ShopAll Ancient RingsRoman Bronze Signet Ring 'Equus Victor' (1st-3rd c. AD) EU 47/US 4.75
RomanBronzeRareEU 47

Roman Bronze Signet Ring 'Equus Victor' (1st-3rd c. AD) EU 47/US 4.75

€300,00
EUR · incl. EU VAT
Material
Bronze
Rarity
Rare
Ring size
EU 47  /  US 4.75
Authenticity
Lifetime guarantee

Visible traces of centuries of human history. Authenticated for life.

One-of-one. When it sells, it's gone.
  • One-of-one. No restock, no replica.
  • Authenticated by qualified specialists.
  • Lifetime authenticity guarantee in writing.
  • Insured shipping worldwide, included. 30-day returns.
Hand · daylight
Wearability & care

Yes, you can wear it.

All Aurora rings are sturdy enough for daily wear. Hands will not hurt them.

Avoid prolonged water exposure. A detailed care guide ships with every order.

Care guide included · Lifetime support
  • SSL encryption + PCI compliance
  • Card data never stored on our servers
  • Apple Pay, Google Pay, Shop Pay supported
  • Worldwide insured shipping, included
  • EU 3–5 days · International 1–3 weeks (customs)
  • Ships in a linen-wrapped wooden box
  • 30 days from delivery
  • Return at your own shipping
  • Refund once the item arrives back with us
  • Written lifetime guarantee with every piece
  • Full refund if ever shown to be inauthentic
  • No expiry · transferable certificate
5.0 ★★★★★
60 customer stories
Read all customer stories →
About this piece Bronze · Roman · Rare · EU 47 · All Ancient Rings

A finely preserved Roman bronze signet ring with a rectangular bezel engraved with a stylized horse in motion. A timeless emblem of vitality and strength, often linked to the Roman equestrian class and the god Mars.

Description
This robust bronze ring features a rectangular bezel engraved with a horse in dynamic motion, possibly galloping or rearing. The engraving field shows faint linear detailing that may indicate reins or groundline. Its thick, expanding shoulders taper gently toward the back, typical of Imperial Roman craftsmanship from the 1st–3rd centuries AD. The design suggests both personal symbolism and status — likely belonging to a cavalryman, horse trader, or admirer of equestrian prowess.

Details
Material: Bronze with stable green patina
Date: Roman, 1st–3rd Century AD
Ring Size: EU 47 / US 4.75
Condition: Excellent ancient condition with visible engraved design and smooth patina
Provenance: Private European collection, acquired in the late 20th century
Unique Identifier: R-43-B

Restoration and Authenticity
Presented in original, unrestored condition with stable cuprous patina. Accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity verifying age and origin.

Historical Context
In Roman iconography, the horse symbolized nobility, speed, and martial valor. Such imagery often appeared on personal seals used by soldiers and merchants, marking allegiance or profession. Provincial workshops across Gaul, the Balkans, and Britain frequently produced bronze signet rings featuring animals, each carrying both practical and amuletic significance. This example exemplifies the artistic economy and symbolic richness of everyday Roman identity.

Authentication

How do I know it's real?

In situ · documented patina
i.

Documented sourcing

Acquired from a long-established European private collection with collection paperwork, predating the relevant cultural-property cut-offs.

ii.

Typed against published references

Catalogued against the standard typologies, Henig for intaglios, Marshall and Dalton for finger-rings.

iii.

Independent specialist sign-off

A qualified specialist outside our staff reviews and signs the certificate before the piece is listed.

Referenced & catalogued alongside
Aurora pieces are typed against the same published references and held in the same documentary tradition as the collections of:
Museum
The British Museum
Museum
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Museum
Victoria & Albert, London
Museum
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Museum
The Getty, Los Angeles
Museum
Musée du Louvre, Paris
Database
OCRE — American Numismatic Society
Database
Beazley Archive, Oxford
Publication
Henig, Roman Engraved Gemstones
Publication
Marshall, Catalogue of Finger Rings (BM)
Publication
Dalton, Catalogue of Early Christian Antiquities
Publication
Roman Imperial Coinage (RIC)
For the careful buyer

How Aurora compares.

A side-by-side look at how an Aurora piece is sold, versus the two most common alternatives.

AuroraAuction houseseBayOther platforms
Lifetime authenticity guaranteedependsrarely
Independent specialist sign-off
Documented provenancesometimesrarelysometimes
Returns30 daysno returnsno returnsno returns
Insured shipping includedadd-onadd-onadd-on
Linen-wrapped wooden gift box
Written certificate, signeddependsdepends
Personal Customer Service 24/7daysvariesvaries
Customer stories

What it feels like to wear something this old.

★★★★★
★★★★★
★★★★★
★★★★★
Authentication

How every Aurora ring earns its certificate.

01
Sourcing

Documented collection.

Acquired from European private collections with paperwork predating the relevant cultural-property cut-offs. No ground finds, no unverified channels.

02
Typology

Cross-referenced.

Casting technique, alloy, patina depth and stylistic markers are compared against the standard published catalogues for the period.

03
Sign-off

Independent specialist.

Final review by a qualified specialist outside our staff. Signs the certificate that ships in the box and backs the lifetime guarantee.

Frequently asked

Questions, honestly answered.

Is this ring really ancient?

Yes. Every Aurora ring is dated by casting technique, alloy composition, patina depth and stylistic typology — cross-referenced against published catalogues for the relevant period. The date stated on the certificate is binding: if a piece is ever shown not to be of the period stated, we refund the full purchase price. Forever, no expiry.

How is it authenticated?

Three stages. First, documented sourcing from established European private collections. Second, typological comparison against the standard published references for the period (Henig, Marshall, Dalton and equivalents). Third, final sign-off by an independent specialist outside our staff. The signed certificate ships with every piece.

Can I wear it daily?

Yes. Aurora rings are sturdy enough for daily wear — hands will not hurt them. Avoid prolonged water exposure (showers, sea, pools) and any harsh cleaning. The patina is part of the object's history; please don't polish it. A care guide ships with every order.

What if it doesn't fit my finger?

Ancient rings cannot be resized without compromising the original metal. Three options: return within 30 days for a full refund; wear it on a chain (we can recommend a goldsmith for a sympathetic mount); or keep it as a display object. Many Aurora pieces are lived with rather than worn every day.

What's the return process?

30 days from delivery, no questions asked. The piece must return in the condition it arrived, in its original packaging. Return shipping is at the buyer's cost; we recommend insured, tracked service. Full refund issued within 5 business days of arrival back to us.

How is it shipped?

Fully insured, tracked, signature on delivery, in a linen-wrapped wooden box with the certificate and care guide. EU: 3–5 business days. International: 1–3 weeks (customs declarations are mandatory for antiquities and add a few days, never our shipping speed).

Where do Aurora rings come from?

From documented European private collections assembled before the relevant cultural-property cut-offs. Each piece arrives with collection paperwork detailing its provenance chain back as far as the documentation allows. We never source from unverified channels or recent ground finds.

What does the lifetime guarantee cover?

A written promise that if the piece is ever shown to be inauthentic or not of the stated period, we refund the full purchase price. No expiry. The certificate is transferable — if you ever pass the ring on, the guarantee follows it to the next owner.

Available now in the same period

Live pieces from the same era.