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Ring Finger: 3rd Century B.C. Greece
by Charles Panati

The early Hebrews placed the wedding ring on the index finger.  In India, nuptial rings were
worn on the thumb.  The Western custom of placing a wedding ring on the "third" finger (not
counting the thumb) began with the Greeks, through carelessness in cataloguing human
anatomy.

Greek physicians in the third century B.C. believed that a certain vein, the "vein of love", ran
from the "third finger" directly to the heart.  It became the logical digit to carry a ring
symbolizing an affair of the heart.  

The Romans, plagiarizing Greek anatomy charts, adopted the ring practice unquestioningly.  
They did attempt to clear up the ambiguity surrounding exactly what finger constituted the
third, introducing the phrase "the finger next to the least".  This also became the Roman
physician's "healing finger", used to stir mixtures of drugs.  Since the finger's vein supposedly
ran to the heart, any potentially toxic concoction would be readily recognized by a doctor "in
his heart" before being administered to a patient.

The Christians continued this ring-finger practice, but worked their way across the hand to the
vein of love.  A groom first placed the ring on the top of the bride's index finger, with the
words "In the name of the Father."  Then, praying "In the name of the Son," he moved the ring
to her middle finger, and finally, with the concluding words "and of the Holy Spirit, Amen," to
the third finger.  This was also known as the Trinitarian formula.  

In the East, the Orientals did not approve of finger rings, believing them to be merely
ornamental, lacking social symbolism or religious significance.