Madame la Reine avec ses enfants, 1834: Élisée Massé

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Madame la Reine avec ses enfants, 1834: Élisée Massé
POINT ROYAL MAGAZINE |🎉Joyeux anniversaire, Votre Majesté Impériale ! 🎉
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@theroyalthornoliachronicles @modernthornoliachronicles
🎉 Happy Birthday, Your Imperial Majesty!
Today, Emperor Napoleon V celebrates his twentieth birthday far from Francesim, in the midst of his State Visit to Thornolia. It is a fitting reflection of his reign so far: a young sovereign who, despite his age, has already placed duty before celebration.
Ascending the throne only a few months ago following the sudden death of his father, Emperor Napoleon IV, Louis has scarcely had the opportunity to experience the carefree years of youth. At just twenty, he leads an Empire, represents his nation on the international stage, and, alongside Empress-Regent Charlotte, prepares to welcome their first child.
Throughout the visit to Thornolia, the young Emperor has distinguished himself through his attentiveness and the confidence with which he has carried out official ceremonies, diplomatic engagements, and state occasions. A maturity that stands in striking contrast to his age has not gone unnoticed.
On this special day, it is an entire generation that seems ready to take up the mantle. Sovereigns barely twenty years old, a child on the way… The youth of the Imperial couple may sometimes invite questions, but it also inspires great hope for the future.
Everyone at Point Royal extends their warmest wishes to His Imperial Majesty on the occasion of his twentieth birthday.
At only twenty years old, Napoleon V continues to leave his mark on the great international diplomatic stage. Currently on a State Visit to Thornolia since yesterday, the young sovereign made a particularly symbolic stop at the Imperial Embassy of Francesim, where representatives of the French expatriate community and members of the consular staff awaited him.
Within the historic salons of the embassy, decorated for the occasion, the Emperor held lengthy discussions with the ambassador regarding French citizens living in Thornolia. Access to consular services, support for students, economic development, and the protection of expatriate communities were among the main topics addressed.
“The necessity for the Crown to remain close to its citizens, even far from the homeland.” - Napoleon V durant the visit.
A message regarding the Polynesian crisis?
Yet it was a far more personal moment that truly marked the diplomatic reception. The sovereign was presented with several official gifts by the ambassador, including an exceptional piece that immediately captured the attention of the guests: a Thornolian ceremonial egg, a celebrated masterpiece of goldsmithing.
Created especially for Emperor Napoleon V by the Royal Atelier of Thornolia, the ceremonial egg was presented by the French Ambassador of Thornolia during a state reception commemorating the longstanding cultural ties between Francesim and the Thornolian Crown.
The egg rests upon four miniature chiselled golden eagles, while a majestic heraldic eagle - directly inspired by the arms of the Simparte dynasty - spreads its wings atop the object. Delicate sapphire and diamond inlays surround the imperial motifs, and the interior reportedly contains a mechanical miniature representing the Aigle, the imperial yacht that carried Napoleon V to the Thornolian coast.
According to several guests present at the reception, the young Emperor appeared particularly moved by the gesture, taking time to examine every detail of the work alongside the ambassador. A rare, almost intimate scene, standing in striking contrast to the imposing protocol that has surrounded this State Visit since his arrival at Port Olivier.
L'Oeuf-Aigle Thornolien
Crafted using traditional techniques preserved since the founding of Thornolia in 1810, the piece reflects the blended artistic heritage of Eliskoyan settlers and Thalian refugees who helped shape the empire’s identity.
The egg combines Thornolia's signature imperial blue enamel with polished gold and ivory in the restrained yet highly symbolic style for which the Royal Atelier is internationally renowned. Four gilded supports elevate the piece beneath a crowned eagle finial, while delicate sapphire and diamond inlays reference both imperial authority and maritime legacy.
Officials described the commission as both a diplomatic gift and a tribute to Thornolia's origins. The Royal Atelier, founded in 1812, remains one of the last major decorative arts institutions in the world to produce ceremonial state objects entirely by hand using nineteenth-century methods preserved through generations of master craftsmen.
