pawnbroker
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
pawnbroker one who makes loans on personal effects that are left as security. The practice of pawnbroking is ancient, as is recognition of the danger it involves of oppressing the poor. In fact, the Bible provides the poor with a number of safeguards against oppression from their creditors. According to Ex. 22.25-27 and Deut. 24, 6, 12, 13, 17, pawnbrokers may not practice usury, may not take necessities of life as security, and in general must not take as a pledge any article whose loss would severely injure the borrower. In the Middle Ages, Christians generally were forbidden by the church to lend money at interest , and pawnbroking was left largely to the Jews as one of the few means of a livelihood open to them. Lombards also engaged extensively in moneylending, however, and in London, the financial center is still called Lombard St. In some Latin American and European nations pawnshops are operated under religious, charitable, or municipal auspices. The most famous such pawnshop is Vienna's Dorotheum, founded (1707) by Emperor Joseph I and still run by the state to provide the poor with easy credit at low rates of interest. In Great Britain and in American states, pawnbroking is regulated by usury laws. Pawnshops are predominantly found in low-income areas, where residents are often unable to establish other types of credit.
Author not available, PAWNBROKER.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Traumatic Experience and the Representation of Nature in the Novel and Film The Pawnbroker
Literature/Film Quarterly; 1/1/2007; Johnson, Michael K; 8035 words;
Both Edward Wallant's novel The Pawnbroker (1961) and director Sidney Lumet's film ... discover from the story told in The Pawnbroker, what Sol calls the "reality" of "sight ... to suggest that each version of The Pawnbroker supplements the other and that discussing ...
|
|
UK pawnbrokers decline in number, but business still booms.
Daily Mail (London); 10/10/2004; 979 words;
... brought it in, but it can be sold by the pawnbroker. After deductions for debt, interest ... you borrow more than UKpound 100, a pawnbroker must give you 14 days warning of his ... despite high interest charges, many pawnbrokers are thriving in all kinds of communities -- as I discovered last week. Mayfair ...
|
|
Pawnbrokers can offer loans, merchandise
Telegraph - Herald (Dubuque); 9/16/2007; The Associated Press; 314 words;
Question: How does a pawnbroker's business work? Answer: Pawnbrokers lend money on items of value ranging from gold and ... averaging $75 to $100. The interest rate charged by a pawnbroker is controlled by the state and varies across the ...
|
|
Tennessee Pawnbrokers Object to Ordinance Requiring Thumbprints.
Knight Ridder/Tribune Business News; 4/3/2001; 632 words;
By Don Jacobs, The Knoxville News-Sentinel, Tenn. Knight Ridder/Tribune ... begin their annual tussle with the pawnbroker industry. It has been a constant ... requires anyone selling an item to a pawnbroker to leave a thumbprint with the business ... reported stolen, they go back to the pawnbroker and get ...
|
|
Hard times for some prompt comeback for once disreputable pawnbrokers; BUSINESS ANALYSIS New forms of lending help Albemarle & Bond achieve 51 per cent surge in profits.(Business)
The Independent (London, England); 9/17/2002; 943 words;
... amp; Bond, Britain's second largest pawnbroker after Harvey & Thompson, unveiled ... in the company - the largest quoted pawnbroker in the UK - had clearly not been expecting ... jumped 13 per cent to 67p. The fact that pawnbrokers have been staging a resurgence in the ...
|
|
Texas pawnbrokers face poor image, heavy regulation.
San Antonio Express-News (San Antonio, TX); 6/27/2004; 874 words;
... Internet to price. Starting pay for pawnbrokers ranges between $6 to $12 an hour ... emphasis on selling, most managers hire pawnbrokers who have previous customer-service ... will run off regulars. Although pawnbrokers may make loans up to $12,750, most ... for anything larger. A prospective pawnbroker ...
|
|
Pawnbroker took items then fled, police say.(Local)
The Virginian Pilot; 4/8/2005; 433 words;
... Roy THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT NORFOLK - A pawnbroker fled after loading the contents of his ... urged people not to get angry with them. Pawnbrokers are required to wait 45 days before ... and has been active in local and state pawnbrokers' associations. She had never heard of ...
|
|
Home loan crunch a boon for pawnbroker
Oakland Tribune; 11/12/2007; Tim Simmers; 843 words;
... but from his vantage point as a pawnbroker, he sees an economic underbelly ... up into the thousands of dollars, pawnbrokers say. Four out of five items pawned are reclaimed by customers, pawnbrokers report. They prefer it that way ...
