GoGuides Verified Text

HANAPER

SHA-256 integrity check: match
Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:hanaper:219651e8031d
Section
Hash Algorithm
sha256
Stored Hash
30d49610e7751695742e8b932675e1fac74f81335b81d3136ef6ba7e2789be62
Computed Hash
30d49610e7751695742e8b932675e1fac74f81335b81d3136ef6ba7e2789be62
Normalizer
ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:01
Source URL

Verified Text

hanaper, properly a case or basket to contain a "hanap" (o. eng. _hnaep_: cf. dutch _nap_), a drinking vessel, a goblet with a foot or stem; the term which is still used by antiquaries for medieval stemmed cups. the famous royal gold cup in the british museum is called a "hanap" in the inventory of charles vi. of france. the word "hanaper" (med. lat. _hanaperium_) was used particularly in the english chancery of a wicker basket in which were kept writs and other documents, and hence it became the name of a department of the chancery, now abolished, under an officer known as the clerk or warden of the hanaper, into which were paid fees and other moneys for the sealing of charters, patents, writs, &c., and from which issued certain writs under the great seal (s. r. scargill-bird, _guide to the public records_ (1908). in ireland it still survives in the office of the clerk of the crown and hanaper, from which are issued writs for the return of members of parliament for ireland. from "hanaper" is derived the modern "hamper," a wicker or rush basket used for the carriage of game, fish, wine, &c. the verb "to hamper," to entangle, obstruct, hinder, especially used of disturbing the mechanism of a lock or other fastening so as to prevent its proper working, is of doubtful origin. it is probably connected with a root seen in the icel. _hemja_, to restrain, and ger. _hemmen_, to clog.