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This royal bride said no to a tiara for her wedding and chose fake flowers instead

The wedding of King Harald and Queen Sonja in 1968

You expect flowers at a wedding but these ones were part of a royal fashion statement that packed a real punch. One royal bride spent years being talked about as just not good enough for a ruling dynasty and when she finally did walk down the aisle to marry her prince, she said no to a tiara. She chose fake flowers instead which is showing your enemies the door with about as much class as possible.

The royal wedding with no tiara

In August 1968, all eyes were on Oslo for one of the biggest and most talked about royal weddings of recent times. The heir to the throne of Norway, Crown Prince Harald, finally married Sonja Haraldsen, after seeing off opposition from those who felt a future king shouldn’t marry a non-royal.

Sonja of Norway on her wedding day. She wears a white silk dress with large tulle veil held in place by fake flowers
Queen Sonja’s striking crown of artificial flowers can be seen in close up as she leaves the church after her wedding
(By Urpo Rouhiainen – https://finna.fi/, CC BY 4.0, Wiki Comons)

The bride chose a very Sixties style wedding dress, with minimal embellishment, and a very Sixties hair ornament. There was definitely no place for a tiara here as Sonja’s tulle veil was held in place with an arrangement of artificial flowers. It doesn’t get more Sixties than that.

It’s no wonder that this royal bride was on the style zeitgeist with her wedding outfit. Queen Sonja of Norway studied design and loved making her own clothes. Just like thousands of brides that summer, Sonja went with the trend for artificial flowers in her hair.

Fake flowers that tell a powerful truth

Besides, she’d spent nine years in the middle of that royal row about whether Harald should be allowed to marry a so called commoner. There was no other heir to the throne of Norway and Harald held firm despite opposition. In the end, he told his father, King Olav, that he either married Sonja or no one.

His lack of a wife and of legitimate heirs might have spent the end of the throne. Harald won the day and Sonja became a royal bride. But she said no to a tiara. There’s something rather classy about turning up to Oslo Cathedral to marry the heir to the throne and secure the Norwegian monarchy and doing it all without a diamond in sight.

King Harald and Queen Sonja wave from the balcony of Oslo Palace after their wedding in 1968
The bride and groom got a huge reception when they appeared on the palace balcony after the wedding
(By Urpo Rouhiainen – https://finna.fi/, CC BY 4.0, Wiki Comons)

The couple emerged into August sunshine as the Crown Prince and Princess of Norway and Sonja, the bride who had been rejected by the powers that be because of her non royal status, was now the most important woman in the country. Her new father in law, who had shown his support for the union by walking into the church with Sonja, was a widower and had no consort. Sonja immediately stepped into the role of ”first lady” of Norway.

In 1991, King Olav died and Harald took the throne of Norway. Now queen, Sonja made full use of the spectacular set of jewels available to her as consort. But her path to a throne began with a simple crown of fake flowers that were a real style statement all of their own.

About author

Lydia Starbuck is Editor in Chief at Royal Central and the main producer and presenter of the Royal Central Podcast and Royal Central Extra.Lydia is also a pen name of June Woolerton who is a journalist and writer with over twenty years experience in TV, radio, print and online. Her latest book, A History of British Royal Jubilees, is out now. Her new book, The Mysterious Death of Katherine Parr, will be published in March 2024.June is an award winning reporter, producer and editor. She's appeared on outlets including BBC 5 Live, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Local Radio and has also helped set up a commercial radio station.June is also an accomplished writer with a wide range of material published online and in print. She is the author of two novels, published as e-books. She is also a marriage registrar and ceremony celebrant.