The Blue Enamel Pattern
The scalloped blue/gold enamel on the upper half resembles overlapping feathers and waves.
That detailing has dual symbolism:
eagle representing the Simparte imperial line,
and ocean waves representing the voyage that brought Napoleon to Thornolia.
The technique itself is known as Eliskoyan Featherwork Enameling.
A difficult Eliskoyan technique requiring multiple firings to prevent cracking.
Because of the rich cobalt tone, later copies often failed to reproduce the original color correctly. The authentic enamel became known as: Eliskoyan Blue.
The Ivory Panels
The smooth ivory body creates a striking contrast with the ornate top.
Historically, this might have been interpreted as representing:
purity of imperial authority,
the untouched frontier of Thornolia,
or the "blank future" awaiting the exiled dynasty.
Unlike older Eliskoyan objects crowded with saints and iconography, Thornolian court art preferred cleaner surfaces inspired by naval and colonial aesthetics.
By the late 1800s, this minimalist ivory style could become fashionable among Thornolian aristocrats.
The Stand
The pedestal itself is incredibly important.
The pearl garlands and crystal pendants give it ceremonial delicacy, almost ecclesiastical.
This reflects lingering Eliskoyan Orthodox-inspired decorative traditions adapted into Thornolian secular imperial culture.
Historical Meaning of the Commission
The French Ambassador's gift to Napoleon V to be understood as a tribute from a nation born from exile. Thornolia itself emerged from displaced peoples:
Eliskoyan settlers seeking opportunity,
and Thalian royalist refugees escaping the collapse of the Thalian monarchy and the violence that followed.
Because of this, the egg's symbolism centers around survival through reconstruction. The message to Napoleon V is essentially:
“Your dynasty helped inspire the empire that gave our exiles a future.”
The miniature yacht inside, a symbol recognising Napoleon V’s arrival to Thornolia, is also sacred to Thornolia's national identity. Not because it merely carried Napoleon, but because it carried:
settlers,
refugees,
nobles,
craftsmen,
officers,
and displaced families seeking survival.
The Aigle effectively becomes the symbolic "birth vessel" of Thornolia.
Simovia Court... the Queen’s entrance & quarters... one month later.
The lovely and amazing Dr Maja is by the equally lovely and amazing @boolproppin who was kind enough to send Dr Maja over to help poor Alma.
Transcript below the cut.
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Princess Josefine de Thornolie et Tsarevich Nikolai Alexandrovich, 1918
@estenbourgsims
Monseigneur L'Épin, 1850 - Arsène Chéreau
Palais de Thornolie: 01 Juin 1850, 20:00
Duchesse de Clèrisseau: Arabella has clearly outdone herself. The wisteria on the terrace are blooming still. Can you imagine?
Duc de Clèrisseau: [Distracted] The crown always finds a way to be in season, whether nature agrees or not.
[Charlotte focuses in on Eleanor, noticing her unease]
Duchesse de Clèrisseau: You’ll have no lack of admirers tonight, Mignonne. If half the court isn’t watching you, they will be watching Oliver.
Duchesse de Clèrisseau: And that blue is just right on you. You’ll outshine la mascarade itself.
Mademoiselle Eleanor: Merci, Maman…
Duc de Clèrisseau: You’ve had a curious saison. I imagine tonight feels heavier than it should.
Duchesse de Clèrisseau: We know it hasn't been easy, but clarity matters, Eleanor. Not just for others, but for yourself as well.
Mademoiselle Eleanor: I'm not confused, Maman.
Duc de Clèrisseau: Whatever you've chosen, you should know it does not have to be a performance. You owe nothing to anyone.
Marquis de Clèrisseau: She knows what she's doing.
Duc de Clèrisseau: Do you?
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Palais de Thornolie: 01 Juin 1850, 20:00
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(Let the Masquerade Begin!)
Les Enfants de la Cour, 1835: Élisée Massé