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The Engagement (1600)

Warm breeze carrying the laughter of two families down the banks of the Nile, the desert air perfumed with sweet scents of figs, next to a field of golden emmer wheat, stood a young couple exchanging wedding rings. Like many ancient Egyptians, they wore theirs on the left ring finger, where the “vein of love” was thought to run directly to the heart.
Warm breeze carrying the laughter of two families down the banks of the Nile, the desert air perfumed with sweet scents of figs, next to a field of golden emmer wheat, stood a young couple exchanging wedding rings. Like many ancient Egyptians, they wore theirs on the left ring finger, where the “vein of love” was thought to run directly to the heart.
Warm breeze carrying the laughter of two families down the banks of the Nile, the desert air perfumed with sweet scents of figs, next to a field of golden emmer wheat, stood a young couple exchanging wedding rings. Like many ancient Egyptians, they wore theirs on the left ring finger, where the “vein of love” was thought to run directly to the heart.

The Engagement (1600)