|
|
Pawnbroker shops are closing
Birmingham Post; 10/18/2003; Martin Faint Business Staff; 488 words;
... Business Staff Birmingham Post 10-18-2003 Pawnbroker shops are closing down as the number ... century, the National Association of Pawnbrokers said. But despite the slump, the body ... Research Centre, revealed that half of pawnbroker customers borrowed for food and other ...
|
|
Pawnbroker HT expands after profits reach 12.8m
Evening Standard - London; 8/22/2007; 178 words;
PAWNBROKER HT Group is planning a dramatic expansion as it aims ... that rose 20% to 12.8 million. Although those who visit pawnbrokers are clearly in need of a short-term loan, the company ... Britain. It's a big market," he adds. Now the UK's largest pawnbroker, HT was founded in south London in 1897. It has ...
|
|
Pawnbroker HT expands as profits tick up to 12.8m
Evening Standard - London; 8/22/2007; 178 words;
PAWNBROKER HT Group is planning a dramatic expansion as it aims ... that rose 20% to 12.8 million. Although those who visit pawnbrokers are clearly in need of a short-term loan, the company ... Britain. It's a big market," he adds. Now the UK's largest pawnbroker, HT was founded in south London in 1897. It has ...
|
|
Pawns in the game; This is Money: Pawnbrokers might not the first people you'd visit to sort out your cash-flow crisis, but more and more people are turning to them. Helen Monks reports.
The Evening Standard (London, England); 3/8/2002; Monks, Helen; 723 words;
... cash to keep them out of bother. But pawnbrokers appear to be enjoying a renaissance ... services. The National Association of Pawnbrokers (NAP) argues that, far from being about ... poverty and unhappiness, going to a pawnbroker is a positive choice. It even claims ...
|
|
Pawnbroker is back ...(Features)
Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 9/3/2004; 341 words;
The return of the pawnbroker to King Street was not an event that ... atmosphere will be much less old-fashioned pawnbroker - where generations of needy customers ... bottom line is that the jewellery and pawnbroker retailer has identified a need here ...
|
|
Pawns in the game This is Money: Pawnbrokers might not the first people you'd visit to sort out your cash-flow crisis, but more and more people are turning to them. Helen Monks reports
Evening Standard - London; 3/8/2002; HELEN MONKS; 721 words;
... cash to keep them out of bother. But pawnbrokers appear to be enjoying a renaissance ... services. The National Association of Pawnbrokers (NAP) argues that, far from being about ... poverty and unhappiness, going to a pawnbroker is a positive choice. It even claims ...
|
|
Less than one per cent use pawnbrokers.(Your Money)
The News Letter (Belfast, Northern Ireland); 10/18/2003; 185 words;
... than one per cent of households use pawnbrokers, the ''world's second oldest profession ... found that: l The number of licensed pawnbroker outlets has plummeted to around 800 ... non-essential shopping. l A third of pawnbroker customers do not have a bank current ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Pawnbroker's soliloquy.
National Review; 3/22/1985; Mano, D. Keith; 836 words;
|
Mum stole [pounds sterling]10,000 from pawnbroker boss.
The Star (Sheffield) (Sheffield, England); 1/7/2008; 413 words;
|
New CRM system for pawnbrokers launched.(by Silicon Valley Systems)(Brief Article)(Product Announcement)
Telecomworldwire; 5/27/2002; 87 words;
|
Prosecuting Raskolnikov: a literary and legal look at "consciousness of guilt" evidence.
Army Lawyer; 12/1/2005; Stigall, Dan E.; 7618 words;
|
Sleep.(Poem)
Poetry; 9/1/2005; O'Rourke, Meghan; 168 words;
|
Squashing 'lice': in a news week of 'All Saddam All the Time,' the story of Iraqi victims of cluster bombs fades from sight.(Media)
National Catholic Reporter; 1/16/2004; Schroth, Raymond A.; 1220 words;
|
Higgins, F.E. The Black Book of Secrets.(Young adult review)(Brief article)(Book review)
Kliatt; 11/1/2007; Rosser, Claire; 219 words;
|
Ethnic politics on the urban frontier: "Fighting Joe" Martin and the Jews of Winnipeg, 1893-96.
Manitoba History; 3/22/1998; Trachtenberg, Henry; 11397 words;
|
Street credit: dire need often means assuming greater risks.(Who's Who Banking & Finance--Lenders of Last Resort)(pawnshops and loan sharks)
Los Angeles Business Journal; 10/27/2003; Greenberg, David; 1007 words;
|
(book review)
Judaism: A Quarterly Journal of Jewish Life and Thought; 3/22/2002; Whitfield, Stephen J.; 2512 words;
|
|
|