Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI (1834)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The 1834 Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI was a papal tiara given to Pope Gregory XVI. It was the first of three tiaras received or commissioned by Pope Gregory during his reign.
The tiara was unique up to the nature of its decoration, which involved three crowns containing outstanding large clover shaped in gold, laid with heavy jewels.
It was for its time the most dramatic of then existing papal tiaras.
The new style of design was copied in the later Palatine Tiara given to Gregory's successor, Pope Pius IX by the Vatican's Palatine Guard in 1877.
Gregory's tiara was one of the most worn in the papal collection. Pius IX, Pius X and Pope Pius XII all wore the tiara. It is unknown if Pope John XXIII ever wore it.
Popes ceased to wear papal tiaras in 1963 though the usage has not been abolished. Future popes could decide to wear papal tiaras, including the Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI, in the future.
Papal Tiaras | |
Papal Tiaras in existence
Tiara of Pope Gregory XIII (1500s) | Papier-mâché Tiara (1800) | Napoleon Tiara (1804) | Tiara of Pope Pius VII (1820) | Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI (1834) | Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI (1845) | Tiara of Pope Gregory XVI (lightweight) | Tiara of Pope Pius IX (1846) | Tiara of Pope Pius IX (lightweight) | Notre Dame Tiara (1850s) | Spanish Tiara (1855) | Belgian Tiara (1871) | Palatine Tiara (1877) | German Tiara (1887) | Paris Tiara (1888) | Austrian Tiara (1894) | Golden Tiara (1903) | Tiara of Pope Pius X (1908) | Milan Tiara (1922) | Tiara of Pope Pius XI (1922) | Tiara of Pope John XXIII (1959) | Tiara of Pope Paul VI (1963) |