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Imperial crown

An imperial crown is a crown used for the coronation of emperors.

The British Imperial State Crown viewed from the side with the front facing left (the Black Prince's Ruby, and the Cullinan II are just visible in profile).

Design edit

Crowns in Europe during the Middle Ages varied in design:

An open crown is one which consists basically of a golden circlet elaborately worked and decorated with precious stones or enamels. ... The medieval French crown was of this type. ... the closed crown, which had bands of metal crossing usually from one side to the other and from back to front so that they met in the middle, at the top of the head. ... These arches are in part utilitarian, since they serve to strengthen the crown, in part decorative, since they are normally made to serve as supports for a central cross or jewel, and in part traditional, since a contributing element to the evolution of many medieval crowns was the structure of the early Germanic helmet, which had metal bands crossing at the top of the head to protect the skull from injury.

A special case of a closed crown was that of the Holy Roman Empire. This was originally an open crown, made up of eight separate richly jewelled sections incorporating four magnificent enamelled plaques, but the Emperor Conrad II (1024–39) had added to it a kind of jewelled crest, running from front to back, to which he had thoughtfully attached his name, CHVONRADVS DEI GRATIA ROMANORV(M) IMPERATOR AVG(VSTVS). This jewelled crest was so closely associated with the notion of the imperial office that when the Habsburgs made a new imperial crown in the 15th century in which they incorporated two large cusps resembling a mitre seen sideways, they provided it with a similar crest running from front to back and topped with a central jewel. ... Strictly speaking, therefore, the only type of crown whose characteristics can properly be regarded as imperial was one with a single crest running from front to back. In practice, in countries unfamiliar with closed crowns at all, any kind of closed crown was assumed to be imperial in character.

— Philip Grierson[1]

During the Middle Ages the crowns worn by English kings had been described as both closed (or arched) and open designs. This was in contrast with kings of France who always wore an open crown. However, there is academic debate on how often closed crowns were used in England during this period, as the first unequivocal use of the closed crown was by Henry IV of England at his coronation on 13 October 1399.[2][3] However his effigy on his tomb in Canterbury Cathedral wears an open crown, so the link in England between the style of the crown and its representation as that worn by a king and an emperor was not established.[3] The use of a closed crown may have been adopted by the English as a way of distinguishing the English crown from the French crown,[4] but it also had other meanings to some. For example, Henry V of England wore a helmet-crown of the arched type at the Battle of Agincourt which the French knight St. Remy commented was "like the imperial crown".[5]

The association of the closed crown with imperial crowns was already established in Continental Europe by the late 14th century, for example the florins minted for Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor) sometimes show him with a closed crown (though on the commoner variety, the crown is open). A miniature picture in the Chronica Aulae Regiae written in the great abbey outside Prague depicts his mother Elizabeth, a queen of Bohemia, wearing an open crown, while his two wives, who had imperial titles, have closed ones.[6]

During the machinations that surrounded the introduction of the imperial crown under Henry VIII (see the section below Legal usage), the closed crown, became associated as a symbolic representation of the English Crown as an imperial crown,[7][a][b] and has remained so until this day.[10]

Types of imperial crowns edit

Roman imperial crowns edit

Byzantine imperial crowns edit

Imperial crowns with mitre edit

 
Emperor Maximilian I wearing a crown with mitre

Imperial crowns with single arch and deployable mitre edit

Imperial crowns with single arch and attached mitre edit

Imperial crowns with high arches edit

Ottoman imperial crowns edit

Prussian-German imperial crowns edit

Napoleonic imperial crowns edit

Imperial crowns based on the design of European royal crowns edit

Other imperial crowns without European origin or influence edit

Heraldic imperial crowns edit

A list of prominent examples of depictions of imperial crowns displayed atop heraldic achievements or as heraldic charge includes:

Legal usage edit

Because Pope Clement VII would not grant Henry VIII of England an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon, the English Parliament passed the Act in Restraint of Appeals (1533) in which it was explicitly stated that

Where by divers sundry old authentic histories and chronicles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this realm of England is an empire, and so hath been accepted in the world, governed by one supreme head and king, having the dignity and royal estate of the imperial crown of the same.[11]

