Memento mori

Antique Neo-Classical Diamond Ring in Silver & Gold, ca. 1790


€ 4,980.00 *
Content 1 piece
Incl. VAT, Shipping
Antique Neo-Classical Diamond Ring in Silver & Gold, ca. 1790
Antique Neo-Classical Diamond Ring in Silver & Gold, ca. 1790
Description
This description was automatically translated from German. If you have any questions about this piece of jewellery, we will be happy to help!
An urn of silver and diamonds sparkles in front of a midnight blue background. Mysterious and cool is its sight, as if only a pale moon shines in a lonely night. A frame of further diamonds in silver frames the depiction. A ring band of gold turns the work into a ring. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, jewellery was a central part of ritualized mourning. Self-devouring serpents as a sign of endless time, magnificently designed urns, inlays of hair and small painted miniatures of mourning priestesses, sorrowful doves and weeping willows populated rings and brooches in great numbers. Mostly they commemorated an individual loss. But sometimes such jewellery was also worn without a specific occasion, as memento mori or vanitas jewellery, intended to remind us of the fundamental finiteness of life and to remind us to consciously enjoy life until then. The ring here, unlike most others, bears no individual engraving commemorating a specific person. Rather, the urn seems to refer to the transience of all life, in keeping with the Latin wisdom "Quidquid agis, prudenter agas et respice finem" - "Whatever you do, act wisely and consider the end." "Respice finem" - this can also be translated as "consider the outcome of your actions." And so it is not death alone that should guide one's actions, but the consideration of the consequences of one's actions already in life. Diamonds, as the hardest material on earth, are used here as symbols of an eternal memory, a never-ending cycle of life and death. The discovery of larger diamond deposits in Brazil in 1725 led to the fact that now also many rich citizens could afford diamonds and the possession of these precious stones was no longer the exclusive privilege of kings and nobles, as it was before that time without exception the case. The ring of the years around 1790 is very well preserved. Worn with care, it may still be a good advisor today. Cf. on corresponding jewellery Ginny Redington Dawas/Olivia Collings: Georgian Jewelry 1714-1830, Woodbridge 2007, p. 162. and p. 164, also Gisela Zick: Gedenke mein. Freundschafts- und Memorialschmuck 1770-1870, Dortmund 1980, pl. 32, and Diana Scarisbrick: Rings. Jewelry of Power, Love and Loyalty, London 2007, p. 176f.
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Size & Details
Antique Neo-Classical Diamond Ring in Silver & Gold, ca. 1790
Memento mori
€ 4,980.00 *
Content 1 piece
Incl. VAT, Shipping
Our Promise
Our Promise
Our Promise

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