Pawnbroker, a
profession
that is based on the offering of loans using
possessions as collateral.
The job of a pawnbroker is to evaluate the value of
any possessions that are offered as collateral for
loans. The loan offered is a percentage of this value
and the possessions are kept by the pawnbroker over
the agreed period of the loan. If the money is repaid
at any time during this period the customer gets the
pawned items back. If the time elapses the pawnbroker
gets to sell the possessions and as a result there are
generally no small number of formerly pawned objects
offered for sale at a pawnbrokers.
Saint
Nicholas is the patron saint of pawnbrokers. A
common pawnbroker's symbol is 3 balls suspended from a
bar (as shown below), representative of the three bags of gold
associated with Nicholas's story.
There is an archaic language associated with the
pawnbroker that today makes the famous pawnbroker nursery
rhyme Pop
goes the Weasel[?] The Nursery Rhyme "Pop
Goes The Weasel" refers to pawning. A weasel is a
shoemaker's tool and to "pop" is to pawn.
"That's the way the money goes... Pop goes the
weasel."
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The
Legendary Origins of the Pawnbroker Symbol
The
Least Known Legend. One of the least known
origins that has been researched is the coin known as
the "Silver Shekel" or "Shekel of
Israel" which was issued in A.D. 68 after a
Jewish revolt against the Romans. One side of the coin
depicted three pomegranates, with a common stalk.
The
Traditional Legend of the Three Balls.
The symbol of the three balls was part of the coat of
arms of the Medici family, who established the Medici
trading and banking empire in Florence, Italy. The
Medicis were a 15th century Italian family of bankers
and lenders, with considerable fame and fortune. They
became so well known in the finance and lending
profession that the other lenders, wanting to share in
their success, adopted similar coats of arms, signs,
shields and symbols, with three golden balls being the
most popular. Once other merchants involved in
monetary dealing adopted the three golden balls as
their symbol, the three balls came to symbolize the
entire profession founded on the ethic of mutual
trust.
Throughout
the Middle ages you can find many coats of arms
bearing three balls, orbs, plates, disks, coins, and
more as symbolic of monetary success.
When
Italian bankers began to open branches abroad, the
symbol of the three golden balls spread to the
European West. It is known that there was pawnbroking
in Spain because Queen Isabella pawned some of her
royal jewels to finance Columbus' long voyage to the
New World. I wonder if the pawnbroker who made
that loan knew just what he was starting?
The
symbol of the three golden balls was brought to the
United States from England, where pawnbrokers still
display the symbol to this day.
Saint
Nicholas and his Three Gifts of Gold. The
figure of Saint Nicholas is a legend from the Orthodox
Russian Church. He was said to be very kind to the
poor.
There
are few other mythology characters and heroes of
folklore who have embraced our hearts and collective
spirit as has "Saint Nicholas, Bishop of
Myra."
In
Turkey, Myra (now Demre) is where Saint Nicholas
gained his world-renowned fame. Born around the year
280 in Patara, fifty miles west of Myra (Demre), into
a well to do Christian family, young Nicholas was
ordained into the priesthood when he was nineteen
years old. When his Uncle and namesake, the Bishop
Nicholas, went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, Nicholas
was appointed as deputy to oversee the monastery,
which the elder Nicholas had built. Thus began the
'life of enlightenment' of the 'boy bishop' Saint
Nicholas.
Saint
Nicholas and the Pawnbroker. Through his
great acts of kindness and generosity, Saint Nicholas
became the patron saint of many; of seafaring men, of
marriageable young women, of the falsely accused, of
endangered travelers, of farmers, of children (of
course), of merchants, and of pawnbrokers. Pawnbrokers
and bankers in northern Italy, who would look to Saint
Nicholas as their patron saint, would hang three
golden balls above the doors of their shops in tribute
to, and for good luck from, their Saint Nicholas.
Another
legend tells of the pawnbroker who made a loan to a
friend with no collateral to secure the debt. The
friend however swears on the icon of Saint Nicholas
that he will repay the loan from the pawnbroker on a
fixed date. When that date comes around, and the debt
is due the pawnbroker, his friend refuses to pay the
debt, insisting that he owes the Pawnbroking nothing.
To settle the matter, the borrower and the pawnbroker
take their case to court for the judge to decide. The
debtor declares under oath that he has given the
borrowed money back to the pawnbroker. Technically,
the debtor spoke the truth, for unknown to all in the
court, he had ssecretly deposited the exact sum of
money owed into a hollow shaft of his walking cane,
which he had tricked the pawnbroker into holding while
he declared his oath of repayment. With no evidence of
guilt, the judge of the court decides in favor of the
debtor. This dismayed the pawnbroker who felt betrayed
by his patron Saint Nicholas.
Leaving
the court, the crooked borrower was making his way
home, and after becoming fatigued, was forced by
exhaustion to lie down by the side of the road to rest
where he fell into a deep, trance-like sleep, from
which no passerby could awake him. Unable to wake or
move him, a passersby watched in horror as the crooked
borrower was run over by a runaway horse and wagon,
and he suffered a painful death. The passersby then
notice laying on the road, the valuable contents of
the debtor's walking cane that had been broken open by
the wheel of the wagon. The passersby called the
pawnbroker and the judge to the scene of the accident.
