Gloves appear to be of great antiquity. According to some translations of Homer's The Odyssey, Laërtes is described as wearing gloves while walking in his garden so as to avoid the brambles.[3] (Other translations, however, insist that Laertes pulled his long sleeves over his hands.) Herodotus, in The History of Herodotus (440 BC), tells how Leotychides was incriminated by a glove (gauntlet) full of silver that he received as a bribe.[4] There are also occasional references to the use of gloves among the Romans as well. Pliny the Younger (ca. 100), his uncle's shorthand writer wore gloves during intercourse and in the winter so as not to impede the elder Pliny's work