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Posy ring: Posy rings form a large and important group in the history of English jewellery. Dating from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century, they were generally designed as simple gold hoops engraved with a short poem or posy (from the French ‘poésy’) on the inside. Although a large portion of posy rings were given at weddings or betrothals, they were also presented as gifts on other occasions. They also served as ‘guard’ or ‘keeper’ rings worn above the more valuable gem-set ring.
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England
17th/18th century
Gold posy ring, with circular hoop engraved: You and I will lovers die; marked IC? in a rectangle
17 mm internal ring diameter; 4.1 g weight
Presented by Dr C.D.E. Fortnum in honour of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, 1897; WA1899.CDEF.F618
Taylor and Scarisbrick, Finger Rings from Ancient Egypt to the present day, 1978, no. 579