In seventy years of reign, Queen Elizabeth II has regularly brought to light the treasures that make up her personal cassette.
Tiaras, tiaras, brooches and dizzying adornments that she reserved for special events.
For her daily commitments, the sovereign focused more on her essential accessories, to the point of being often reduced to her alliance of hat, gloves, bags, moccasins and rows of pearls.
However, his eternal pearl river will remain well in its case for his funeral.
Elizabeth II having wished, according to certain experts quoted by the tabloids in view of London, to be buried with only jewelry for her pearly earrings and her ring.
A wedding ring forged in gold from Wales (a royal tradition established in 1923) and studded with diamonds taken from the tiara of Prince Philip's mother, Alice of Battenberg.
Two choice pieces that she almost never left and which will accompany her on her last journey.
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Princess Elizabeth and Philip Mountbatten at their wedding on November 20, 1947. Hulton Archive/Getty Images