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== Literature ==
* Wilhelm, Gustav: ''[http://www.eliechtensteinensia.li/JBHV/1960/60/Der_historische_liechtensteinische_Herzogshut.html Der historische liechtensteinische Herzogshut]''. in: Jahrbuch des Historischen Vereins für das Fürstentum Liechtenstein, 1960, Volume. pp, S. 5-20. (in German)


[[Category:Crown jewels]]
[[Category:Crown jewels]]

Revision as of 00:07, 2 February 2011

Ducal hat and insignia of the princely Liechtenstein primogeniture. (Gouache from 1756, Liechtenstein Museum)

The Ducal hat of Liechtenstein (German: Herzogshut) is a former crown of the Duke of Liechtenstein. It went missing in the 18th century.

History

The ducal hat of Liechtenstein, commissioned in 1623 by Karl von Liechtenstein, completed in 1626, was discovered missing in 1781 [1] following the death of Prince Franz Joseph I, and remains lost to the House of Liechtenstein till the present day.

In 1976, the people of Liechtenstein presented a replica of the Crown to Prince Franz Josef II on his 70th birthday.[1] The replica is based on the only drawing of the Crown, dated 1756, and is on display in the Liechtenstein National Museum.

The circlet of the crown was modeled on the circlet of the Imperial Crown of Austria, while eight jeweled acanthus leaves, alternately large and small, rested on the rim of the circlet. As with the imperial crown of Rudolf II, the precious stones used in this crown were white (diamonds and pearls) and red (rubies or red spinels), which may have had some alchemist significance. Inside the crown was a red velvet cap topped with a large jeweled button.

The gems used on the Crown were chosen based upon reasoning of the Rudolphine Court, with the Crown appearing designed to protect against evil.[1][2]

According to Emperor Rudolph's physician, Anselm Boëtius de Boodt (1550–1632), diamonds have an inherent power that wards off evil spirits, rubies protect against illness and poison and will warn the wearer when danger threatens by turning dark, and pearls strengthen the health of the wearer and counter the effects of poison.[1][3]

The only depiction of the original crown dates from 1756, a gouache painting that is kept in the Liechtenstein Museum.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Liechtenstein: The Princely Collections ISBN 0-87099-385-2 Metropolitan Museum of Art, Middle Village, New York, U.S.A., 1985.
  2. ^ Gemmarum et lapidum historia (Hanau, 1609)
  3. ^ Quellenband, ISBN 320506271X (EAN: 9783205062714 / 978-3205062714, Böhlau 1983

Literature