Showing posts with label Spanish Royal Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spanish Royal Court. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Spanish Royal Birth Etiquette

“If the child is a boy, the Spanish flag will be hoisted on the Palace and a salute of twenty-one guns will be fired. If it is a girl, a white flag will be run up and a salute of fifteen guns will be fired. If the event occurs at night, an electric light in the national colors will he displayed on the Palace for a boy, and of white light for a girl.”

As Stork Arrives, Guns Will Roar – Royalty to Welcome the New Heir 

Elaborate Preparations Being Made to Receive the Future Prince or Princess of the Spanish Throne

MADRID, April 4.— The royal decree just issued, with the details of the ceremony of the presentation of the heir to the Spanish throne at the moment of its birth, prescribes that the court officials shall be present, also the ministers, the presidents of the two chambers, the Knights of the Golden Fleece, the captain general, the commission of the Asturias and representatives of civil and military corporations. Members of the diplomatic corps will also be invited to attend the ceremony.

If the child is a boy, the Spanish flag will be hoisted on the Palace and a salute of twenty-one guns will be fired. If it is a girl, a white flag will be run up and a salute of fifteen guns will be fired. If the event occurs at night, an electric light in the national colors will he displayed on the Palace for a boy, and of white light for a girl. All of the customary decrees ordering a general amnesty, the release of prisoners condemned for minor offenses and the bestowal of recompenses and decorations upon various persons have been prepared.

How Guests Will Dress

The decree directs attention to the remarkable publicity given in accordance with the etiquette of the Spanish court to the intimate affairs of the Royal family. As soon as evident signs of approaching confinement are noticed, those invited to attend the ceremony must hasten to the Palace, the men attired in uniform and the women in court dress.They must wait in the ante chamber until the infant is presented. 


With the least possible delay the baby is dressed and placed in a basket standing on a golden salver. The King takes the basket, holding the child in his hands and followed by members of the Royal family, enters in where the presentation ceremony is held. Raising the veil over the infant's face, the King says:
“I present to you my beloved son or daughter, the successor to the throne of Spain, the Prince, or Princess of the Asturias, to whom my dear spouse has just given birth.”

Then the Minister of Justice as the principal notary of the realm approaches and views the face of the child and all those invited file past. As soon as the presentation is ended. a solemn Te Deum is sung in the royal chapel. – By the Associated Press, April 1907



Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Etiquette Creates a Pretty Picture

The little Princess asks for a drink of water; a maid of honor hands it to her with the elaborate etiquette prescribed by the formalities of the most rigidly ceremonious Court in Europe. 

The Story of “Las Meninas”

How One of Velázquez's Notable Pictures Came To Be Painted 


The story of “Las Meninas” is that Velasquez was painting a portrait of the Spanish King and Queen (who sat where the spectator is when he looks at the picture). Their little daughter, the Infanta Margarita, came in with her maids of honor, her dog and her dwarfs, accompanied by her duena and a courtier. The little Princess asks for a drink of water; a maid of honor hands it to her with the elaborate etiquette prescribed by the formalities of the most rigidly ceremonious Court in Europe. 

The scene presented so charming a picture, that the King desired Velasquez to paint it. The artist has included himself in the group at work upon a large canvas on which it is supposed he was painting a portrait of the King and Queen when the interruption occurred. The reflection of the King and Queen appears in the mirror at the end of the room, and the Chamberlain, Don Jose Nieto, stands outside the door drawing the curtain. The scene is, indeed, represented with such wonderful realism that a famous French critic said of it, “So complete is the illusion that, standing in front of ‘Las Meninas’ one is tempted to ask, ‘Where is the picture?’” —St. Nicholas, Madera Mercury, 1905



Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia