-40%

NEFJ GOLD P CLADDAGH IRISH LOVE LOYALTY FRIENDSHIP BRACELET VTG HIGH END JEWELRY

$ 40.65

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Metal Purity: Unknown
  • Metal: Gold Plated
  • Brand: NEFJ
  • Style: Bangle
  • Main Stone: Unknown
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Unknown
  • Condition: good used, normal wear from age and use, metal wear, bends in metal etc.. the jewelry in the pictures is the jewelry you will receive, please look closely at all pictures for condition
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

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    PLEASE READ ALL OF THE FOLLOWING BEFORE BIDDING THANK YOU:)
    the pictured jewelry is the exact jewelry you will be getting
    UNIQUE STUNNING ESTATE FIND! COLLECTORS / COLLECTION PIECE.
    SIGNED NEFJ 5 FG PLATED
    YELLOW GOLD CLADDAGH SIZEABLE BRACELET
    WIKI INFO BELOW
    The
    Claddagh ring
    (Irish:
    fáinne Chladaigh
    ) is a traditional Irish ring which represents love, loyalty, and friendship (the hands represent friendship, the heart represents love, and the crown represents loyalty). The design and customs associated with it originated in the Irish fishing village of the same name in Galway. The ring, as currently known, was first produced in the 17th century.
    The Claddagh ring belongs to a group of European finger rings called
    "
    fede
    rings"
    .The name "
    fede
    " derives from the Italian phrase
    mani in fede
    ("hands [joined] in faith" or "hands [joined] in loyalty"). These rings date from Roman times, when the gesture of clasped hands was a symbol of pledging vows, and they were used as
    engagement
    wedding
    rings in medieval and Renaissance Europe.
    Fede
    rings are distinctive in that the bezel is cut or cast to form two clasped hands that symbolize faith and trust or
    "plighted troth"
    The Claddagh ring is a variation on the
    fede
    ring,
    while the hands, heart, and crown motif was used in England in the early 18th century.
    Towards the end of the 20th century there was an explosion of interest in the Claddagh Ring, both as jewelry and as an icon of Irish identity. In recent years it has been embellished with interlace designs and combined with other Celtic and Irish symbols, but this is a very recent phenomenon that corresponds with the worldwide expansion in popularity of the Claddagh ring as an emblem of Irish identity.
    Origins
    Galway
    has produced Claddagh rings continuously since at least 1700, but the name "Claddagh ring" was not used before the 1830s.
    Although there are various myths and legends around the origin of the Claddagh ring, it is almost certain that it originated in or close to the small fishing village of
    Claddagh
    in Galway.
    As an example of a maker,
    Bartholomew Fallon
    was a 17th-century Irish
    goldsmith
    , based in Galway, who made Claddagh rings until circa 1700. His name first appears in the will of one Dominick Martin, also a jeweller, dated 26 January 1676, in which Martin willed Fallon some of his tools. Fallon continued working as a goldsmith until 1700. His are among the oldest surviving examples of the Claddagh ring, in many cases bearing his signature.
    There are many
    legends
    about the origins of the ring, particularly concerning
    Richard Joyce
    , a
    silversmith
    from Galway
    circa
    1700, who is said to have invented the Claddagh design as we know it. Legend has it that Joyce was captured and enslaved by Algerian Corsairs around 1675 while on a passage to the West Indies; he was sold into slavery to a Moorish goldsmith who taught him the craft.King William III sent an ambassador to Algeria to demand the release of any and all British subjects who were enslaved in that country, which at the time would have included Richard Joyce. After fourteen years, Joyce was released and returned to Galway and brought along with him the ring he had fashioned while in captivity: what we've come to know as the Claddagh. He gave the ring to his sweetheart, married, and became a goldsmith with "considerable success" His initials are in one of the earliest surviving Claddagh rings, but there are three other rings also made around that time, bearing the mark of goldsmith Thomas Meade.
    The Victorian
    antiquarian
    Sir William Jones described the Claddagh, and gives Chambers'
    Book of Days
    as the source, in his book
    Finger Ring Lore
    . Jones says:
    The clasped hands [style ring]... are... still the fashion, and in constant use in [the]... community [of] Claddugh at [County] Galway.... [They] rarely [intermarry] with others than their own people.
    An account written in 1906 by William Dillon, a Galway jeweller, claimed that the "Claddagh" ring was worn in the
    Aran Isles
    ,
    Connemara
    and beyond. Knowledge of the ring and its customs spread within
    Ireland
    and Britain during the Victorian period, and this is when its name became established.
    Galway jewellers began to market it beyond the local area in the 19th century. Further recognition came in the 20th century
    .
    Learned to be a beautiful ring.
    In his 1911 book
    Rings for the Finger
    , American mineralogist
    George Frederick Kunz
    addresses the importance of gold wedding rings in Ireland but does not mention the Claddagh ring. He does, however, include a photo of one, captioned with its correct name.
    Furthermore, it is unclear exactly how or when the ring was brought to the United States.
    Usage and symbolism
    The Claddagh's distinctive design features two hands clasping a
    heart
    and usually surmounted by a
    crown
    . These elements symbolize the qualities of love (the heart),
    friendship
    (the hands), and
    loyalty
    (the crown). A "
    Fenian
    Claddagh ring, without a crown, is a slightly different take on the design but has not achieved the level of popularity of the crowned version. Claddagh rings are relatively popular among the Irish
    and those of Irish heritage, such as Irish Americans, as cultural symbols and as friendship, engagement and wedding rings.
    While Claddagh rings are sometimes used as friendship rings, they are most commonly used as engagement and wedding rings. Mothers sometimes give these rings to their daughters when they come of age. There are several mottos and wishes associated with the ring, such as: "Let love and friendship reign." In Ireland, the United States, Canada, and other parts of the Irish diaspora, the Claddagh is sometimes handed down mother-to-eldest daughter or grandmother-to-granddaughter.
    According to Irish author Colin Murphy, a Claddagh ring was worn with the intention of conveying the wearer's relationship status:
    On the right hand with the point of the heart toward the fingertips: the wearer is single and may be looking for love.
    On the right hand with the point of the heart toward the wrist: the wearer is in a relationship.
    On the left ring finger with the point of the heart toward the fingertips: the wearer is engaged.
    On the left ring finger with the point of the heart toward the wrist: the wearer is married.
    There are other localised variations and oral traditions, involving the hand and the finger on which the Claddagh is worn. Folklore about the ring is relatively recent, not ancient, with "very little native Irish writing about the ring", hence, the difficulty today in finding any source that describes or explains the traditional ways of wearing the ring.
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    My goal is to satisfy all of my customers, however due to the used and or nature of my items, and high shipping cost, I am unable to accept returns. All items are sold as is. I try my best to describe each of my items as accurately as possible but please know that I am not an expert. I also try to show many clear pictures of the actual item up for bid. If you have any questions about the items please send me a message BEFORE YOU BID.
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    orders, note
    The Global Shipping Program already provides you the buyer with an invoice for all applicable items, shipping, and import charges. Unfortunately, I can't edit these charges, even to offer a shipping discount. When you the buyer pays, I just ship the item to the US shipping center specified, and the Global Shipping Program will forward it to the buyer. the buyer will directly pay me the purchase price of the item, plus any domestic shipping cost specified in the listing.
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