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  1. Sep 27, 2017 · The earliest recorded instance of a white wedding dress in Western culture is that of the English Princess Philippa at her wedding to the Scandinavian King Eric in 1406. She was dressed in a white tunic lined with ermine and squirrel fur.

  2. Feb 8, 2019 · By the time Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II, married Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1947, the white wedding dress was an international norm.

    • Marlen Komar
    • 2 min
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  4. Princess Philippa of England was the first documented princess to wear white to her wedding in 1406, followed thereafter by Mary, Queen of Scots, when she married Francis Dauphin of France in 1559. But white bridal dresses did not become popular among the masses until after Queen Victoria’s marriage to Albert of Saxe-Coburg in 1840.

  5. Aug 27, 2014 · Philippa of England was the first recorded princess to have worn a white gown to her wedding ceremony in 1406. Mary Queen of Scots was the first high profile bride to have worn a white wedding dress in 1559. At the time, a white dress was a clear indication of her social standing because white fabric is difficult to bleach and maintain ...

  6. Feb 18, 2020 · Like many bridal fashion trends, the tradition of the white wedding dress was established by royalty. The first princess documented to wear white on her wedding day was Philippa of England, daughter of King Henry IV. She married Eric of Pomerania in 1406 dressed in a white tunic with a cloak.

  7. While there are accounts of brides marrying in white dating back to England's Princess Philippa in 1406, the 1840 marriage of England's Queen Victoria to her cousin Prince Albert really put the spotlight on the white wedding dress.

  8. Jul 7, 2014 · The implication is, therefore, that the train of the dress was white, not the entire bridal attire. Other royal brides before Victoria will have included white elements in their wedding wear, but she is, to our knowledge and research, the first in British history to dress in it entirely.

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