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56

EMERALD AND DIAMOND RING

A classic ring centring on a square‒shaped emerald sugar‒

loaf flanked by a trapezium‒cut diamond on both the sides,

mounted in 18K gold.

Emerald: 9.42 carats

Diamond: 0.93 carats

Gold: 4.49 grams

Ring size: American 7, English O

$ 8,785 ‒ 11,490

Rs 6,50,000 ‒ 8,50,000

Emeralds have a powerful place in the world of gemstones as the most famous members of the beryl family. Ancient myths

credit this brilliant green stone with magical properties, from the ability to predict the future, to detecting falsehoods. Emeralds

were even worn as protective talismans and were believed to cure fatal diseases. The emerald is also considered the birthstone

for the month of May, its spring green colour symbolising rebirth and renewal.

In Hindu texts, the emerald was one of the

navaratna

stones, representing the planet Mercury. In Persian culture they symbolised

goodness and purity. But it was in medieval Europe that this gemstone was perhaps considered the most sacrosanct, according

to Hettie Judah: “Jewels as symbols of political power are something more potent than a mere display of wealth. Sumptuary laws

of Byzantium, and many from medieval Europe, forbade the wearing of gemstones such as emeralds by those outside the circles

of the court; money alone could not purchase the right to wear jewels.” (Joanna Hardy and Jonathan Self,

Emerald: Twenty‒one

Centuries of Jewelled Opulence and Power

, London: Thames & Hudson, 2014, p. 19)

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