IN THE YEAR 1645, London was still a medieval masterpiece of a city; the Great Fire of London hadn't yet burned the ancient buildings to the ground. The second pandemic of the Bubonic Plague was killing people in major European cities and nobody understood why. Mary Lakeland burnt to death for witchcraft in England - this was the beginning of witch-hunt paranoia. I bet none of these events were what this ring commemorates, though. "Recuerda el dia 10 de Septiembre de 1645" was probably a highly personal date for someone who spoke Spanish. The details are hidden within three pivoting rings. Was it a birthday? A romantic meeting? We'll never know.
thedetails
- Materials
10k gold (tests)
- Age
c. 1650
- Condition
Very good - minor surface wear commensurate with age and use
- Size
7.5+, cannot be resized; 2.2mm width
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Aboutthe
StuartEra
1603 — 1714
A new era dawned when Queen Elizabeth — the last Tudor monarch — died without an heir. The monarchy was temporarily displaced by the Commonwealth of England from 1649 to 1660 by Oliver Cromwell, but was restored — aka "The Restoration" — as Charles II was invited to take the throne. His father, Charles I, had been beheaded in 1649, and most of the jewelry we see from this period was at least stylistically related to this controversial political event. During this time, discoveries and innovations transformed England and Scotland, which were conjoined after a long period of feuding. Coffee became a new trendy beverage, with 600 coffeehouses in London all catering to a different type of clientele. This imported novelty beverage was possible because of the UK's rapidly expanding worldwide trade network. Not yet interested in acquiring territories, the island nation focused instead on making a fortune exporting wool and importing goods like slaves, sugar, and tea. Everyone (except the enslaved people, of course) benefited from the new merchant class that arose, and in the process the Royal Navy became the most powerful in the world. The look of London changed, too — after the Great Fire of 1666, Christopher Wren was hired to rebuild the city's damaged churches, with his greatest accomplishment being St. Paul's Cathedral.
please note:Terms of Sale
Antiques can be returned unworn and in original condition within 10 days of delivery for an exchange or refund minus the cost of shipping. Once a piece has been altered, including ring re-sizing, it is FINAL SALE.




