Bramham Moor Ring - Women's
Bramham Moor Ring - Women's
Order soon: 1 available
Take this ring of regeneration and use it in your travels. Inspired by an Anglo-Saxon relic featured in the National Museum of Denmark.
The 9th-century original was discovered in Bramham cum Oglethorpe, West Yorkshire. It was found in or before 1732. The runic inscription is identical to that on the kingmoor ring - though each ring showcases a unique artistic interpretation of the runes, and the seemingly more experienced goldsmith who made the Bramham Moor variant avoids overflowing text into the ring's interior.
The runes ᛭ᚫᚱᛦᚱᛁᚢᚠᛚᛏ᛭ᛦᚱᛁᚢᚱᛁᚦᚩᚾ᛭ᚷᛚᚫᛋᛏᚫᛈᚩᚾ͡ᛏᚩᚿ decorate our faithful reproduction. Translated to ÆRKRIUFLTKRIURIÞONGLÆSTÆPONTOL - the meaning has not been fully deciphered but is thought to be of a magical nature - likely a spell of healing or regeneration.
Our careful replica is 3d printed in wax, cast in precious metal, stamped and hand-finished all here in the USA.
Brass, silver: ship in 1-3 business days.
14k Gold: cast to order, please allow 3-4 weeks for perfection.
SKU:R-Bramham24-BRS-040
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Metals
Metals
We source our metals in a manner thats eco-friendly and sustainable. From domestic U.S. sources where possible and from certified DRC-Conflict Free mines where impracticle. All finishes are nickel free excepting 14k whiite gold, which is plated with rhodium in order to prevent reaction.
Fingerring med angelsaksiske runer, Bramham Moor.
801 AD - 900 AD
England, Europe.
Anglo-Saxon
The Bramham Moor Ring, dated to the ninth century, was found in Bramham cum Oglethorpe, West Yorkshire in or before 1732 (now in the Danish National Museum, no. 8545). It is made from electrum (gold with niello), with a diameter of c. 29 mm. and weighs 40.22 g.
The inscription reads:
ᚫᚱᛦᚱᛁᚢᚠᛚᛏ
ærkriuflt
ᛦᚱᛁᚢᚱᛁᚦᚩᚾ
kriuriþon
ᚷᛚᚫᛋᛏᚫᛈᚩᚾ͡ᛏᚩᚿ
glæstæpon͡tol
Where k is the late futhorc calc rune of the same shape as Younger Futhark Yr and the n͡t is written as a bindrune.
Image :National Museum of Denmark
Artifacts ↑↓ Reimagined
Manifesting History
My process starts with curating museum collections to find interesting pieces of jewelry and art to recreate.
I digitalize original pieces into exact 3d models. My careful replicas are then 3d printed in wax.
One Ring at a Time
I use lost wax casting in order to fabricate a ring in metal. It's a technique with a history dating back at least 6500 years. All items are cast in precious metal, stamped and hand-finished here in the USA.
Brass and silver pieces are usually stocked and ship in 1-3 days.
Gold jewelry is usually cast to order and ships in 2-3 weeks.
It was a pleasure working with Shashi and the Museum of Jewelry! The design and fit are perfect!
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My boyfriend, now fiancé, loved the ring. Looking forward to ordering it in gold.
I wanted some exotic and unique but not too flashy rings and this ring caught my eyes. One difference from the photo of this site, it had dark inlay background, but I liked it for runes stand out better. International shipping took a long time but the package arrived without any harm.
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