastasia of Montenegro in 1889, and it was around this time that the well-travelled diamonds were included in the making of the
Bridgerton
Liam Daniel / Netflix
Bridgerton has proved one of the runaway hits of the New Year, quickly soaring to success after its Christmas Day debut. Masterminded by US producer Shonda Rhimes, the Netflix period drama series has won praise for its gripping plot, lavish aesthetic and the refreshing racial diversity of its talented cast. Yet while most of those in the
Bridgerton world are fictional, taken from Julia Quinn’s historical romance novels, Queen Charlotte was a real-life figure (and in fact doesn’t feature in the
Bridgerton books).
Born on 19 May 1744, Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz was the youngest daughter of Duke Charles Louis Frederick of Mecklenburg, styled as the Prince of Mirow, and Princess Elisabeth Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen. The family ruled over Mecklenburg-Strelitz, a small north-German duchy situated in what was then the Holy Roman Empire. And while the ubiquity of varied racial representation in