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Jacobite ring sells for £12,000 | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
A ring used by Jacobite agents to identify themselves while carrying secret messages from Bonnie Prince Charlie has been sold for £12,200. | |
The ring, set with an emerald, was carried to prove the message had originated from the exiled prince. | |
Anyone caught with documents signed by the prince after his defeat at Culloden in 1746 faced execution. | Anyone caught with documents signed by the prince after his defeat at Culloden in 1746 faced execution. |
The ring, which was valued at £3,000, went under the hammer at Lyon and Turnbull in Edinburgh. | |
It was used by Prince Charles Edward Stuart - better known as Bonnie Prince Charlie - decades after he fled to France. | It was used by Prince Charles Edward Stuart - better known as Bonnie Prince Charlie - decades after he fled to France. |
The ring was bought by an anonymous private collector, however I can confirm that it will stay in Scotland Colin FraserLyon and Turnbull | |
The ring bore a concealed cypher which proved the allegiance of its wearers to the Jacobite cause. | The ring bore a concealed cypher which proved the allegiance of its wearers to the Jacobite cause. |
Only when the receiver saw the ring, which features the inscription CRIII 1766: Charles Rex, 1766, would he know the message was genuine. | Only when the receiver saw the ring, which features the inscription CRIII 1766: Charles Rex, 1766, would he know the message was genuine. |
The inscription is significant as 1766 was the year Charles' father James died, leaving the Young Pretender to consider himself the rightful king of Scotland. | The inscription is significant as 1766 was the year Charles' father James died, leaving the Young Pretender to consider himself the rightful king of Scotland. |
Colin Fraser, silver specialist at Lyon and Turnbull, said: "We are very pleased with the result. We had bids from across the country. | |
"The ring was bought by an anonymous private collector, however I can confirm that it will stay in Scotland." | |
He added the ring was thought to be the only one of its kind to have been found, although others are known to have existed. | |
The prince had to communicate with his supporters in secret | The prince had to communicate with his supporters in secret |
He said: "The significance of this unassuming item of 18th Century jewellery is far greater than it appears as it was used as a 'signature' when travelling with correspondence from Charles. | |
"No document could carry a signature or seal, as if the bearer was found in possession of such marked papers by government troops he would almost certainly have been sentenced to death. | |
"Therefore this ring would accompany the messenger to show they had originated from Charles and were considered an official document." | "Therefore this ring would accompany the messenger to show they had originated from Charles and were considered an official document." |
The ring was sold by a private owner, who acquired it from a museum in Montrose several years ago. | |
Charles' grandfather was James VII of Scotland and James II of England. | |
He was deposed in 1688. | He was deposed in 1688. |
Both Charles and his father James fought to be restored as king of Scotland and England. | Both Charles and his father James fought to be restored as king of Scotland and England. |
Much of the Scottish population continued to consider Charles to be the rightful heir to the Scottish throne throughout his decades in exile. | Much of the Scottish population continued to consider Charles to be the rightful heir to the Scottish throne throughout his decades in exile. |
The Jacobite "secret service" of ring bearers provided an invaluable service to the prince, who had to keep all his loyal supporters abreast of his plans and movements. |