[3] With the restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Charles II ordered the creation of two new imperial crowns by Sir Robert Vyner to replace those lost.
[7][2] Sir Edward Walker, who was Garter King of Arms under Charles II, provided a sketch of the crown in his account of the 1661 coronation, though it was not published until 1820.
[10] The Lord Chamberlain's books record that the crown was 'refreshed and repaired' by Sir Robert Vyner for the coronation of James II, but otherwise little changed.
[11] The crown was decorated with diamonds and other jewels, including an emerald with a circumference of seven inches, a large pearl, and a ruby set in one of the four crosses, the latter valued at £10,000 at the time.
[2] The aquamarine monde, added by James II, survives in the emptied frame of George I's state crown and is on public display in the Jewel House at the Tower of London.