How to Read Date Letters on Antique, Vintage & Modern Jewellery
Every hallmark tells a story, but one of the most useful for dating jewellery is the date letter. From Georgian gold lockets to Victorian silver brooches and even present-day pieces, date letters reveal the year an item was tested and hallmarked. They’re most associated with the UK and Ireland, but you’ll also see year and maker information expressed in other ways around the world (often with different shapes and systems). Understanding the patterns helps collectors, buyers and jewellery lovers connect each piece to its moment in history.
In this guide, you’ll learn what date letters are, how cycles work, and how to read them across antique, vintage and modern jewellery — plus how other countries use cartouches and symbols to convey similar information.
Table of Contents
- What Are Date Letters?
- How Date Letter Cycles Work
- UK & Ireland: Alphabet Cycles and Shield Shapes
- Beyond the UK: How Other Countries Indicate Years and Makers
- How to Identify Your Date Letter (Step-by-Step)
- Common Mistakes When Reading Date Letters
- FAQ
- You Might Also Like
- Final Thought
- About Ps Its Vintage
- References
What Are Date Letters?
A date letter is a single character (A, B, C… in various cases and fonts) stamped into precious metal as part of an official hallmark. In systems like the UK and Ireland, each letter maps to a specific calendar year. Read alongside the assay office symbol, the fineness mark (e.g., 925, 375, 750) and the sponsor’s mark, the date letter confirms when the piece was independently tested and hallmarked.
Other countries may not use alphabet cycles, but they often rely on cartouche shapes (outlines) and numeric stamps to communicate year, maker or purity. The key is learning how the shapes and symbols work together in each system.
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How Date Letter Cycles Work
In UK and Irish hallmarking, date letters run in a rotating alphabet cycle. After completing the alphabet, the next cycle restarts with changes to:
- Letter case (uppercase vs lowercase)
- Font style (serif, sans serif, script)
- Shield outline (square, rounded rectangle, chamfered rectangle, etc.)
Because shapes and styles change, the same letter (for example, “N”) can represent different years in different cycles. Cycles usually span roughly 20–25 years, and certain letters may be skipped to avoid confusion (e.g., I/J or O/0). Date letters were compulsory historically and became optional from 1999 under modern rules — but they still appear widely on contemporary UK/Irish pieces.
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UK & Ireland: Alphabet Cycles and Shield Shapes
Each assay office has distinctive styles and shields:
- London: Rounded rectangle shields with changing fonts over time
- Birmingham: Square or straight-edged shields across several cycles
- Sheffield: Crown (historic), later rose, with office-specific date letters
- Edinburgh: Castle symbol plus Scottish letter styles
- Dublin: Chamfered rectangle shields; the Hibernia mark confirms Dublin assay
Why the shape matters: an uppercase “N” in a rounded rectangle (London 1968) is not the same year as an uppercase “N” in a square shield (Birmingham 1937), nor a lowercase “n” in a chamfered rectangle (Dublin 1999). The outline is the tie-breaker when letters repeat across cycles.




Beyond the UK: How Other Countries Indicate Years and Makers
Outside the UK and Ireland, the shapes around hallmarks still matter — but they often identify makers, purity or towns, while years are shown with numbers or fixed symbols.
- France: Maker’s marks are stamped in a lozenge-shaped cartouche (diamond) and purity is shown with symbols such as the Minerva head (silver). France does not use a UK-style A–Z date cycle.
- Netherlands: National symbols and shielded numerals are common; years are often shown as numeric stamps rather than alphabet letters.
- Scandinavia (e.g., Denmark, Sweden, Finland): You’ll typically see town marks and numeric year stamps inside rectangular or oval cartouches.
- Russia: Hallmarks frequently combine Cyrillic letters (assayer/town) with numeric years in rectangular/oval outlines.
- USA: No national hallmarking law. Dating often relies on maker’s trademarks and style changes rather than official date letters.
Bottom line: UK/Irish pieces usually decode to a year via date letters and shield outlines, while many continental systems use numeric dates and fixed symbols inside distinct shapes. In all cases, the cartouche provides vital context.
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How to Identify Your Date Letter (Step-by-Step)
- First, find the assay/office symbol (e.g., leopard’s head, anchor, castle, rose, Hibernia). That sets the correct chart.
- Check the shield outline around the letter (square, rounded rectangle, chamfered rectangle, etc.).
- Note the letter’s case and font (uppercase/lowercase, serif/sans, script).
- Match all three to an office-specific chart to confirm the year.
Tip: If you suspect an import, review import mark charts as their outlines and symbols differ from domestic series.
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Common Mistakes When Reading Date Letters
- Ignoring the shield outline: same letter, different year.
- Assuming letters are sequential: cycles may skip I/J, O, U, V, W, Z.
- Confusing sponsor’s initials with date letters: sponsor cartouches are often rectangular/oval and sit alongside date letters.
- Reading in isolation: cross-check the office symbol and fineness mark for accuracy.
- Applying UK logic to all countries: France, the Netherlands and others use different rules (often numeric years and fixed symbols).
FAQ
Are date letters only used in the UK and Ireland?
No. They’re best known in the UK/Ireland. Other countries also use cartouches and symbols to indicate year and maker, but many prefer numeric year stamps and fixed purity symbols rather than an A–Z letter cycle.
Do modern pieces still use date letters?
In the UK and Ireland, date letters became optional in 1999, but many modern pieces still include them. Always read them with the office symbol and shield outline.
Why do some alphabets skip letters?
To avoid confusion with similar characters (for example, I/J or O/0). Skipped letters vary by office and cycle.
Does a lozenge shape always mean a date letter?
No. A lozenge can indicate a maker’s mark in France or a Victorian design registration cartouche in the UK. Always confirm context.
Where should I check date letters and shapes?
Use office-specific charts and reputable guides (see References). Always match the office symbol, shape and letter style together.
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You Might Also Like
- Hallmark Shapes: How Shield Outlines Help Date Jewellery
- Understanding Dublin Hallmarks: Irish Silver & Gold Jewellery Explained
Final Thought
Date letters are powerful — but they’re only one part of the picture. In the UK and Ireland, the alphabet cycle plus the shield outline will pinpoint a year. Elsewhere, shapes still matter, but you’ll often rely on numeric stamps and fixed symbols. Read the whole set together and you’ll unlock the piece’s timeline with confidence.
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About Ps Its Vintage
Ps Its Vintage is independently run and specialises in preloved, vintage and antique jewellery. Every piece is chosen for its character, quality and symbolism, with a focus on hallmarks, makers and meaningful design. This guide helps you understand date letters with confidence so you can buy and collect wisely.
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References
- Silver Makers Marks – UK & Ireland Date Letters
- Birmingham Assay Office – Date Letters
- Dublin Assay Office – Hallmarking Explained
- Antique Jewellery University – Hallmarking Basics