Sounds to me as a fair deal, if the ring is a period one.
A question for you, Odal....why are so many rings found with split shanks?
William
"Much that once was, is lost. For none now live who remember it."
That's quite interesting! I hadn't heard of this before! So...most split shank rings are cadaver rings?
William
"Much that once was, is lost. For none now live who remember it."
Yes, MOST, but not all of them, for instance time to time I've found Latvian rings with splitted shank, but this was made only for expand the ring diameter. But you need to bear in mind that such rings have usually rounded borders and edges in split area. Second, if ring was found on owners finger usually they are in very bad condition. Enamel usually eaten by ptomaine (corpse poison) and rings looks like on picture below.
Heavy fluctuation in temperature (frost and thaw etc.) causes even steel helmets to crack... I guess general conditions such as these are as probable of an explanation as any corpse found theory when it comes to split bands, no?
Interesting thread, not often you see good enameled "canteen" rings being posted and discussed. Seeing all the "is this real" threads when it comes to post-war biker junk kind of turns one off from following this type of thread, so this is a welcomed change.
Wow!
Interesting! I too have wondered about the band split. So I take it that most with splits were wrapped around an unfortunate soldiers finger, or the fact that they were underground for years caused the separation.
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