The next year the Act of Supremacy (1534) explicitly tied the headship of the church to the imperial crown:

The only supreme head in earth of the Church of England called Anglicana Ecclesia, and shall have and enjoy annexed and united to the imperial crown of this realm.[12]

During the reign of Mary I the First Act of Supremacy was annulled, but during the reign of Elizabeth I the Second Act of Supremacy, with similar wording to the First Act, was passed in 1559. During the English Interregnum the laws were annulled, but the acts which caused the laws to be in abeyance were themselves, deemed to be null and void by the Parliaments of the English Restoration, so by act of Parliament The Crown of England and (later the British and UK crowns) are imperial crowns.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Henry changed his coinage and his Great Seal from depicting himself with an open crown to a closed one to depict the imperial nature of the English Crown.[8]
  2. ^ Shortly before Henry VIII of England started his breach with the Roman Catholic Church, Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, as regent for his son Philip the Handsome, had the real d'or coin struck depicting a closed crown, which due to the close trading links between the Low Countries and England would have made the imagery familiar to English men involved in trade and this may have influenced Henry's choice of a difference style of crown.[9]
  1. ^ Grierson 1964, pp. 127–128.
  2. ^ Chris Given-Wilson, Henry IV (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016), pp. 151-52.
  3. ^ a b Grierson 1964, p. 129.
  4. ^ Grierson 1964, pp. 129, 133.
  5. ^ Grierson 1964, p. 130.
  6. ^ Grierson 1964, p. 130 footnote 3.
  7. ^ Grierson 1964, pp. 118, 130–131.
  8. ^ Grierson 1964, p. 131.
  9. ^ Grierson 1964, p. 118, 134.
  10. ^ Grierson 1964, p. 132.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-27. Retrieved 2007-01-18.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-27. Retrieved 2007-01-18.

References edit

  • Grierson, Philip (28 January 1964), The origins of the English sovereign and the sybolism of the closed crown (PDF), British Numismatic Society

