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#italian royalty
europesroyalsjewels · 3 months
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Ruby Dragonfly Tiara ♕ Prince Carlo of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Duke of Castro
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europesroyals · 25 days
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31/03 - All time favorite tiara
Queen Margherita of Savoy's Musy Diamond & Pearl Tiara
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pokadandelion · 7 months
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Queen Elena of Italy
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royalmotherhood · 9 months
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Princess Bona of Bavaria, nee Princess of Savoy-Genoa, with her husband, and their two children, Amalie Isabella and Eugen, in 1921.
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Princess Marie Louise of Bourbon-Parma, late 1880s.
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conegl · 4 months
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PRINCE FREDERICK JOSEPH BENTON, DESCENDENTE DELLA FAMIGLIA DI CASERTA PRINCIPE FREDERICO GIUSEPPE
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castlebunny · 2 years
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the kiss by silvio allason, 1910 𓆸
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Villa Grimoldi (Italian collection XI)
Hi folks!
I'm sharing the villa Grimoldi. This house is inspired in tradtional italian villas, specially the one existing in Argentina for the Grimoldi family. 
It fits a 40x430 lot. 
As allways, you will need the usual CC I use: all of Felixandre, Tha Jim, SYB, Regal Sims, etc.
Please enjoy, comment if you like it and share pictures with me if you use my creations!
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intricatecaprice · 9 months
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Capitán Armando Salazar's Spain:
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(circa War of Spanish Succession)
One of the things I didn't know when I first started writing fanfic for Capitán Salazar was that technically, Spain wasn't really a single unified country in his lifetime.
If you had asked them where they were from, the men of La María Silenciosa would have been more likely to tell you they were 'Castilian', or 'Aragonese', or any number of the smaller regions across the country.
To give a brief history, from the 700s-1500s AD, Spain was called Al-Andalus, and was under the control of Muslim states. You can still see a great deal of architecture from this time period especially in the South of Spain, the most famous being Alhambra palace (Granada):
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But Christianity started to spread rapidly from the 1400s onwards, and by 1502 all Muslims were ordered to either convert or leave (this royal edict is still criticised today, with many debating if the edict was largely responsible for the eventual decline of Spain's economy and population).
Over the centuries, the cultures of each Spanish region became so significantly different from one another that it is not unlikely to have caused tension aboard Salazar's ship.
Southern regions retained strong Moorish influences due to their geographical proximity to Morocco, but this kept them divided culturally and politically from their Northern neighbours.
Catalonia and Aragon (North East) hated the taxes they'd been forced to pay to the new king Philip V in the early years of the war of Spanish Succession. They fought against their neighbours when the King attempted to send Castilian soldiers through their territory. The King punished those who rebelled by taking their homes and lands away - leaving them with nothing.
All of this would definitely have played heavily into the personal identity of each of the men aboard La María Silenciosa: not all of them would necessarily have shared the same language, manners, or way of looking at themselves and the world around them.
It's interesting to me, therefore, that the colour the men of La María Silenciosa wore was grey.
Not the yellow and red stripes of the Catalonian flag. Not the blue and gold coat of arms of King Philip V. No, the colour is deliberately neutral. As if by donning the grey, every man aboard La María Silenciosa is acknowledging that no matter their differences, under Capitán Salazar's command they are one.
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janiedean · 26 days
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literally begging for any chain ever to fucking let terf wizard collaborations in the dust i don’t want to give that woman a cent of any of my money ever but i’d also like to buy food that’s not like shitty thank u
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Ancona Tiara ♕ Prince Carlo of Bourbon-Two Sicilies, Duke of Castro  
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europesroyals · 2 years
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✣ My Jewelry Box of Favorites ✣
If you could gather together a collection of 24 tiaras, each with a different characteristic (no duplicates), from aristocratic and royal collections, what would you choose?
12. Convertible Tiara: Queen Margherita of Italy’s Musy Diamond & Pearl Tiara
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Sofonisba Anguissola (Italian, c.1532-1625) Portrait of Prince Alessandro Farnese (1545-1592), later Duke of Parma and Piacenza, c.1560 National Gallery of Ireland
This is a portrait of Prince Alessandro Farnese. He was a 15-year-old aristocrat who was the son of the Duke of Parma and grandson of King Charles V of Spain. He was educated at the Spanish court and he became a military general, fighting in campaigns against the Turks, French and English.
Sofonisba Anguissola painted the prince a short time after her arrival at the Spanish court, where she was lady-in-waiting to the Spanish queen Elisabeth of Valois.
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europesroyalsweddings · 7 months
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✵ April 29, 1964✵
Princess Irene of the Netherlands & Carlos Hugo, Duke of Parma and Piacenza
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kingofreturn41 · 1 year
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Italian and Lebanese
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artmarkmedia · 8 months
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youtube
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