Thatcher, who died in 2013, was Britain's longest-serving prime minister
of the 20th century and the only woman to have held the office, but is
remembered by many on the left of British politics as highly divisive.
Handbags owned by late British prime minister Margaret Thatcher,
whose apocryphal use of them to bludgeon opponents gave rise to the
term "handbagging", are to be auctioned after a museum said talks about
adding items from her wardrobe to its collection had led nowhere.
The bags are among 350 "historic and personal lots",
also including clothes, signed copies of speeches, Thatcher's wedding
dress, her red prime ministerial dispatch bag and items of jewellery,
that the auctioneer Christie's said on Tuesday would be offered at its
London showroom on Dec. 15 and later online.
Thatcher,
who died in 2013, was Britain's longest-serving prime minister of the
20th century and the only woman to have held the office, but is
remembered by many on the left of British politics as highly divisive.
The
term "handbagging" was coined in the 1980s by Thatcher's fellow
Conservative member of parliament Julian Critchley to describe her style
in cabinet meetings, the Oxford English Dictionary says, defining it as
an action by a woman to "verbally attack or crush (a person or idea) ruthlessly and forcefully".
The
auction was announced after London's Victoria & Albert Museum
(V&A), Britain's main repository of historic articles of clothing,
said in a statement carried by British media that it did not deem the
articles appropriate for its collection.
"Several
years ago, a general discussion took place to explore whether some
pieces from the wardrobe of Baroness Thatcher might be added to the
V&A's collection," the museum added later, in a statement sent to Reuters. "These conversations did not develop." ($1 = 0.6487 pounds)
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