Their use and design has changed markedly over the ages, however. Most of us have little need for something to carry the head of a gorgon in and, if we did, a modern-day wallet wouldn’t be up to the task.
Wallets were for keeping food and possessions in, but, as classical scholar A. Y. Campbell explained, this was ‘no modern lunch basket, out of which came Derby-day salmon and Champagne. The wallet was the poor man’s portable larder’. They were more akin to knapsacks, as Shakespeare makes clear. In Troilus and Cressida, Ulysses tells Achilles: ‘Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, wherein he puts alms for oblivion.’
Money was originally kept not in wallets, but in larger purses, a habit that has lingered down the centuries more with ladies than gentlemen. Over time, coins began to be placed in wallets, with other items. Lawrence C. Wroth, writing in the 1950s, gave a portrait of an Elizabethan merchant ‘carrying fixed to his belt… a leather pouch or wallet in which he carried his cash, his book of accounts and small articles of daily necessity’.
This story is from the April 15, 2020 edition of Country Life UK.
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This story is from the April 15, 2020 edition of Country Life UK.
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