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Found this antique Mizpah copper ring with gold plating today on some local gold diggings:
Not in the best condition but still an interesting find. Not sure what the stone is in the centre (maybe glass?) but it's very dull. Has some small marks on the band but too small to tell what they are even with a loupe. Best guess is square with solid internal square then 2 opposing triangles then another square with a cobra in it? Could be just me eyes playing tricks too :lol:
The band is very small. Even in shape I'd struggle to get it on my little finger - may have been meant for a child? Wish it could talk.
From http://www.nationaljeweler.com/independents/2059-the-history-behind-mizpah-jewelry
Mizpah is Hewbrew & has come to connote an emotional bond between 2 people. Often attached to the phrase from the Bible The Lord watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from another, after Mizpah is mentioned in the book of Genesis.
First made in the 1850's or 1860's during the Victoria era and was popular through the 1880s before experiencing a drop-off in popularity. The pieces experienced a revival, however, in the early 1900s, when men were leaving their families to fight in what at that time was called the Great War (World War I).
Not in the best condition but still an interesting find. Not sure what the stone is in the centre (maybe glass?) but it's very dull. Has some small marks on the band but too small to tell what they are even with a loupe. Best guess is square with solid internal square then 2 opposing triangles then another square with a cobra in it? Could be just me eyes playing tricks too :lol:
The band is very small. Even in shape I'd struggle to get it on my little finger - may have been meant for a child? Wish it could talk.
From http://www.nationaljeweler.com/independents/2059-the-history-behind-mizpah-jewelry
Mizpah is Hewbrew & has come to connote an emotional bond between 2 people. Often attached to the phrase from the Bible The Lord watch between me and thee, when we are absent one from another, after Mizpah is mentioned in the book of Genesis.
First made in the 1850's or 1860's during the Victoria era and was popular through the 1880s before experiencing a drop-off in popularity. The pieces experienced a revival, however, in the early 1900s, when men were leaving their families to fight in what at that time was called the Great War (World War I).