iSnare.com - Free Content Articles Directory
Authors Contents [Advanced Search][Add OpenSearch][Job Search]
Distribute your articles to thousands of article sites for only $2 and below! Read more...

Index  Culture
 

Piggy Banks - A Short History

 
[ Contact the Author] [ Send to a Friend] [ Article Publisher] [Make PDF] [ Print] [ Bookmark & Share]
 
Read our Terms of Service before reprinting this article. The submitter specified above has claimed the rights to this article.
Ron Askotzky

After selling piggy banks for more than a year it suddenly dawned on me - why are they called piggy banks? What does a pig have to do with saving money? A pig would be the last animal you’d associate with saving! Why not bunny banks or doggy banks and for that matter, why an animal at all?! Additionally, piggy bank sounds like it was intended as a child’s item as how many adults would use a piggy bank for collecting change?

To satisfy my curiosity I did some piggy bank research and have learned some interesting things and thought I would share them with you.

As you well know, many, particularly ceramic, piggy banks do not have an opening to remove the money. Why is that? The theory goes that this is to serve as a lesson in finances for children. The piggy bank enables a child to save his money but forces him to justify its spending as in order to access the money he needs to break his piggy bank. This lesson seems to have been forgotten by many adults! Maybe we should keep a piggy bank in our front foyer and deposit our loose change as we come home each day! I digress…

The question still remains, why is it called a piggy bank and why is it in the shape of a pig?

One theory is that just as it was common to purchase a piglet and feed it with scraps until it was finally ready for slaughter, so too we feed our piggy bank with small change (“scraps”) until it is full and then break it to reap the rewards of our investment. According to this, the piggy bank would also be appropriate for adults.

A more popular theory is that, in fact, the original piggy bank had absolutely nothing to do with a pig! In the Middle Ages, when metal was expensive, an inexpensive, orange colored clay, called pygg, was the common media for making pots and jars, and was referred to as a pygg jar, for example. One of these jars was often used to hold coins. Eventually, the pygg jar or pygg bank used for coins, surely accidentally, became known as a pig bank or piggy bank! The general consensus is that this evolution transpired a few hundred years ago in England when crafters were hired to make pygg banks and not being familiar with pygg they made pig shaped banks.

The oldest recorded piggy bank in the shape of a pig is claimed to be 1500 years old from Indonesia. If this is so, it precedes the pygg theory by around 1000 years! Perhaps there was some connection between the pig and saving money in that culture but it seems to have not influenced Western culture, where the modern piggy bank only evolved from pygg clay just a few hundred years ago.

Understandably, the piggy bank is not popular in all cultures. The pig is considered an impure animal according to the Old Testament and hence is not owned, eaten nor benefited by Jews. Similarly, Islam forbids the eating of pork due to being impure. Hence, one would not expect to find too many piggy banks in Muslim countries and in homes of those of the Jewish and Muslim faiths.

The modern piggy bank, whether made from ceramics, plastic, beads or metal, has been a very popular collector’s item and gift for children due to its appealing and humorous appearance. In addition to the smile or chuckle we experience each time we drop some change into our piggy bank let us be reminded by the lesson it teaches us!

By the way, the famous phrase, “break the bank”, has nothing to do with the piggy bank!

Important NoticeDISCLAIMER: All information, content, and data in this article are sole opinions and/or findings of the individual user or organization that registered and submitted this article at Isnare.com without any fee. The article is strictly for educational or entertainment purposes only and should not be used in any way, implemented or applied without consultation from a professional. We at Isnare.com do not, in anyway, contribute or include our own findings, facts and opinions in any articles presented in this site. Publishing this article does not constitute Isnare.com's support or sponsorship for this article. Isnare.com is an article publishing service. Please read our Terms of Service for more information.

Ron Askotzky is co-founder of Wow! Imports, importing fair trade and earth friendly decor, gifts and collectibles including glass beaded piggy banks from Africa.

Article Tags: bank [See Dictionary], pig [See Dictionary], piggy [See Dictionary]
Got a question about this article? Ask the community!
Article published on October 15, 2006 at Isnare.com
 
Rate this article:

5 Must-Know Tips For Personalizing Your Ketubah Text (Jewish Wedding Contract)
Submitted by: Sarah Goldberg

You're jewish and you just got engaged, so you need to think about getting a ketubah for your wedding...

Ayutthaya’s Fall, Bangkok’s Rise
Submitted by: Manora

With the exception of King Boromokot (1733-1758), during whose reign Thai monks visited Ceylon to purify Sinhalese Buddhism, Narai’s successors became increasingly ineffectual while, ominously, Burmese kings grew stronger...

Ayutthaya’s Fall, Bangkok’s Rise Part 2
Submitted by: Manora

His voracious reading convinced him that Thailand’s continued independence could best be secured by encouraging equally friendly relations with numerous Western countries...

Ayutthaya’s Fall, Bangkok’s Rise Part 3
Submitted by: Manora

By gracefully and gradually acceding to such territorial demands, Chulalongkom preserved Thai independence, particularly in the vital Menam Chao Phya basin...

The Nation and Village Life Thailand
Submitted by: Manora

The structural principle represented on a microcosmic scale by the home and the village can be seen extended to full complexity in the organization of the nation at large...

Ayutthayan Economy and Lifestyle Part 3
Submitted by: Manora

Son of King Thammaraja, who held the Thai throne on Burmese sufferance, the nine-year-old Naresuan had been taken hostage to Burma after Ayutthaya’s fall...

Ayutthayan Economy And Lifestyle Part 4
Submitted by: Manora

Regular state revenues and peace allowed culture to flower as never before, and Narai’s reign was to be remembered for the establishment of friendly relations with Europeans making Ayutthaya the most cosmopolitan of cities...

The Byrd Dynasty in Richmond Virginia
Submitted by: Shell Harris

Richmond is built upon an area originally used by the native Powhattan tribe and they built their own capitol here, also known as Powhattan...

What Stylish Scarves Should Men Wear to Look Fashionable?
Submitted by: Simon Johnnson

For men, going a little bit out of the usual style of shirts and sweaters and jeans always results in something fashionable and extremely sexy...

How to Don the Perfect Winter Fashion Wear?
Submitted by: Simon Johnnson

Do you have a big brown or black leather jacket which sports big round buttons, and a snow-proof overcoat that can give the words “Plain” and “dreary” a complete new dimension...

Stylish Korean Men's Scarves in 2009
Submitted by: Jeff T.

Scarves of Korean style are very popular, especially the men scarves used by celebrities in the television program...

Top 10 Scarves For Winter
Submitted by: Jeff T.

All gorgeous women possess their preferred shawls or scarves You can look in a fashion magazine to find the tying style you like for your scarves...

Men's Ties – Guides to Men Dress
Submitted by: Jeff T.

The essential part of men clothing are neckties A man's dressing sequence is underwear, shirt, pants, belt, socks, neckties, shoes, and suits, as we know...

Muslims Christians and Mahayana Buddhists in Thailand
Submitted by: Manora

Muslims comprise Thailand's largest religious minority, and are concentrated mainly in the southernmost provinces of Narathiwat, Pattani, Yala and Satun...

Hindus and Sikhs Thailand
Submitted by: Manora

Hindus and Sikhs The approximately20,000 Indians residing in Thailand are almost equally divided between Hindus and Sikhs...

Isnare.com Footer Divider

© 2004-2009. Isnare Free Articles - An Isnare Online Technologies Free Articles Project. All Rights Reserved.   Privacy Policy