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Windsor uniform

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

George III in Windsor dress
King George III wearing the Windsor uniform in 1807
Prince Frederick Augustus in undress Windsor dress
Undress Windsor uniform, as worn by Prince Augustus Frederick (a son of King George III) in 1798

The Windsor uniform is a type of formal dress worn at Windsor Castle by male members of the British royal family (and some very senior courtiers).[1]

History

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The Duke of Edinburgh (far right) wearing the modern version at a state dinner in 2009

The uniform was introduced by King George III in 1777.[2] The full dress version, which had a good deal of gold braid about it, did not survive beyond 1936, but the undress version, introduced in 1798,[3] is still worn today: a dark blue jacket with red facings. It is now worn only at Windsor Castle, and since the reign of King Edward VII, it has generally been worn only as evening dress (although King Charles III has worn a version of it as a riding coat).

The uniform currently takes the form of an evening tail coat of dark blue cloth, lapelled, with scarlet collar and cuffs.[1] There are three buttons on each front, two at the back of the waist, two at the end of each tail, and also two on each cuff (plus one above). The gilt buttons bear a design of a Garter star within a garter, surmounted by the imperial crown.

It is worn with a white single-breasted waistcoat with three small gilt buttons of the same pattern, and with plain black evening-dress trousers.[1] When the court is in mourning, a black waistcoat and black armband are worn. As well as the tail coat version, the late Duke of Edinburgh also wore (and King Charles III continues to wear) a dinner jacket version of the coat.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Windsor uniform". Dress and insignia worn at His Majesty's court (London: 1921). Retrieved 25 November 2017.
  2. ^ Jeremy Black, George III: America's Last King (New Haven: Princeton University Press, 2006), 118 and 428.
  3. ^ "London Friday May 18". Hampshire Chronicle. England. 19 May 1798. Retrieved 28 January 2020 – via British Newspaper Archive.
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