A money bag ( moneybag , moneybag , money sack , sack of money , the golden bag , golden bag , golden bag , etc.) are bags (usually with straps) of money (or gold) used for holding and transporting coins and banknotes from/to mints, banks, ATMs, vending machines, businesses, or other institutions. Money bags are usually transported in armored cars or money trains and, in the past, via the post-carriage.
Crumillospongia is a genus of middle Cambrian sponge named after a small money purse, or crumilla (Latin for "small, small" wallet).
Video Money bag
Histori
According to the story given in the Gospel of John, Judas Iscariot carries the money bags of the disciples.
During the Roman era, Legio IV Scythica camped in Zeugma, an ancient city of Commagen (modern Turkey). Excavations conducted in the city reveal 65,000 seal seals (in clay, known as "Bulls") found in places believed to serve as archives for Zeugma's ancient custom. Seals seals used to seal papyrus, parchment, money bags, and customs are a good indication of the volume of trade and transport and communication network density ever established in the region.
Obol Charon, a custom of death that originated in ancient Greece where coins were placed with corpses, in the 3rd to 4th centuries in Western Europe, often found in pockets, making them pockets of money . From the Middle Ages to about 1900, the Rottweiler dogs were used by butchers around the market to keep the moneybag tied around their necks.
Beginning in the 14th century, the wallet of money (panakizhi) was given to scholars during Revathi Pattathanam, an annual gathering of scholars held in Kerala, India. In the 16th century feudal Japan, the samurai wore uchi-bukuro (wallet of money ) around the waist or neck.
In 1620, child tracheotomy had never been heard until a boy tried to hide a bag of gold by swallowing it. It becomes caught in his throat and blocks his trachea. Tracheostomy allows the surgeon to manipulate the sac and pass through the system. In September 1864, Rose O'Neal Greenhow, a Confederate agent, drowned in a gold sack around his neck after leaving the Condor (the British blockade launcher) on the boat.
Maps Money bag
Nickname
The rich can have a nickname "moneybag" (or "bb> moneybags "). Marcus Licinius Crassus (c. 115-53 BC), a prominent Roman politician of his day, was known in Rome as Dives , meaning "Rich Man" or "Moneybag". Ivan I of Moscow ("Ivan the Moneybag") was a Russian Grand Duke of Moscow from 1328-1341 famous for being generous with his wealth. American Cardinal Francis Spellman (1889-1967) is sometimes called "Cardinal Moneybags" in later life, while Chicago mafia and blackmailer Murray Humphreys (1899-1965) are referred to as "Mr. Moneybags" by his friends. Miss Moneybags (played by Edna Purviance) is a fictitious character in the 1914 Charlie Chaplin mute comedy The Count. James Edward "Baron of Edgerton" Hanson (1922-2004) billion-dollar empire earned him the nickname "Lord Moneybags". Another fictional character, Victor Newman (Eric Braeden) of The soap and soap opera, is also called "Moneybags".
In popular culture
Money bags have been represented in art and culture throughout human history, including painting, literature, film, television, games, and even food.
- Leno, the ancient Roman stock theater (1st century BC to the 5th century), often depicted carrying a money bag.
- The statue of Jainism (11th century to 11 AD) shows various Jain gods (Yaksa Sarvanubhuti) and/or their assistants, holding a moneybag ( chowrie , noli ), wallet ( nakulika ), or "purse-like" Buddhas (PaÃÆ' à ± cika and Vai? rava? a/Jambhala) and Hindu (Kubera) gods/gods/goddesses money bags (or wallets or equivalents - "bags/sheaths of gems", etc.) as part of their iconography. Lugus, another god worshiped by the Celts and identified with Mercury, the Roman god of commerce (Gaulish Mercury, in particular), is depicted carrying a money-bag.
- Around 1130, Hugh of St. Victor Chronica refers to a sacculus or sacculum in Latin), with its compartment, as a memory training analogy.
- In the 16th century, The Conjurer , a painting by Hieronymus Bosch, featured a child who steals a wallet of money from a bespectacled character.
- Around 1791, James Gillray published a cartoon about the reaction to Boydell Shakespeare's Gallery labeled "Boydell sacrificing Shakespeare's Work to the Money-Satan Devil".
- The Apotheosis of Washington (1865), a fresco on the dome in the rotunda of the Capitol Building of the United States containing trade scenes with the Roman god Mercury holding a bag of gold.
- The 2nd Series of Foreign Education Series Bill of 1896 shows an allegorical figure from Commerce that has a bag of money beside it, making it a bag of money with real money.
- A Bag of Gold (1915), a movie starring Sidney Ainsworth
- In 1974, Herb Block produced the Herblock Special Report, a political cartoon book and a text about Richard Nixon with some cartoons featuring a money bag.
- Money for Nothing (1993), a comedy/crime movie about Joey Coyle (John Cusack) who found $ 1.2 million dollars in a pocket midway after falling from behind an armored car
- The Black Book (1993), a criminal novel by Ian Rankin on "Operation Moneybags", a police investigation aimed at putting money lenders out of business
- 29 Palms (2002), a live-to-video movie about a bag of money that affects characters who own it
- Thai bag (tung tong, or toong tong, ?? ??????), a small, crunchy pastry bag and fried [shaped like a money bag] with various (unknown) stuffs
- In South Park in the episode "Two Days Before The Day After Tomorrow" (2005), the antisemitic Cartman tries to stop Kyle at gunpoint, asking the latter to hand over his "Jewish Golden" bag. Apparently Kyle not only has a bag of gold (which he wore around his neck all the time), but also a bait bag.
- The Accessories Dean creates a handbag from a recycled US Mint money bag.
In game
In various games, a money bag (or golden bag ) tends to be used to represent assets or points. In board games like Dungeon! (1975) The money bag is a treasure card, in Talisman (1983) as a card, and in Monopoly as pawn/pieces introduced in 1999. Game events television 1976 Break the Bank has a money bag as space and Right Price has a price game called "Game Balance". Video games like Chase 'n' (1981), Bagman (1982), Errors! (1982), Moneybags (1983), Bank Panic (1984), Circus Charlie (1984), Gunfright (1985), Roller Coaster (1985), Arm Wrestling (1985), series Castlevania (1986-2010), and Robin Hood: The Legend of Sherwood (2002) has a money bag (or golden bag) in it. As a video game character, Moneybags is a character in the Spyro the Dragon series and a boss named Moneybags at Dual Hearts .
See also
References
External links
- moneybags in Free Dictionary
Source of the article : Wikipedia