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3 août 2017

A gemset and enamelled sword (tulwar) hilt, Benares, Late 18th-early 19th century

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Lot 151. A gemset and enamelled sword (tulwar) hilt, Benares, Late 18th-early 19th century. Hilt 7¾in. (19.6cm.) long. Estimate £25,000 - GBP 35,000. Price realised GBP 40,000. © Christie's Image Ltd 2015

Of typical form with upper suspension loop, the ground of green enamel with pink floral highlights, set with a series of diamonds in gold mounts forming rosettes and floral sprays, hand guard withmakara head finial with agate eyes, with original similarly decorated chape, minor loss of enamels.

ProvenanceAnon sale in these rooms, 10th October 2013, lot 187

NoteThe present hilt uses enamels of a very distinctive palette. There are three basic colours - pink, green and white. The green ground is found on a number of early enamelled vessels, notably a covered jar in Cleveland (Mark Zebrowski, Gold, Silver and Bronze from Mughal India, London, 1997, pl.29, p.52). The shading of the enamels that is found here, particularly in the pink, appears to be a later feature, and is typical of Benares. The pink enamel of Benares was apparently introduced in the late 18th century by Qaysar Agha, an Afghan from Kabul, who had learnt the craft from Persian enamellers. The pink motifs, normally flowers and buds as here, were painted on white enamel with brushes made of squirrels' tail hair. By the 1880s the craft was almost non-existent and the last great Benares enameller, Babbu Singh, died in 1923 (Pedro Moura Carvalho, Gems and Jewels of Mughal India. The Nasser D. Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, London, 2010, p.128). A pair of anklets in the Khalili Collection share very similar decoration to ours, with the elegant pink flower and small gold accents painted directly onto the green (Carvalho, op. cit., no.54, p.129). Those are attributed to the 19th century.

Another jeweled tulwar, although without the elegant ground of enamel that ours has, is in the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (Joseph M. Dye III, The Arts of India, Virginia, 2001, no.199, p.423). A hilt and chape, again without the enamel, but with similar floral spray to the chape is in the Al-Sabah Collection, catalogued as 2nd-3rd quarter 17th century (Keene, op.cit, no.13.9, p.148). An elegantly enameled tulwar recently sold in these Rooms, 4 October 2012, lot 189.

Christie's. Art of the Islamic and Indian Worlds, 23 April 2015, London

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