Signet Ring
1600-1700 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This curiously shaped ring combines the functions of a signet ring and a tobacco tamper, used to press loose tobacco into the bowl of a pipe. As a signet it would have been 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. The bezel of this ring is engraved with a double-headed eagle, a symbol found in Germanic countries.
Other rings with tobacco tampers have been recorded by the Portable Antiquities Scheme. The shape of these rings makes it unclear how miuch they would have been worn in daily life - they were perhaps more likely to have been kept in a pocket or on a desk. Tobacco had been introduced into Europe from North America in the sixteenth century and was widely smoked in long handled ceramic pipes with small bowls.
This ring forms part of a collection of over 600 rings and engraved gems from the collection of Edmund Waterton (1830-81). Waterton was one of the foremost ring collectors of the nineteenth century and was the author of several articles on rings, a book on English devotion to the Virgin Mary and an unfinished catalogue of his collection (the manuscript is now the National Art Library). Waterton was noted for his extravagance and financial troubles caused him to place his collection in pawn with the London jeweller Robert Phillips. When he was unable to repay the loan, Phillips offered to sell the collection to the Museum and it was acquired in 1871. A small group of rings which Waterton had held back were acquired in 1899.
Edmund Waterton used the fortune which was made by his family’s involvement in the British Guiana sugar plantations to put his collection together. His grandfather owned a plantation known as Walton Hall and his father, Charles Waterton, went to Guiana as a young man to help run La Jalousie and Fellowship, plantations which belonged to his uncles. When slavery was abolished in the British territories, Charles Waterton claimed £16283 6s 7d in government compensation and was recorded as having 300 enslaved people on the Walton Hall estate.
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. The bezel of this ring is engraved with a double-headed eagle, a symbol found in Germanic countries.
Other rings with tobacco tampers have been recorded by the Portable Antiquities Scheme. The shape of these rings makes it unclear how miuch they would have been worn in daily life - they were perhaps more likely to have been kept in a pocket or on a desk. Tobacco had been introduced into Europe from North America in the sixteenth century and was widely smoked in long handled ceramic pipes with small bowls.
This ring forms part of a collection of over 600 rings and engraved gems from the collection of Edmund Waterton (1830-81). Waterton was one of the foremost ring collectors of the nineteenth century and was the author of several articles on rings, a book on English devotion to the Virgin Mary and an unfinished catalogue of his collection (the manuscript is now the National Art Library). Waterton was noted for his extravagance and financial troubles caused him to place his collection in pawn with the London jeweller Robert Phillips. When he was unable to repay the loan, Phillips offered to sell the collection to the Museum and it was acquired in 1871. A small group of rings which Waterton had held back were acquired in 1899.
Edmund Waterton used the fortune which was made by his family’s involvement in the British Guiana sugar plantations to put his collection together. His grandfather owned a plantation known as Walton Hall and his father, Charles Waterton, went to Guiana as a young man to help run La Jalousie and Fellowship, plantations which belonged to his uncles. When slavery was abolished in the British territories, Charles Waterton claimed £16283 6s 7d in government compensation and was recorded as having 300 enslaved people on the Walton Hall estate.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Engraved bronze |
Brief description | Bronze signet ring, the oval bezel engraved with a double-headed eagle, a projecting tobacco tamper on the hoop, possibly made in Germany, 1600-1700. |
Physical description | Bronze signet ring, the oval bezel engraved with a double-headed eagle. The hoop has a projecting tobacco tamper. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions | A double-headed eagle. (Engraved on the bezel.) |
Object history | From the Waterton Collection. Rings with pipe tampers were used to press down the tobacco in a pipe to make sure that it drew evenly and burned well. Similar pipe tampers incorporating finger-rings have been recorded on the Portable Antiquities Scheme database: For example, see finds: BERK-3D22B1; HESH-7E11A4; IOW-9318E7; LVPL-3BD087; LVPL-A563A1; SF-7096BD; SOM-1556F1; SUSS-373EA5; SWYOR-4BBAD6; SWYOR-D0A4F1 and WAW-416CA5. |
Summary | This curiously shaped ring combines the functions of a signet ring and a tobacco tamper, used to press loose tobacco into the bowl of a pipe. As a signet it would have been 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. The bezel of this ring is engraved with a double-headed eagle, a symbol found in Germanic countries. Other rings with tobacco tampers have been recorded by the Portable Antiquities Scheme. The shape of these rings makes it unclear how miuch they would have been worn in daily life - they were perhaps more likely to have been kept in a pocket or on a desk. Tobacco had been introduced into Europe from North America in the sixteenth century and was widely smoked in long handled ceramic pipes with small bowls. This ring forms part of a collection of over 600 rings and engraved gems from the collection of Edmund Waterton (1830-81). Waterton was one of the foremost ring collectors of the nineteenth century and was the author of several articles on rings, a book on English devotion to the Virgin Mary and an unfinished catalogue of his collection (the manuscript is now the National Art Library). Waterton was noted for his extravagance and financial troubles caused him to place his collection in pawn with the London jeweller Robert Phillips. When he was unable to repay the loan, Phillips offered to sell the collection to the Museum and it was acquired in 1871. A small group of rings which Waterton had held back were acquired in 1899. Edmund Waterton used the fortune which was made by his family’s involvement in the British Guiana sugar plantations to put his collection together. His grandfather owned a plantation known as Walton Hall and his father, Charles Waterton, went to Guiana as a young man to help run La Jalousie and Fellowship, plantations which belonged to his uncles. When slavery was abolished in the British territories, Charles Waterton claimed £16283 6s 7d in government compensation and was recorded as having 300 enslaved people on the Walton Hall estate. |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | 743-1871 |
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Record created | November 25, 2005 |
Record URL |
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