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Home » Categories » Fashion » Handbags » History of Handbags - From the 14th Century to Today's Bag Designers » Printer Friendly

Henrietta Timmons (4,177)

History of Handbags - From the 14th Century to Today's Bag Designers

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Submitted Thursday, December 04, 2003
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Have you ever wondered about the origin of handbags and purses? Handbags have been essential to daily life ever since people have had something precious to carry around with them and only the items have changed over time. The very first mention in written literature comes from the 14th century, even though Egyptian hieroglyphs show pouches carried around the waist. Bags were attached to what were called "girdles" which were fastened to the waist. Embroidery and jewels adorned these articles and were used to show status - the richer the person, the more elaborate the bag.

In the 16th century, handbags took on more of an air of practicality with the use of everyday materials such as leather with a drawstring fastener on top. During this period, cloth bags were used that were made larger and used by travelers and carried diagonally across the body. The 17th century saw more variety and both fashionable men and women carried small purses with more complex shapes. Young girls were taught embroidery as a very necessary skill to make them marriagable and we see the rise of beautiful and unique stitched artwork in handbags.

Neo-classical clothing became popular in the 18th century with a reduction in the amount of underclothing worn by women. Wearing a purse would ruin the look of this clothing so fasionable ladies started carrying their handbags which were called reticules. Women had a different bag for every occasion and every fashion magazine had arguments on the proper carrying of these purses. In the reticules one would find rouge, face powder, a fan, a scent bottle, visiting cards a card case, and smelling salts.

The term "handbag" first came into use in the early 1900's and generally referred to hand-held luggage bags usually carried by men. These were an inspiration for new bags that became popularized for women, including complicated fasteners, internal compartments, and locks. With this new fashion, jewelers got into the act with special compartments for opera glasses, cosmetics, and fans. The 1920's saw a revolution in fashion with varying hemlines and lighter clothing. Bags no longer needed to match the outfit perfectly and the rage was for the stylish lady to carry a doll dressed exactly like herself, complete with matching bag for her minature companion! The discovery of King Tutankhamun's tomb inspired Egyptian art on purses.

The 1940's saw new austerity in clothing, including handbags with the war effort in mind. Metal frames, zips, leather, and mirrors were in short supply so manufacters used plastic and wood. The 50's saw the rise of important designer houses including Chanel, Louis Vuitton, and Hermes and the 60's saw the breakdown of old notions of the classical and the rise of youth culture.

Copy is the most sincere form of flattery and, if so, Kate Spade, Gucci, Coach and Dior must be very flattered! There are many replica handbags flooding the market (just visit Canal Street in New York City!). Some of these "designer fakes" even carry the label of the Company they are imitating while others just have the signature "C" or "G" without the label. What's in the future of handbags? My personal prediction is more individualized bags and interesting fabrics.






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There are a total of 53 comments on this article.
Most recent comment threads on this article:


» left by Hangbag Queen (3 years 198 days ago.)
I am doing a personal project on handbags, and intend to make my own, so this was a very interesting article for me, as it gave me lots of information about the history and it also gave me ideas for my own handbag.
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» left by jenneifer from school (3 years 149 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
i like your hond bags alot they are pretty
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» left by MopsyPower from Fairyland =) (2 years 244 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 3 out of 5
Thx this page has helped me heaps in my textiles project and gave me ideas for my own bag
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» left by Emmamma from Sydney, Australia (2 years 206 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 3.5 out of 5
I think you could go deeper into the origins, and how they developed into the modern-day bag, but it was generally good
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» left by Cynthia Castillo from Brownsville, TX (2 years 60 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 4.5 out of 5
Im doing a report on handbags for my field of study which is Computer Accounting Specialist. Handbags have nothing to do with accounting, but its a good way to make money. I found this article,which i can use to find information for my report. Just imagine how many people have handbags, and how much money goes into the handbag business? Thank you for putting this article it helped me so much.
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» left by heather from hastings (2 years 13 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 4 out of 5
very interresting article , i am about to do an art coursework project , and iv decided to do bags as my design and this was very usefull
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» left by Anonymous (2 years 1 day ago.)
Some information on 16th century "handbags" was not as complete as it could have been. For instance, most of the more elaborate "purses" were worn by men, not women.
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 325 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 2 out of 5
this was a great help thankxs heaps
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 325 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
i love handbags and this article
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» left by ashley from USA (1 year 317 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
im in fashion class so was a helpful article for such a hard assignment
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» left by anonymous (1 year 309 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 4.5 out of 5
This was a really cool article and it helped me lots
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» left by Georgia (1 year 302 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
This artical was a lot of help, but i think i have read some thing very similar on another website
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» left by Anonymous (1 year 34 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 4.5 out of 5
Thank you for this wonderful artical it helped me alot I love handbags,

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» left by Meredith Story from Berkely, CA (1 year 31 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Thank you for this article. I love handbags and history, and I found this article very interesting.

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» left by Anonymous (342 days 23 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 4 out of 5
Thank you very much, this helped me a lot.

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» left by joogle from poogle (332 days 20 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
You need pictures, to prove your evidence of your iformation.
i need pictures for my homewrok, but it is good infomation.
 
thanks x

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» left by robet from wellington (280 days 8 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 0.5 out of 5
it needs pictures i dont understand words
 
but thankz anyway

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» left by douglas from dallas texas (279 days 11 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
the wordes are to big to read more pictures would make it easier to undersatnd=)..
 
thankz 4 the help thoe

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» left by Anonymous (196 days ago.)
This has helpede my product design project. Thanks

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» left by Anonymous (137 days 15 hours ago.)
really useful, im doing a textiles project on bags, so it was a great help. thanks!

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» left by anonymous from hudds (125 days 19 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
the article wasnt particularly useful for the corse work i am doin but i do think its cool

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» left by Anonymous (117 days 15 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 2.5 out of 5
i'm currently doing textileds & working on evening bags. for homework, we need to research the history of bags & this has helped me a little bit :)
 would like more pictures though!

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» left by sara (85 days 9 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
no help but to say i liked one line in the information.

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» left by eufemia from india (74 days 20 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 0.5 out of 5
its nice and interesting thanks

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» left by Anonymous (30 days 12 hours ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
this article is exactly the same as something i have currently read

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Article added to SearchWarp.com on 12/4/2003 4:49:42 PM.
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