imperial, crown, model, automobile, imperial, automobile, imperial, crown, crown, used, coronation, emperors, british, imperial, state, crown, viewed, from, side, with, front, facing, left, black, prince, ruby, cullinan, just, visible, profile, contents, desig. For the model of automobile see Imperial automobile An imperial crown is a crown used for the coronation of emperors The British Imperial State Crown viewed from the side with the front facing left the Black Prince s Ruby and the Cullinan II are just visible in profile Contents 1 Design 2 Types of imperial crowns 2 1 Roman imperial crowns 2 2 Byzantine imperial crowns 2 3 Imperial crowns with mitre 2 3 1 Imperial crowns with single arch and deployable mitre 2 3 2 Imperial crowns with single arch and attached mitre 2 4 Imperial crowns with high arches 2 5 Ottoman imperial crowns 2 6 Prussian German imperial crowns 2 7 Napoleonic imperial crowns 2 8 Imperial crowns based on the design of European royal crowns 2 9 Other imperial crowns without European origin or influence 3 Heraldic imperial crowns 4 Legal usage 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 ReferencesDesign editCrowns in Europe during the Middle Ages varied in design An open crown is one which consists basically of a golden circlet elaborately worked and decorated with precious stones or enamels The medieval French crown was of this type the closed crown which had bands of metal crossing usually from one side to the other and from back to front so that they met in the middle at the top of the head These arches are in part utilitarian since they serve to strengthen the crown in part decorative since they are normally made to serve as supports for a central cross or jewel and in part traditional since a contributing element to the evolution of many medieval crowns was the structure of the early Germanic helmet which had metal bands crossing at the top of the head to protect the skull from injury A special case of a closed crown was that of the Holy Roman Empire This was originally an open crown made up of eight separate richly jewelled sections incorporating four magnificent enamelled plaques but the Emperor Conrad II 1024 39 had added to it a kind of jewelled crest running from front to back to which he had thoughtfully attached his name CHVONRADVS DEI GRATIA ROMANORV M IMPERATOR AVG VSTVS This jewelled crest was so closely associated with the notion of the imperial office that when the Habsburgs made a new imperial crown in the 15th century in which they incorporated two large cusps resembling a mitre seen sideways they provided it with a similar crest running from front to back and topped with a central jewel Strictly speaking therefore the only type of crown whose characteristics can properly be regarded as imperial was one with a single crest running from front to back In practice in countries unfamiliar with closed crowns at all any kind of closed crown was assumed to be imperial in character Philip Grierson 1 During the Middle Ages the crowns worn by English kings had been described as both closed or arched and open designs This was in contrast with kings of France who always wore an open crown However there is academic debate on how often closed crowns were used in England during this period as the first unequivocal use of the closed crown was by Henry IV of England at his coronation on 13 October 1399 2 3 However his effigy on his tomb in Canterbury Cathedral wears an open crown so the link in England between the style of the crown and its representation as that worn by a king and an emperor was not established 3 The use of a closed crown may have been adopted by the English as a way of distinguishing the English crown from the French crown 4 but it also had other meanings to some For example Henry V of England wore a helmet crown of the arched type at the Battle of Agincourt which the French knight St Remy commented was like the imperial crown 5 The association of the closed crown with imperial crowns was already established in Continental Europe by the late 14th century for example the florins minted for Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor sometimes show him with a closed crown though on the commoner variety the crown is open A miniature picture in the Chronica Aulae Regiae written in the great abbey outside Prague depicts his mother Elizabeth a queen of Bohemia wearing an open crown while his two wives who had imperial titles have closed ones 6 During the machinations that surrounded the introduction of the imperial crown under Henry VIII see the section below Legal usage the closed crown became associated as a symbolic representation of the English Crown as an imperial crown 7 a b and has remained so until this day 10 Types of imperial crowns editRoman imperial crowns edit nbsp A mixed type between Diadem and laurel wreath from Anatolia nbsp Depiction of the corona radiata or radiant crown associated with the cult of Sol Invictus late 3rd century Marcus Aurelius Probus Byzantine imperial crowns edit nbsp Emperor Justinian with a stemma nbsp Crown of Constantine IX Imperial crowns with mitre edit nbsp Emperor Maximilian I wearing a crown with mitreImperial crowns with single arch and deployable mitre edit nbsp Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire coronation crown of Holy Roman Emperors elect the German Kings nbsp Imperial crown on the head of the Charlemagne reliquary in Aachen nbsp The larger of the Imperial Crowns of Charles VII made in Augsburg nbsp The smaller of the Imperial Crowns of Charles VII made in FrankfurtImperial crowns with single arch and attached mitre edit nbsp Personal Crown of Holy Roman Emperor Frederick III depicted on his tomb nbsp Personal Imperial Crown made for Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II later Imperial Crown of Austria nbsp Imperial Crown