High-nuclearity transition-metal clusters continue to attract a great deal of interest, partly because of their fascinating physical properties and partly for the architectural beauty of their structures. An interesting subarea of 3d metal cluster chemistry is the small but growing family of molecules that have circular structures. Large cyclic polymetallic clusters are valued for their ability to mimic the properties of linear coordination polymers. [1] For example, theories developed for analyzing magnetically coupled ring systems have been extensively applied to calculate the thermodynamic properties of 1D materials. [2] Furthermore, the chemistry of circular molecular clusters is also associated with supramolecular chemistry. Anion and cation recognition provide the possibility of controlling the size of clusters. A representative example of this approach is the ability to address the synthesis of molecular rings by exploiting host ± guest interactions with alkali-metal cations, because alkali-metal cations are hosted by rings of different size. Thus, hexairon(iii) [3±5] and hexamanganese(iii) [6] complexes with cyclic M 6 O 12 cores can easily accommodate Li and Na ions, both in the solid state and in solution, whereas Cs ions require larger rings, such as M 8 O 16 . [5] Metal rings have excited mankind since mythological times. [7] The largest cyclic structure containing exclusively paramagnetic 3d metals is the Ni II 24 wheel reported by Winpenny and co-workers, [8] which is approximately an order of magnitude smaller that the giant wheels constructed from molybdate fragments by the M¸ller group; [9] a Ni II 12 wheel is also known. [10] Large, cyclic, polymetallic arrangements of other 3d metals, either unsupported or supported (by ions or molecules as guests), have been found for chromium(iii), [11] manganese(iii), [12] iron(ii), [13] iron(iii), [12, 14] cobalt(ii), [15] and copper(ii). [16] Restricting further discussion to the so-called ferric wheels with nuclearities equal to or higher than ten, the structurally characterized complexes that contain O-donor groups as bridging ligands are [{Fe(OMe) 2