So whether the trend originated with the Prince at the time of his marriage to Mrs. Fitzherbert, or earlier in Paris, Prinny certainly was the first to popularize the trend in London. In any case, the intent was to keep the lover's identity a bit of a secret by not revealing the whole face. Since the Prince was a leader of fashion, the brooches became very popular in the late 18th century through the early decades of the 19th century. It is also likely that some eye brooches were simply another variation of sentimental or mourning jewelry and had nothing to do with secret lovers. This would explain, for example, female eyes mounted in very feminine settings. Those eye brooches that have come down from the Victorian era were certainly sentimental or mourning pieces. Queen Victoria is said to have commissioned several as gifts, even though the notion of eye brooches was by that time very old-fashioned. In Dickens' Dombey and Son , published in 1848, the impoverished, aging spinster, Miss Tox, is described as wearing "round her neck the barrenest of lockets, representing a fishy old eye."
There is not much written about eye brooches, but the following sources were helpful in putting together this article: J. Anderson Black, The Story of Jewelry, William Morrow and Co., 1974. Shirley Bury, Jewellery, the International Era, Volume I: 1789-1861, Antique Collectors Club, 1991. Shirley Bury, Sentimental Jewellery, Stemmer House, 1985. Ann Louise Luthi, Sentimental Jewellery, Shire Publiations, 1998. Claire Phillips, Jewels and Jewellery, Victoria and Albert Publications, 2000. Diana Scarisbrick, Jewellery in Britain 1066-1837, Michael Russel Ltd, 1994.
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