La señal de matrimonio que el novio entrega a la novia durante la ceremonia matrimonial.
Se han encontrado anillos de matrimonio judíos en tesoros medievales. Hoy se cree que la mayoría de los anillos grandes con forma de casa datan de fechas posteriores, y que tal vez fueron creados para coleccionistas del siglo XIX. La autenticidad de este tipo de anillos se viene cuestionando desde 1871.
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Mann, Vivian B. “The First English Collector of Jewish Wedding Rings and their Dealers.” Images: A Journal of Jewish Art and Visual Culture, vol. 11, no. 2, 2018, pp. 177-85.
Pappenheim, Shlomo. “The Wedding Ring.” The Jewish Wedding, New York: Yeshiva University Museum, 1977, pp. 45-51.
Seidmann, Gertrude. “Marriage Rings Jewish Style.” Connoisseur, 1981, pp. 48-51.
Seidmann, Gertrude. “Jewish Marriage Rings.” The International Silver & Jewellery Fair & Jewish Marriage Rings Seminar, 1989, pp. 29-34.
Sperber, Daniel. “Betrothal Rings.” The Jewish Life Cycle: Custom, Lore and Iconography – Jewish Customs from the Cradle to the Grave, Ramat Gan and Oxford: Bar-Ilan University Press and Oxford University Press, 2008, pp. 158-65.
Adler, Cyrus, and Albert Wolf. “Rings.” Jewish Encyclopedia: The Unedited Full-Text of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia.
Holocomb, Melanie. “Whoever Hid the Colmar Treasure Inside a Wall Managed to Protect it from Looters but was not so Lucky Themselves.” Shared History Project, Leo Baeck Institute, 12 Feb. 2021.
Holocomb, Melanie. “Who Once Wore this Exquisite Ring.” Shared History Project, Leo Baeck Institute, 12 Feb. 2021.
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