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ENGLISH RINGS                           183
most prized ornament of the shrine, and is believed to have been given by Louis VII of France on the occasion of his visit in 1179. Henry VIII must have tired of his massive thumb ring, for in the inventory of the precious stones delivered to Queen Mary, March 10, 1554, shortly after her accession, there appears the fol­lowing entry: "A collar of golde set with sixteen faire diamounts, whereof the Regal of France is one, and fourteen Knotts of perles, in every Knotte four perles.42
Two pretty New Year's gifts for January first, 1571, were delivered to Lady Mary Sidney on the last day of the year 1570. One of them was a ring " set with a rose " ; the other was more ambitious in design, being described as " a Jewell with the storie of time " set with diamonds and rubies, certainly an appropriate gift for the day. This cost but £10 or $50, a much larger sum, however, in those bygone days than it is accounted to be to-day, for the purchasing power of money was many times greater.43
The earliest mention of the diamond ring given by Elizabeth to Mary Queen of Scots occurs in Camden's account of the events of Elizabeth's reign. After relat­ing the events that determined Mary to seek Elizabeth's protection, Camden continues:
She therefore sent John Beatoun to her [Elizabeth] with the diamond she had formerly received from her as a symbol of mutual good-will, signifying to her that she was about to come to England and ask for aid in case her subjects continued to make war against her.44
42 Gasquet, " Henry VIII and the English Monasteries," London, 1906, p. 409. Cott. MS. Tib. e. viii, f. 269.
43 Third Report of the Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, London, 1872, p. 231.
44 Camdeni, "Annales rerum Anglicarum et Hibernicarum regnante Elizabetha," Francofurti, 1616, pp. 151, 152.