Nu gespreide betaling mogelijk op het juweel van uw dromen! Vraag ons naar de details. Gratis verzekerde verzending van alle orders!
See our: rings.
A type of ring to be worn by a man or a woman on one of the fingers, or sometimes on the thumb.
The ring consists of two parts:
Such rings are of many forms, often depending on the occasion of their use, e.g.
|
|
|
Or the religious significance of the use, e.g.
|
|
|
Other such rings are of many shapes and styles, e.g.
|
|
|
Originally one finger ring was worn by a person, but from Roman times, and later in the 17th century, men and women wore several rings on any finger as well as on the thumb (and not only on the bottom joint), and often several on the same finger, including sometimes a guard ring. From the 16th century finger rings were worn by women in various manners, e.g. sewn to a dress or tied on a bow. From c. 1600 in England such rings, when worn on a finger, were sometimes attached to a long black thread or ribbon tied around the wrist, or were worn suspended from a ribbon around the neck or threaded on a cord around a hat. Men in Germany sometimes wore rings strung on a hat band. When having a portrait painted, especially in Tudor and Stuart times, men and women often wore all of their rings.
A wedding ring was originally worn by the bride on the third finger of the left hand (the belief being that from there a vein, vena amoris, connected with the heart), but in the Middle Ages it was worn, for a then reversed belief, on the right hand. The wedding ring was placed on the left hand in England, but after the ceremony it was worn on any finger or on the thumb. The wearing of a wedding ring by a man, while frequently on the Continent and now also in the United States (and customary in the East), is less frequent in England.
Persons wearing gloves sometimes wore a ring over the glove or slashed the glove to reveal it underneath.
From: An Illustrated Dictionary of Jewelry, autor: Harold Newman, publishers: Thames and Hudson