Some 400 years ago in a fishing village called Claddagh overlooking Galway Bay, close to the city of the Tribes, lived Richard Joyce a Master Goldsmith. It was he who crafted this now famous design that has become part of the IRISH heritage.
The Claddagh Ring belongs to a widespread group of finger rings called Fede or "Faith rings" which date from Roman times. They are distinguished by having the bezel cut or cast in the form of two clasped hands, symbolising faith, trust or "plighted troth". Fede rings were popular in the Middle Ages throughout Europe, and there are examples from this time in the National Museum of Ireland, Kildare Street, Dublin. The "Claddagh" ring is a particularly distinctive ring; two hands clasp a heart surmounted by a crown.
The ring worn on the right hand, crown turned inward tells your heart is yet unoccupied, worn with the crown turned outwards reveals love is being considered. Worn on the left hand the crown turned outward shows all, your heart is truly spoken for.
W. Dillon in his publication on "The Claddagh Ring" in the Galway Archaeological Society Journal, Vol. IV, 1905-6, defines the limits over which the ring is worn as roughly from the Aran Islands on the West, and through all Connemara and Joyce Country to Galway, and then eastward and southward for not more than 12 miles at most. The whole district is the one served by fisherfolk of the Claddagh village just outside the city of Galway, but became known as the Claddagh ring probably because of the proximity to the city of the large Claddagh fishing community using the ring alone.
Huge numbers of Claddagh rings were left with a Mr. Kirwan following the Great Famine 1846/7 which finally had to be consigned to the melting pot as there was nobody to redeem or purchase them, hence the difficulty in ascertaining their origin.
Dillon describes some early rings, one with a mitre-like crown, rings made from coins, an analogous ring from Brittany, a "Munster" ring, also Spanish rings with some similarities. He tells us that the Claddagh ring was the only ring ever made in Ireland worn by Queen Victoria and later by Queen Alexandra and King Edward VII. Their rings were made by Dillons of Galway, established in 1750, to whom the Royal Patent was granted and the tradition has been carried on at Dillons to this day. Prince Rainier and Princess Grace of Monaco in 1962 were presented with gifts embodying the Claddagh ring motif set in Connemara marble.
In 1984 when Galway celebrated its Quincentennial as a Mayoral City, the people of Galway presented a specially commissioned 18 carat gold Claddagh ring to President Ronald Reagan.
The earliest examples of Claddagh rings that can be dated are stamped with RI, the mark of Richard Joyce, a goldsmith working in Galway circa 1689-1737, of the Joyce Tribe, one of the renowned "Fourteen Tribes of Galway" City. According to Dr. Kurt Ticker in "The Claddagh Ring - A West of Ireland Folklore Custom" (1980) interest in Claddagh rings became dormant after Richard Joyce ended his manufacturing career in the 1730s, and it was revived a generation or more later, probably by George Robinson (Dillon in fact had attributed the earliest ring to Robinson). From then on a number of Galway goldsmiths and jewellers of Galway made Claddagh rings. Their early manufacture was by cuttle-bone mould casting, then the cire perdue or "lost wax" process up to the 1840s, when manufacture became commercialised.
Some Marks on Claddagh Rings from the latter part of the 17th to the early part of the 18th century.
MARK | JEWELER |
RI | RICHARD JOYCE, GALWAY |
GR | GEORGE ROBINSON, GALWAY |
AR | ANDREW ROBINSON, GALWAY |
NB | NICHOLAS BURDGE, GALWAY |
F | AUSTIN FRENCH, GALWAY |
JD RD WD | DILLON |
JS | ?JOHN SHADWELL |
TH | unknown |
The first story says that a Margaret Joyce married Domingo de Rona,
a wealthy Spanish merchant who traded with Galway. They
proceeded to Spain, where he died,leaving her a considerable fortune.
Returning to Galway she used her fortune to build bridges from
Galway to Sligo, and re-married Oliver Og French, Major of Galway
1596/7. She was rewarded for her good works and charity by an
eagle who dropped the original Claddagh ring into her lap.
The second story says that a Richard Joyce of Galway was captured
by Algerian corsairs, sold to a Moorish goldsmith who trained him in
the craft. In 1689 he was released from slavery as a result of a
demand from King William III. The Moor offered him his only
daughter in marriage and half his wealth, if he would remain in
Algiers, but Joyce declined and returned home. He brought with him
the idea of the Claddagh ring. The earliest Claddagh rings to be traced
bear his mark and the initial letters of his name, RI (Richard Joyce).