The pawnbroker counts the spillage of coins to find
that they total the exact amount borrowed from him,
but he refuses to take the money while his one-time
friend lies lifeless.
The
pawnbroker prays that if the power of Saint Nicholas
is great enough to take the life of the crooked debtor
to expose his fraudulent claim, surely the good and
merciful Saint could bring his friend back to life.
Heartened
by the good will and generosity of the pawnbroker,
Saint Nicholas obeys the prayer, and miraculously, the
debtor opens his eyes, stands, and walks to the
pawnbroker. He repays all the money he owed.
The
story of the debtor and the pawnbroker helped
establish the role of Saint Nicholas as the protector
of financial integrity and guardian of commitments
made in good faith.
Deed
of Generosity. Even before the young
Nicholas had become a priest, a repeated deed of
generosity symbolically characterized the beloved
Saint. As the legend goes, the generous deed was
bestowed upon a widowed nobleman who lived in the same
town as Nicholas and his parents. The nobleman, once
wealthy, but now without a penny, found himself
desperate and unable to take care of his three teenage
daughters.
To
support himself and his two youngest daughters, the
one-time nobleman conspired with an evil woman who
agreed to buy and sell his oldest daughter into
slavery or 'ill repute.' Hearing of the poor man's
plight, the young Nicholas tied three hundred florins
into a handkerchief, resembling a small, round sack.
One evening, after dark, Nicholas secretly threw the
small, round sack of gold coins through an open window
in the poor man's house. Then as quietly as he came,
young Nicholas hurried away from the house and into
the shadows of the night.
The
next morning, when the gold coins were found, the poor
man and his daughters blessed their anonymous
'gift-giver', and used the money as a dowry so that
his oldest girl could be married. Their household was
able to survive for a time, but soon the poor man and
his daughters were again in financial straits. With
nowhere else to turn, the man again colluded with the
evil woman who agreed to buy and sell his now oldest
daughter. However, before this could happen, the young
Nicholas heard of the poor mans struggle, and again
threw a second small, round sack of gold coins through
an open window in the man's house, silently
disappearing into the dark of night.
The
next morning, the gold coins were found, and the poor
man and his two daughters blessed their mysterious
gift-giver, because the now oldest daughter could be
married using the money as her dowry. The poor man and
his last remaining daughter survived well enough for a
while, but after time passed they found themselves
once again in desperate need, and the man returned to
the evil woman who agreed to buy and sell his last
remaining daughter. Hearing of the poor man's
desperation, young Nicholas again came secretly to the
man's house and threw a third small, round sack of
gold coins through an open window. This time however,
the man spotted Nicholas trying to make his silent
getaway.
When
the man caught up to him, he told Nicholas, "If
you had not saved us in time, our family would have
been destroyed, materially and morally." A modest
and noble man, Nicholas was much too humble to accept
such praise, and said, "Please, do not tell
anyone of this deed as long as I live." The man
agreed, and not until the death of Saint Nicholas did
he ever tell a single soul.
Though
the generous Saint of Myra may be historically known
as Saint Nicholas, his spirit has bred many other
names. In other countries he is known as Sankt
Nicholas, Sint Nicholas, Santa Klass, Father
Christmas, Pere Noel, Befana, and Krist Kindlein. Of
course, we know him as jolly old Santa Claus. But
whatever the name, the emotion evoked by his image
remain the same. The universal values of good will and
generosity transcend time and tradition, and the need
to love and to be loved are characteristic traits of
Saint Nicholas to which all aspire.
The
transformation of Saint Nicholas into Father Christmas
or Father January occurred first in Germany, then in
countries where the Reformed Churches were the
majority, and finally in France, the feast day being
celebrated on Christmas or New Year's Day. Dutch
Protestant settlers in New Amsterdam (New York City)
replaced Saint Nicholas (Sinter Claes) with the
benevolent magician who became known as Santa Claus,
thus contributing further to his spreading folklore.
STRANGE
BUT TRUE!
Throughout history, pawnbrokers have been
helping people. The Bible offers references to
pawnbroking, and in Deuteronomy 24:6-13 it states:
"No man shall take the nether or the upper
millstone to pledge, for he taketh a man's life to
pledge". What this means is: you should not take as
a pledge anything a man needs to make a living. The same
chapter also says: "Thou shalt not go into his
house to fetch the pledge. Thou shalt stand abroad and
the man to whom thou dost lend shall bring the
pledge…unto thee." Interestingly, often the
debtor's children could be used as a pledge (2
Kings,4:1-7). Also in Deuteronomy 23:21 the people were
told not to take interest from their own countrymen -
only from foreigners.
According to ancient Mesopotamian law, the rates of
interest charged - even in those days - were 20% for
silver, and 33% for grain.