tiptoparticles.com
Home Page :> About Us :> Place Your Link :> Privacy :> Terms & Conditions :> Submit Article
Search:   
Get 3 way links
 
 

Realty & Property

 

Business & Services

 

Cooking & Drinking

 

Family & Home

 

Self Healing

 

Creative Arts

 

Investment & Finance

 

News & Media

 

Politics & Government

 

Fashion & Lifestyle

 

Travel & Vacation

 

People & Society

 

Computers & Software

 

Teens & Children

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Shopping Online

 

Employment & Careers

 

Fitness & Health

 

Recreation

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Education & Reference

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Research & Science

 

Home Page » Business & Services » Marketing
 

The Varied Faces of the Lanyard

 

It is curious how the use of something can change over time. Like the tailbone or the appendix, many things have survived from the past that have lost all reasons to survive. Yet they do survive, clueless dinosaurs from a previous age that have adapted themselves to newer uses, becoming a croc or a lizard in the process. The lanyard, that curious piece of string that pops up in all places and comes attached with all sorts of things, is one such remnant of a previous age.

It is uncertain as to when the first lanyard came up. And for what purpose. Being basically a piece of string it could have found some useful business in a previous day. Nor can it be said with any conviction that its primary and first use were defined in the army camps of pre-modern Europe. Chances are variants of lanyard were used in other lands for other purposes for hanging sword, or a jacket, or tugging at the beard of a hard taskmaster. However, firm claims as the inventor of this ubiquitous piece of string comes from the army and the navy only. The lanyard was originally a long piece of cord around one meter in length that was used to secure the jack-knife or the sword. The tradition developed of wearing the lanyard on the left shoulder attached to a jack-knife which was tucked into the left breast-pocket. The color and the position (left shoulder or right) have changed from this to that but the lanyard has maintained its ornamental position on the breasts of military men for the last many centuries from tin-pot dictators in the interiors of Africa to stocky four-star Generals in US Army, from pretentious royal princes in funny dresses to fake presidents in Amazon jungles. Other sources maintain that the lanyard was first used to tie the fodder for the horses pulling the cannons. Later, its use deviated to pulling the fire-trigger on the artillery, a use that continues to this day in some older systems. With its expertise with ropes and knots, the navy says the lanyard was its invention. Curiously, in the navy too it ended up at the same place a sort of collar for the shoulder for the men in uniform. Various uses of the lanyard were devised within the camps. Some used it to tie their sabers to their wrists allowing them to fire the pistol with the same hand the word dragoon, French in origin, derives from this usage. Later on when pistols became standard issue, the pistol was attached to the uniform with the lanyard. Everywhere we find that the lanyard stayed close to the main object of the profession of the men in uniform.

Times have changed. The adage that sounded hollow a few years back that the pen is mightier than the sword has fought back in favor of the wielder of intellectual resources. Today, the lanyard is seen more in the company of civilians than in the company of the men in uniform. The lanyard comes attached to the pen, the torch, the knife, the badge, the whistle and what not. As consumer gadgets get more miniaturized, everything from cell phones to iPods and digicams gain the hallowed company of the lanyard. It is a sign of the changing times that the most empowering devices (phones and cameras) are now associated with something that was similarly the companion of symbols of empowerment yesterday (swords and guns).

Not to be left behind, the metaphor of empowerment is sought by charitable causes. MakePovertyHistory, the international campaign to end extreme poverty around the world, has chosen the humble lanyard as a symbol of sympathy with the just cause of liberation from oppression. As the official website itself adds: By supporting Make Poverty History we can prove our role as liberators but not in a way that is painful and boring but exciting and new!. The lanyard can hold the keys to liberation and it also doubles as a mobile phone holder!. There you have it empowerment from the humblest of sources.

Author: Kumar Ravi
 
Author Bio:
Kumar Ravi is a notable scripter. Kumar likes to pen down articles about this field.
This article can be searched using: internet marketing, search engine marketing, online marketing, online marketing business opportunity
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Make Change Easy - Get Involved!
 
How To Run Your Greatest Conference Ever
 
Fleet Washing Expansion Considerations
 
When Customers Complain
 
The End of Quarter One: Are You on Track?
 
Joie de PR?
 
Starting A Local SEO Company
 
3 Advantages of using Electronic Press Releases
 
Risk and HR Managers Must Work Together
 
You can STOP Cold Calling and Make Them Chase After You Instead
 
 
 
Home Page :> Privacy :> Terms & Conditions
Copyright © 2008 www.aaronslist.com