Mittelalter, Epoche der Kreuzritter Bronze Compass Rose Ring — Amulet of the Holy Path - 21 mm (Ohne mindestpreis)






Leitete das Ifergan Collection Museum, spezialisiert auf phönizische Archäologie.
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Kompassrosenring — Amulett des Heiligen Pfads, ein mittelalterlicher Bronzenring aus dem Hochmittelalter (11.–13. Jahrhundert) mit einer gravierten Kompassrose am Bezels, Innen-Durchmesser 21 mm, Höhe 21 mm, Breite 13 mm, in sehr gut+ Zustand, 2022 aus einer deutschen Privatsammlung erworben.
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Crusaders’ Compass Rose Ring — Rare Medieval Bronze Amulet of the Holy Path
Europe, High Middle Ages, ca. 11th–13th Century AD
A rare medieval bronze ring featuring a finely engraved Compass Rose (Rose of the Winds) — a powerful symbol associated with Crusaders, pilgrims, and medieval travelers.
This ring was not decorative alone. In the Middle Ages, the compass rose symbolized orientation, divine guidance, and protection on long journeys. Such rings were worn by men who traveled far from home — knights, crusaders, messengers, and merchants — as a reminder that faith and direction mattered as much as steel and courage.
The engraving shows a four- and eight-pointed wind rose, carefully cut into the bezel. The symbol represents the cardinal and intercardinal directions — order within chaos, a path through uncertainty.
• Object: Ring
• Material: Bronze
• Period: High Middle Ages
• Weight: 3.11 g
• Inner diameter: 21 mm
• Bezel: Oval, engraved compass rose
• Condition: Intact, strong medieval character
• Surface: Beautiful, stable ancient patina
• Provenance: Old private European collection
• Shipping: European Union only
For a Crusader leaving Europe toward the Holy Land, the world was vast, dangerous, and unknown. The compass rose was more than a navigational symbol — it was a promise. A promise of return. A reminder of direction when maps failed and fear crept in.
Rings like this were worn close to the skin, touched before battle, before departure, before prayer. This artifact may have crossed mountains, seas, and borders, carried by a man who believed that the right path would reveal itself to those who dared to walk it.
A genuine medieval relic with presence, symbolism, and soul.
Not merely jewelry — a survivor of an age of faith, steel, and long roads.
Crusaders’ Compass Rose Ring — Rare Medieval Bronze Amulet of the Holy Path
Europe, High Middle Ages, ca. 11th–13th Century AD
A rare medieval bronze ring featuring a finely engraved Compass Rose (Rose of the Winds) — a powerful symbol associated with Crusaders, pilgrims, and medieval travelers.
This ring was not decorative alone. In the Middle Ages, the compass rose symbolized orientation, divine guidance, and protection on long journeys. Such rings were worn by men who traveled far from home — knights, crusaders, messengers, and merchants — as a reminder that faith and direction mattered as much as steel and courage.
The engraving shows a four- and eight-pointed wind rose, carefully cut into the bezel. The symbol represents the cardinal and intercardinal directions — order within chaos, a path through uncertainty.
• Object: Ring
• Material: Bronze
• Period: High Middle Ages
• Weight: 3.11 g
• Inner diameter: 21 mm
• Bezel: Oval, engraved compass rose
• Condition: Intact, strong medieval character
• Surface: Beautiful, stable ancient patina
• Provenance: Old private European collection
• Shipping: European Union only
For a Crusader leaving Europe toward the Holy Land, the world was vast, dangerous, and unknown. The compass rose was more than a navigational symbol — it was a promise. A promise of return. A reminder of direction when maps failed and fear crept in.
Rings like this were worn close to the skin, touched before battle, before departure, before prayer. This artifact may have crossed mountains, seas, and borders, carried by a man who believed that the right path would reveal itself to those who dared to walk it.
A genuine medieval relic with presence, symbolism, and soul.
Not merely jewelry — a survivor of an age of faith, steel, and long roads.
