First of all, I have two posts on Sashes 101: wearing them in your own country, and wearing them in someone else's country And my general disclaimer applies here: I'm no expert, so forgive any mistakes. Also, this is clearly just a selection of guests and not everybody.
Let's start with those that wore Dutch orders. The general rule is that these are the highest orders the Dutch royal family have for their own country, and the highest Dutch orders the foreign royals possess, if they have any at all - though there is at least one exception here.
King Willem-Alexander |
Left to Right: Queen Máxima, Prince Constantijn, Princess Beatrix, Princess Irene, Princess Margriet, Pieter van Vollenhoven, Princess Christina |
King Hussein died and things changed. Fellow sovereigns and consorts usually get the Order of the Netherlands Lion as seen above, but we didn't see that in this particular guest list.
Crown Prince Naruhito of Japan, the Prince of Wales, Crown Prince Al-Muhtadee Billah and Crown Princess Sarah of Brunei |
Princess Laurentien |
Now to those that wore orders from their own countries. They don't have Dutch orders of their own, which likely means they've never been a part of a Dutch state visit (this explains the difference between spouses in some cases - Camilla, for example, joined the family long after the last Dutch state visit).
The Duke and Duchess of Parma, and Prince Jaime, Princess Margarita, and Princess Carolina of Bourbon-Parma |
Foreign royals with no orders are all wearing, of course, the highest order they possess from their home country (left to right): Crown Princess Mary and Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark in the Order of the Elephant, Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn and Crown Prince Maha Vajiralongkorn of Thailand in the Order of the Royal House of Chakri, the Duchess of Cornwall in the Royal Victorian Order, Crown Princess Victoria and Prince Daniel of Sweden in the Order of the Seraphim. You see Denmark and Thailand wearing their sashes in the opposite direction of everyone else; direction is specific to the order, and these are two of the relatively few that go over the left shoulder.
Foreign royals part deux: the Princess of Asturias in the Order of Charles III, Crown Princess Masako of Japan in the Order of the Precious Crown, Hereditary Princess Sophie and Hereditary Prince Alois of Liechtenstein in the Order of Merit of the Principality of Liechtenstein, Hereditary Grand Duchess Stéphanie of Luxembourg in the Civil and Military Order of Merit of Adolph of Nassau, and Prince Albert II of Monaco in the collar of the Order of St. Charles. Albert was the only sovereign in attendance, and while he has no Dutch order (not much state visit action going on in Monaco, really), he wore the collar of Monaco's top order - collars are a step more formal than ribands.
And there you have it! With that, our coverage of the Dutch inauguration festivities comes to a close. Thanks for following along!
Photos: NOS/DutchPhotoPress/PacificCoastNews/Pool/Getty Images