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Signet Ring

early 17th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This ring would have been used as a signet, pressed into hot wax to seal a letter or packet. Personal seals (secreta) provided an essential legal safeguard and were used to witness documents such as wills, deeds of gift, loans and commercial documents, personal letters and land indentures. A letter from Lord Berengario in Verona in 906 underscores the importance of the signet: ‘So that this may be more truly believed and more faithfully observed, we order this to be sealed with our ring, confirming it with our own hand’.

Signet rings could be engraved with a coat of arms or crest, an initial, a merchant's mark (a geometric symbol used to mark goods or personal belongings), or a personal symbol. Sixteenth and seventeenth century portraits show signet rings worn on the forefinger or thumb, presumably to make it easy to apply the ring to the wax by turning the hand. They were items of jewellery with a practical function but the use of precious metals and engraved hardstones indicates that they were also signs of status.



Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Enamelled gold with a sapphire intaglio
Brief description
Enamelled gold signet ring, the octagonal bezel set with a sapphire intaglio depicting the monogram 'IL' below a coronet, the back lobed and enamelled, France, early 17th century
Physical description
Enamelled gold signet ring, the octagonal bezel set with a sapphire intaglio depicting the monogram 'IL' below a coronet, the back lobed and enamelled.
Dimensions
  • Height: 2.6cm
  • Width: 2.5cm
  • Depth: 1.4cm
Marks and inscriptions
'IL' (Monogram below a coronet, intaglio)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Miss M. F. T. Ready
Subjects depicted
Summary
This ring would have been used as a signet, pressed into hot wax to seal a letter or packet. Personal seals (secreta) provided an essential legal safeguard and were used to witness documents such as wills, deeds of gift, loans and commercial documents, personal letters and land indentures. A letter from Lord Berengario in Verona in 906 underscores the importance of the signet: ‘So that this may be more truly believed and more faithfully observed, we order this to be sealed with our ring, confirming it with our own hand’.

Signet rings could be engraved with a coat of arms or crest, an initial, a merchant's mark (a geometric symbol used to mark goods or personal belongings), or a personal symbol. Sixteenth and seventeenth century portraits show signet rings worn on the forefinger or thumb, presumably to make it easy to apply the ring to the wax by turning the hand. They were items of jewellery with a practical function but the use of precious metals and engraved hardstones indicates that they were also signs of status.

Collection
Accession number
M.10-1959

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Record createdNovember 23, 2005
Record URL
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