The stories behind five gold rings found in 2024
Archaeologist Helen Geake works in Norfolk â the treasure finds capital of the UK â and often thinks of the Twelve Days of Christmas carol in her work.
There is one particular verse that stands out: âOn the fifth day of Christmas, my true love gave to me, five gold rings.â
âThatâs me,â says Dr Geake who works as the countyâs finds liaison officer. âIâm always finding gold rings in my work.â
She assesses objects discovered in the county by metal detectorists, in her role as part of a team that recommends whether the objects should be declared treasure by a coroner.
âGold rings are one of the things that get lost more than most, pretty much everyoneâs got a ring,â says Dr Geake.
âAnd theyâre easy to lose, you take them off to wash and dry your hands, your fingers get fatter and thinner.â
Dr Geake has chosen five rings that have crossed her desk in 2024, each one revealing more about the people who lived in the county in centuries past.
1. A Roman ring depicting the goddess Diana
âItâs such a tiny, tiny thing and yet the design is so clear,â says Dr Geake about her first choice.
The find, in the village of Sedgeford, near Hunstanton, is set with a dark red gemstone.
It measures 18.2mm (0.7in), yet its depiction of the goddess Diana is packed with detail.
Dr Geake says: âShe has her bow in one hand, the other is reaching for an arrow and there is even a little dog with its snouty nose and paw lifted.
âIt is the tiniest bit of Roman art and thereâs not an awful lot that has survived that isnât sculpture.â
The highly decorated ring has similarities to a pendant found in the 4th Century Thetford Treasure hoard, and may even have come from the same workshop.
2. A Roman âchunk of goldâ
Her next choice is also Roman but is âjust a great chunk of goldâ.
Dr Greake says: âIt makes a nice counterpart to the other one and shows the variety of jewellery in the Roman world.
âItâs really chunky and feels completely different, with a slightly rough look as if it was hammered into shape.â
Discovered near Kingâs Lynn, it was made between the 1st and 4th Centuries.
And weighing 7.81g (0.3oz), âyou could make five gold rings out of this one aloneâ, she adds.
It has been disclaimed â meaning it will be returned to its finder and the owner of the land it was found on â because museums lack the resources and spaces to claim every find.
Dr Geake says: âBut itâs marvellous we know about it â and it has been added to the Portable Antiquities Scheme database.â
3. A Stuart-era mourning ring
Moving to the 17th Century and a ring found near Merton offers insight into the funeral rituals of people in the Stuart era.
Dr Geake says: âMourning rings were made to remember the person who died and given out at funerals.
âInside it is says, âSH died 5 May 93â â we know this means 1693.â
People would leave money in their wills for rings to be created and distributed to family and friends in their memory.
âFor example, the diarist John Evelyn distributed 60 rings to his daughterâs friends after her death â and the closer the friend, the better the ring,â says Dr Geake.
âBut with this ring, we donât know anything about them, which I find sad â is it a Samuel or a Sarah? Who was this person?â
4. A âmysteriousâ Bronze Age ring
âThere are loads and loads of these Bronze Age penannular rings in the database, more than 150 from the whole country, yet we just donât know how they were used,â says Dr Geake.
Made between about 1300 BC to about 800 BC, it was discovered in north Norfolk and Norwich Castle Museum hopes to add the piece to its collection.
âMight it have been tied into hair? Would that work? Or perhaps it went around part of the ear like an ear cuff â but Iâd be nervous it would fall out,â she says.
âItâs very perfect and I like this one a lot â many are split or broken in some way â they are lovely things, but mysterious.â
5. A medieval ring with the symbol of faithfulness
Her final choice is a 14th or 15th Century medieval ring unearthed at Hingham, which is covered in different forms of decoration, including two saints.
She thinks one of the saints might be St Barbara, in part because she in part because âshe always carries a palmâ.
According to legend, the saint was murdered by her father when she refused to give up Christianity and get married.
Dr Geake says: âThe designs include shaking hands â the symbol of faithfulness -flowers, there are two saints carrying palms and it would have been very bright and colourful with traces of yellow, red, green and blue, while the engraving on the top would have been black and white.â
âItâs as if someone has chucked the kitchen sink at it in terms of every design possible.â
It only appears to be gold, but is in fact gilded over a silver base.
Its owner probably could not afford solid gold, but wanted a ring which had the appearance of the more costly material, says Dr Geake.
The item was disclaimed and returned to the finder and landowner.
If the detectorists unearth finds that are more than 300 years old and made from gold or silver, they must report them under the Treasure Act.
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