Posy rings
Number recorded on PAS database: 832
This section on posy rings is limited to rings with an inscription of an amatory nature. The rings were exchanged between lovers and were a popular way of swapping secret messages. The name is derived from the French word for poem ‘poésie’.
The earliest rings date from around the 13th C and examples as late as the 19th C are recorded in the PAS database. Many different styles exist ranging from the very simple, plain bands with an inscription on the interior to highly decorated bands and inscriptions on both the interior and exterior. They are perhaps the most difficult of the ring categories to date and a number of factors need to be taken into account when attempting to assess their date of production.


Inscription language


Inscription position

Lettering style

Destination
List of all inscriptions (sorted alphabetically)
Inscription | Date | Makers' Mark | Image | PAS ID | Found (County) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
De tout mon cuer | 15th C | None | YORYM-655EFF | East Riding of Yorkshire | |
De tout mon cuer | 15th C | None | DENO-FB27A1 | Nottinghamshire | |
Deade if diuided | 18th C | None | NARC-7B4A32 | Staffordshire | |
Delvi pensez par kisvi si | 15th C | None | HAMP-14F3E5 | Hampshire | |
Deniall is death | 17th C | None | LIN-76B104 | Lincolnshire | |
Deny not he that loveth thee | 18th-19th C | IM | WILT-981B2F | Wiltshire | |
Derect our wayes Lord all our days | 18th C | e | HAMP-AC8381 | Hampshire | |
Deserie hath rest if content | 17th C | IY | BM-8101CB | Essex | |
Deserve no blame | 16th-17th C | None | YORYM-A62700 | North Yorkshire | |
Desire hath no rest | 16th-17th C | None | ESS-0CC010 | Essex | |
Desire hath no reste | 16th-17th C | None | YORYM-9AA838 | North Yorkshire | |
Direct our ways' Lord all our days' | 17th C | CL | GLO-0A2A00 | Gloucestershire |
The rings:































