Lot 100
  • 100

A SILVER PANDAN, CENTRAL INDIA, DECCAN, 17TH CENTURY OR LATER

Estimate
1,500 - 2,000 GBP
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Description

  • Silver
  • 7 1/8 x 8 1/8 inches
Of cylindrical waisted form with a slightly convex base, the domical cover with an inverted rim and small fluted knop-form finial, later punched letters and numbers, possibly inventory records, on the cover and twice on the body

Catalogue Note

The elegant plain form is immediately reminiscent of the domed architecture of the Deccani Sultanates. This architectural inspiration is shared with a larger group of pandans, several of which are in bidriware of the 17th century (Zebrowski 1997, p.266, nos.452, 453 and 454). The use of architectural forms on metal boxes may be inherited from medieval Persian practice but an awareness of contemporary dome forms is apparent in the Deccani examples (Zebrowski 1997, p.264).  

The chewing of pan involves the mixing of thin slices of the nut of the areca palm with lime paste enveloped in a fresh leaf of the betel tree (Zebrowski 1997, p.263). The associations of the habit with a leisurely lifestyle imbued it with connotations of courtly life. In a miniature of 1570, depicting the Sultan of Ahmadnagar, the use of pan seems to be used as emblemmatic of royal status (Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, inv.no.SupplĂ©ment persan 1572, fol.26). In a relatively large container such as this, with no internal divisions, it is assumed that its purpose was the storage of the unassembled materials for betel chewing.