of Russia coronation crown of the Russian Tsars Emperors nbsp Crown of Anna of Russia nbsp Never realized design for Christian IV of Denmark 1594Imperial crowns with high arches edit nbsp Durer s portrait of Emperor SigismundOttoman imperial crowns edit nbsp Suleyman the Magnificent s Venetian Helmet Likely destroyed Prussian German imperial crowns edit nbsp German State Crown wooden model 1872 nbsp Empress CrownNapoleonic imperial crowns edit nbsp Imperial Crown of Napoleon Bonaparte called the Crown of Charlemagne nbsp Napoleon Bonaparte with the Laurels crown destroyed 1819 nbsp Empress Josephine with empress crowns destroyed 1819 nbsp Crown of Napoleon III destroyed 1871 reproduction displayed at the Abeler collection of crowns and regalia in Wuppertal nbsp Crown of Empress Eugenie nbsp Imperial Crown of Mexico Second Empire partially modeled on French versions of Napoleon III s crown and the Crown of Empress Eugenie as sponsorsImperial crowns based on the design of European royal crowns edit nbsp Empress Ana Maria of Mexico with the Crown of the First Mexican Empire nbsp Brazilian Imperial Crown of Pedro I nbsp Brazilian Imperial Crown of Pedro II nbsp Design of the Imperial Crown of Mexico seen in paintings of Maximilian I of Mexico during the Second Mexican Empire nbsp Imperial Crown of India the Imperial Crown worn by King George V at the Delhi Durbar in 1911 nbsp Imperial Crown of the Central African Empire the Imperial Crown worn by Emperor Bokassa I at his coronation in 1977 Other imperial crowns without European origin or influence edit nbsp Kiani Crown Imperial Crown in Persia nbsp Pahlavi Crown Imperial Crown in Iran Persia nbsp Consort Crown of Persia nbsp Ming Dynasty Emperor Imperial Crown for full ceremonial dress nbsp Ming Dynasty Emperor Gold Funeral Crown nbsp Ming Dynasty Empress Phoenix Crown nbsp Kangxi Emperor of Qing Dynasty wearing Imperial Crown nbsp Imperial Crown of the Empire of China worn by Yuan Shikai when he proclaimed himself emperor in 1915 nbsp Imperial Crown of Japanese Emperor Kōmei 19th century nbsp Emperor Gojong of Korean Empire wearing Imperial Crown nbsp Vietnamese Nguyen dynasty Imperial Crown nbsp Imperial Ethiopian crownHeraldic imperial crowns editA list of prominent examples of depictions of imperial crowns displayed atop heraldic achievements or as heraldic charge includes nbsp Holy Roman EmpireOlder design with high arches nbsp Holy Roman EmpireModern design with an arch and mitre Often considered as the generic design of the imperial crowns nbsp Holy Roman Empire variant especially common in the Spanish heraldic tradition nbsp Russian Empire nbsp Austrian Empire nbsp Ethiopian Empire nbsp Iran Kiani nbsp Iran Pahlavi nbsp First French Empire nbsp Second French Empire nbsp Brazilian Empire nbsp First Mexican Empire nbsp Second Mexican Empire nbsp German EmpireHeraldic representation changed in 1889 nbsp England United Kingdom Commonwealth Realms nbsp Central African EmpireLegal usage editMain article British EmperorBecause Pope Clement VII would not grant Henry VIII of England an annulment of his marriage to Catherine of Aragon the English Parliament passed the Act in Restraint of Appeals 1533 in which it was explicitly stated that Where by divers sundry old authentic histories and chronicles it is manifestly declared and expressed that this realm of England is an empire and so hath been accepted in the world governed by one supreme head and king having the dignity and royal estate of the imperial crown of the same 11 The next year the Act of Supremacy 1534 explicitly tied the headship of the church to the imperial crown The only supreme head in earth of the Church of England called Anglicana Ecclesia and shall have and enjoy annexed and united to the imperial crown of this realm 12 During the reign of Mary I the First Act of Supremacy was annulled but during the reign of Elizabeth I the Second Act of Supremacy with similar wording to the First Act was passed in 1559 During the English Interregnum the laws were annulled but the acts which caused the laws to be in abeyance were themselves deemed to be null and void by the Parliaments of the English Restoration so by act of Parliament The Crown of England and later the British and UK crowns are imperial crowns See also editConsort crown Coronation crown Royal crown State crownFootnotes edit Henry changed his coinage and his Great Seal from depicting himself with an open crown to a closed one to depict the imperial nature of the English Crown 8 Shortly before Henry VIII of England started his breach with the Roman Catholic Church Maximilian I Holy Roman Emperor as regent for his son Philip the Handsome had the real d or coin struck depicting a closed crown which due to the close trading links between the Low Countries and England would have made the imagery familiar to English men involved in trade and this may have influenced Henry s choice of a difference style of crown 9 Grierson 1964 pp 127 128 Chris Given Wilson Henry IV New Haven Yale University Press 2016 pp 151 52 a b Grierson 1964 p 129 Grierson 1964 pp 129 133 Grierson 1964 p 130 Grierson 1964 p 130 footnote 3 Grierson 1964 pp 118 130 131 Grierson 1964 p 131 Grierson 1964 p 118 134 Grierson 1964 p 132 The opening words of the Act in restraint of Appeals 1533 Archived from the original on 2010 07 27 Retrieved 2007 01 18 Excerpt from The Act of Supremacy 1534 Archived from the original on 2010 07 27 Retrieved 2007 01 18 References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Imperial crowns Grierson Philip 28 January 1964 The origins of the English sovereign and the sybolism of the closed crown PDF British Numismatic Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Imperial crown amp oldid 1195613394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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