There are many stories about
the Claddagh ring. Claddagh itself refers to a small fishing village
just near Galway city. The Claddagh ring supposedly originated in this
area. The ring has a design of a heart being encircled by a pair of
delicate hands with a crown above the heart. In earlier times this
design was the symbol of the "Fishing Kings of Claddagh"
meaning 'in love and friendship let us reign'. In the 17th century the
symbol was first depicted on a ring which became the fashionable
exchange of friends or lovers. In marriage the heart was worn towards
the wrist otherwise towards the fingertips.
There are many modern versions of the Claddagh Ring.
Here are some folk legends about the Claddagh:
It
symbolizes LOVE (heart), FRIENDSHIP & FAITH(hands), and LOYALTY
& FIDELITY(crown).
There was a Dublin version of this
ring that appeared some 100 years back with two hands and two Hearts but
no Crown. Some call this version the Fenian Claddagh.
The Crown to The Father, The Left
hand to the Son, and the Right Hand the the Holy Ghost. This explanation
is directly correlated to the Shamrock, one of the earliest symbols of
the Holy Trinity among the Irish.
Some will say that the crown
represents Beathauile. The left hand represents Anu who was the
ancestral and universal mother of the Celts and who later changed her
name Danu. The right hand represents Dagda Mor, the father of the gods
who was so powerful he had the power to make the sun stand still. The
heart represents the Hearts of all mankind and that which gives the
everlasting music to the Gael.
As legend has it, the town
developed the ring (originally a sigil to be painted on ships and sails)
to be worn by sailors of Claddagh. When these sailors would run into
other fishermen in their waters, they would check for the sigil, and if
they did not find it, they would kill them.
Way back in the sandy mists of
time, so the story went, there was a great king who was madly in love
with a peasant woman--but as she was of a lower class his love had to go
unrequited. In suicidal the king killed himself and had his hands lopped
off and placed around his heart as a symbol of his undying love for the
woman.
The original Claddagh ring is generally attributed to one Richard Joyce,
of Galway. Joyce departed from Claddagh, a small fishing village where
the waters of the River Corrib meet Galway Bay, on a ship enroute to the
plantations of the West Indies. That week he was to was to be married,
but his ship was captured by Mediterranean Algerian pirates and the crew
were sold as a slaves; Rihcard Joyce was sold to a Moorish goldsmith who
trained him in his craft. He soon became a master in his trade and hand
crafted a ring for the woman at home he could not forget. In 1689 he was
released after William III came to the throne of England and concluded
an agreement whereby all his subjects who where held in captivity by the
Moors were to be allowed return to their homes. The Moorish goldsmith
offered Robert Joyce him his only daughter in marriage and half his
wealth if he would remain in Algiers. He declined and returned to
Claddagh to find that the woman of his heart had never married. He gave
her the ring and they were married and he set up a goldsmith shop in the
town of Claddagh. (The Claddagh is said to be the oldest fishing village
in Ireland). The earliest Claddagh rings to be traced bear his mark and
the initial letters of his name, RI (Richard Joyce).
Another version o the Joyce tale tells 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 married one 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.
Huge numbers of Claddagh rings were
left with a Mr. Kirwan following the Great Famine 1846-47 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.
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. 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.
By
tradition the ring is taken to signify the wish that Love and friendship
should reign supreme. The hands signify friendship, the crown loyalty,
and the heart love. The ring has become popular outside Connamera since
the middle of the last century - its spread being helped by the vast
exodus from the West during the great Famine in 1847-49. These rings
were kept as heirlooms with great pride and passed from mother to
daughter. Today, the ring is worn extensively across Ireland, either on
the right hand with the heart turned outwards showing that the wearer is
"fancy free" or with the heart turned inwards to denote that
he or she is "spoken for". The pride of place is on the left
hand, with the heart turned in, indicating that the wearer is happily
married and the love and friendship will last forever, the two never
separated.