According to Kensington Palace, Eugenie paired her Peter Pilotto gown with the Greville Emerald Kokoshnik Tiara, commonly referred to as the Boucheron Tiara, lent to her by the Queen. The tiara was made by Boucheron for Dame Margaret Helen Greville in 1919 in the fashionable “kokoshnik” style popularized in the Russian Imperial Court.
The tiara is made of brilliant and rose cut diamonds pavé set in platinum, with six emeralds on either side, and it was bequeathed by Mrs. Greville to Queen Elizabeth in 1942.
Meghan also borrowed her tiara from the Queen’s jewelry collection, which was the same bandeau style as Eugenie’s.
According to Kensington Palace, the English tiara, which features diamonds set in platinum, was made in 1932 and features a center detachable brooch made of ten diamonds dating back to 1893.
The tiara is “formed as a flexible band of eleven sections, pierced with interlaced ovals and pavé set with large and small brilliant diamonds.”
The palace confirmed that the diamond bandeau was a present to the then Princess Mary in 1893 by the County of Lincoln on her marriage to Prince George, Duke of York, who would become King George V. The bandeau and the brooch were passed down by Queen Mary to The Queen in 1953. The queen’s sister Princess Margaret famously wore the piece to events.
Despite their very similar tiaras, Eugenie and Meghan’s bridal style did differ in other ways.
While the Duchess of Sussex pinned in a cathedral length veil on her wedding day, Eugenie went without the traditional accessory as a way to bring attention to her spinal scar from the surgery she had at age 12 to correct her scoliosis.
This article originally appeared on PEOPLE.com