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OMG Celeb > Royalty > Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth with the wedding tiara that survived a royal wedding disaster
Royalty

Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth with the wedding tiara that survived a royal wedding disaster

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Last updated: July 17, 2026 6:42 pm
News Room Published July 17, 2026
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When Princess Beatrice married Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi on July 17, 2020, her intimate Windsor wedding became an unexpected tribute to one of Queen Elizabeth II’s most treasured memories.

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Alongside the vintage Norman Hartnell gown borrowed from her grandmother, Beatrice wore the historic Queen Mary Fringe Tiara, the same dazzling diamond headpiece Queen Elizabeth wore on her own wedding day in 1947. 

© Pacific Coast News/The Grosby Group
Princess Beatrice completed an exclusive bridal tradition when she became only the third British royal bride to wear the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara.

But behind its sparkling appearance lies one of the most dramatic stories in British royal wedding history.

The tiara famously snapped just hours before the future queen walked down the aisle.

Princess Beatrice's wedding gown, designed by Norman Hartnell, was originally created for Queen Elizabeth II and carefully adapted for the royal bride.© CAMERA PRESS/ED/JL/Royal Collection Trust
Princess Beatrice’s wedding gown, designed by Norman Hartnell, was originally created for Queen Elizabeth II and carefully adapted for the royal bride.

The royal wedding crisis that nearly changed history:

On the morning of Princess Elizabeth’s wedding to Prince Philip at Buckingham Palace, the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara suddenly broke while the court hairdresser was securing it to her veil.

Queen Elizabeth II wore the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara on her 1947 wedding day after the historic jewel was repaired just hours before the ceremony.© CAMERA PRESS/Baron
Queen Elizabeth II wore the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara on her 1947 wedding day after the historic jewel was repaired just hours before the ceremony.

Because the tiara had been designed with a detachable frame that allowed it to double as a necklace, one of its structural clasps unexpectedly gave way, leaving the bridal jewel split just hours before the ceremony.

According to royal accounts, Queen Elizabeth, later known as the Queen Mother, remained remarkably calm amid the panic, reassuring her daughter that there was still time and that other tiaras could be worn if necessary.

King George VI (1895 - 1952) and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (1900 - 2002) at Westminster Abbey, London, at the wedding of Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) and Prince Philip, 20th November 1947.© Bert Hardy
King George VI (1895 – 1952) and Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother (1900 – 2002) at Westminster Abbey, London, at the wedding of Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) and Prince Philip, 20th November 1947.

Princess Elizabeth, however, hoped to wear the tiara she had chosen. A Garrard jeweler was immediately summoned to Buckingham Palace before racing the broken piece back to the workshop under police escort.

Working against the clock, the craftsmen repaired the heirloom and returned it to the palace just in time for the future queen to leave for Westminster Abbey.

Some royal historians have since pointed to a slight irregularity visible near the center of the tiara in wedding photographs, attributing it to the hurried repair carried out that very morning.

Originally created for Queen Mary in 1919, the Fringe Tiara became one of the British royal family's most treasured wedding heirlooms.© Evening Standard
Originally created for Queen Mary in 1919, the Fringe Tiara became one of the British royal family’s most treasured wedding heirlooms.

Why Queen Elizabeth chose the tiara for Princess Beatrice:

More than seven decades later, Queen Elizabeth II personally loaned the same tiara to Princess Beatrice for her own wedding to Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi. The decision carried extraordinary symbolism.

Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth II by wearing the same Queen Mary Fringe Tiara her grandmother chose for her own wedding in 1947.© Pacific Coast News/The Grosby Gr
Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth II by wearing the same Queen Mary Fringe Tiara her grandmother chose for her own wedding in 1947.

Originally planned as a grand royal celebration, Beatrice’s wedding was dramatically scaled back because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Instead, the couple exchanged vows in a small ceremony at the Royal Chapel of All Saints in Windsor Great Park, surrounded only by close family.

By loaning Beatrice the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara, Queen Elizabeth helped make the intimate occasion especially meaningful. Royal commentators have long viewed the gesture as a reflection of the close bond between grandmother and granddaughter, while also connecting Beatrice’s wedding to one of the monarch’s own happiest memories.

Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth with the wedding tiara that survived a royal wedding disaster© Pacific Coast News/The Grosby Group
Princess Beatrice honored Queen Elizabeth with the wedding tiara that survived a royal wedding disaster

A bridal jewel reserved for only three British royal brides:

The Queen Mary Fringe Tiara is one of the rarest wedding tiaras in the British royal collection.

Princess Anne became the second British royal bride to wear the historic Queen Mary Fringe Tiara when she married Captain Mark Phillips in 1973.© Evening Standard
Princess Anne became the second British royal bride to wear the historic Queen Mary Fringe Tiara when she married Captain Mark Phillips in 1973.

Originally created by Garrard in 1919, it was fashioned from a diamond necklace Queen Victoria had given to Queen Mary as a wedding gift in 1893. Designed in the fashionable kokoshnik style inspired by traditional Russian headdresses, the tiara can also be detached from its frame and worn as a necklace.

Despite its prominence, only three British royal brides have worn it on their wedding day. Queen Elizabeth II became the first in 1947, followed by Princess Anne in 1973. Nearly five decades later, Princess Beatrice completed the trio when she chose the heirloom for her lockdown wedding in 2020.

Queen Elizabeth II chose the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara for her wedding to Prince Philip in 1947, beginning a bridal tradition that would span generations.© Zuma Press/The Grosby Group/Lagencia Grosby
Queen Elizabeth II chose the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara for her wedding to Prince Philip in 1947, beginning a bridal tradition that would span generations.

Its exclusive bridal legacy has made it one of the most sentimental pieces in the royal jewelry collection, linking three generations of royal women through a single jewel.

A symbol of resilience across generations:

For many royal watchers, Beatrice’s choice represented more than a nod to family tradition.

Queen Mary owned the celebrated Fringe Tiara, a jewel that would later be worn by three British royal brides.© Sjöberg BildbyrÃ¥
Queen Mary owned the celebrated Fringe Tiara, a jewel that would later be worn by three British royal brides.

The same tiara that survived a frantic repair on Queen Elizabeth’s wedding morning was entrusted to her granddaughter during one of the most unusual royal weddings in modern history. 

Although separated by 73 years, both brides wore the historic heirloom during moments that tested expectations, turning the Queen Mary Fringe Tiara into a lasting symbol of resilience, continuity and the enduring bonds between generations of Britain’s royal family.

Read the full article here

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