Coronation gown

Vernon
128
2 min
Year: 1906

Transcription

Narrator: 

There’s a lovely quote from Queen Maud. It’s from a letter she wrote in December 1905, a month after she came to Norway.  
 
Janne Arnesen: 

"Behold! I am a Queen!!! Who would have thought it? & I am the very last person to be stuck on a throne!" 

Narrator: 

Queen Maud’s words were spoken by Janne Arnesen, an art historian at the National Museum. She tells us how the young queen had a very special nickname among her friends and family.  

Janne Arnesen: 
As a girl, she was known as "Her Royal Shyness". She was shy and reserved – at least in public.  

Narrator: 

Maud became our first queen for nearly 600 years. This happened after the dissolution in 1905 of the Union between Sweden and Norway. After the Union ended, Maud’s husband, Prince Carl of Denmark, was offered the Norwegian throne. 

Janne Arnesen: 

The coronation ceremony at Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim, a city in the central part of Norway, was the first major opportunity for many Norwegians to see their new queen. And Maud thought it was quite awful – both at her wedding and during the coronation – to have everyone looking at her.  

Narrator: 

It took six months, thousands of hours of work, and a collaboration between fashion houses in Norway and England, to make Queen Maud’s coronation gown. The result that you see before you is a dream-like creation in golden silk, embroidered with glittering gemstones, metal sequins and imitation pearls. 

Janne Arnesen:  

The gown was a very good choice for the occasion. If we compare the situation to a job interview, she was in every way dressed for the role. And perhaps I wouldn’t call it a diversionary tactic, but it’s clear that clothes can be used to boost one’s self-confidence. 

Narrator:  

Queen Maud’s sense of style quickly set the standard for fashion in Norway, and she is still referred to as a queen of fashion – in every sense of the word. 

Janne Arnesen:

The gown was a very good choice for the occasion. If we compare the situation to a job interview, she was in every way dressed for the role. And perhaps I wouldn’t call it a diversionary tactic, but it’s clear that clothes can be used to boost one’s self-confidence. 

Narrator:

Queen Maud’s sense of style quickly set the standard for fashion in Norway, and she is still referred to as a queen of fashion – in every sense of the word.