This exhibition features identically reconstructed 13th-14th century archaeological finds - rings - by jeweller Evaldas Babenskas. The exact reconstructions allow us to see what the jewellery worn by the inhabitants of early medieval Lithuania actually looked like. In order to produce an exact replica of a ring, a jeweller has to carry out various chemical tests on the find, identify the technology used by a craftsman who lived almost a thousand years ago, trace the production process, choose the exact metal alloys and recreate the ring's decoration and colours from the fragmentary parts that have survived. The rings worn throughout Eastern Europe in the 13th and 14th centuries were quite similar, but in Lithuania a few rings of a very specific design have been found, which are distinguished by their style, method of production and complexity of technology. These rings are united by a structural feature: the bodies of the rings are hollow, formed by a filigree (Latin: filum - filament, granum - grain) thin wire partition. They are made of extremely thin silver wire and tinplate. The exhibition will be open until 1 September at the bastion of the Vilnius defensive wall (Bokšto g. 20/18, Vilnius).