Throughout Outlander, Claire was seen wearing two wedding rings – both when she married her second husband
It makes more sense in the book, because Claire left Frank's ring on during the ceremony and that's why she wore Jamie's father's ring (and later her silver wedding band) on her right hand.
Claire's wedding rings consist of one gold ring, given to her by her first husband, Frank Randall, and one silver ring, given to her by her second husband, Jamie Fraser. From the time that she marries Jamie in 1743, Claire wears the silver ring on her right hand and continues to wear the gold on her left.
To signify their love, Jamie crafts Claire a homemade wedding ring out of the key to their home in Lallybroch. However, the former WWII nurse is still technically married to her husband from the future, Frank Randall (Tobias Menzies). READ MORE: Sam Heughan: Will Sam Heughan be the next James Bond?
Claire wasn't physically hurt, but she was threatened by Bonnet and he did want to take her rings. To prevent that, Claire tried to swallow them, but only succeeded in saving the gold band given to her by Frank. The other ring, Jamie's ring, was snatched by Bonnet, despite Claire's efforts.
Golden Globes presenter Jamie Lee Curtis has been married to her husband Christopher Guest for almost 37 years, and the star doesn't wear her wedding ring for a very sentimental reason. The Halloween actress revealed to People magazine that she keeps her prized possession in a special box that means the world to her.
These stones come into play time and again on Outlander: Claire travels through the stones at Craigh na Dun in 1746 when Jamie brings her back to them in order to keep their baby safe, and then one more time in 1968 when she travels back to be reunited with her one, true love in 1766.
Some think Jamie's spirit (but not his body) traveled to through time to guide Claire to him; others suggest Jamie had a near-death experience after the Battle of Culloden, and that's why his ghost is 25 when he appears to Frank.
Eventually, Jamie reveals why he'd given Murtagh one of his mother's candlesticks last episode: He'd asked him to fashion a new wedding ring for Claire, with an inscription that translates to “Give me a thousand kisses,” a reference to their special poem.
And it is that ring, crafted by Murtagh out of silver from Jamie's mother's candle stick, that we see Claire receive in tonight's episode, as a replacement for the one Bonnet stole. Gabaldon was a fan of the show's solution.
'Outlander' recap, episode 7: Jamie and Claire share the marriage bed in 'The Wedding' Brittany: After six episodes of foreplay, we finally get what we've all been waiting for! Jamie and Claire are married, so now they can finally get to the marriage bed.
Just as she begins to worry that Jamie might be capable of lying to her, Jamie quells her fear by revealing to her his indiscretion with Mary MacNab, a woman who worked at Lallybroch, while Claire was back in 1968 with Frank and Brianna. This confession soothes Claire, and the two find themselves realigned once again.
Claire Fraser was born on October 20, 1918.
That would make her 27-and-a-half at the time she and Jamie meet in the books, while Jamie's barely 22. This would make Claire five and a half years older than Jamie.
Jamie: "Claire, it was you. It's always been you, and it always will be. Get into bed and put the candle out.
In the 20th Century, she is still married to Frank. She continues to wear the ring to honor the man who was a father to Brianna.
Master Raymond drinks first, and though he hunches over in pain, he makes it through. He also uses some sleight of hand---when Claire gets the goblet back, her necklace turns black. Somehow, he has laced Claire's poison with an even deadlier poison.
“She ends up having a secret, right? You know, her secret is that she's struggling, and that she's leaning on something other than her family and her relationship to get through it.” Balfe believes that “a very common thing” with trauma is that people end up hiding in a certain way. Or, hiding a part of themselves.
Bug cut Claire's hair in an attempt to stop the fever. Unfortunately, time is the only thing that cures the fever. Tom Christie was also sick but he had the same symptoms as her which were unrelated to dysentery.
Diana Gabaldon has confirmed there is no possibility that Jamie Fraser will time-travel into the future and live out his life at Lallybroch.
For now, though, it appears both Fergus and Marsali aren't time travellers with actors Lyle and Domboy addressing this in an Instagram live Q&A from earlier this year.
Director Brendan Maher told Vulture that while both Menzies and Heughan had stunt doubles for the physically demanding sequence, neither used them much. “We had people for safety, just in case, but the nature of the work is that you want the actors to do as much as they possibly can,” Maher said.
Claire visits Faith's grave, where she leaves a single pink tulip from Jared's conservatory, and is surprised at how emotional she feels after all this time.
As a time traveler, he has lived during the 1630s and possibly other eras. He first attempts to travel forward beyond his own projected lifetime in 1778, with the help of Master Raymond.
Only those with the "travel gene" can go through the stones. Jamie doesn't have it. And ghosts don't even need stones!