Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s golden quiver to be auctioned in UK

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Maharaja Ranjit Singh’s golden quiver to be auctioned in UK

Thursday, 11 October 2018 | Pioneer | London

A gold-thread-embroidered, velvet-clad leather bow and arrow holder made for Maharaja Ranjit Singh leads a set of Indian treasures to go under the hammer in London later this month.

The exquisite quiver, believed to have been made for ceremonial purposes rather than to be used in battle by the Sikh emperor – known as the Lion of Punjab – is estimated to fetch between 80,000 pounds and 120,000 pounds when it comes up for auction at the Bonhams Islamic and Indian Art sale on October 23.

“This is a wonderful piece from the fabled Treasury of Lahore, and all the circumstantial evidence points to it being the one made in 1838 for Ranjit Singh, Lion of the Punjab – the state’s greatest and most famous leader,” said Oliver White, Bonhams Head of Indian and Islamic Art.

“The quiver was made purely for ceremonial purposes, and appears to have been rarely worn. As a result, it is in excellent condition,” he notes.

According to Bonhams historians, archery played an important role in Sikh military culture. Long after bows and arrows were superseded by more modern weaponry, they retained a ceremonial and symbolic significance, especially among the nobility who would appear in public wearing an embroidered quiver at their side.

It is believed that the Maharaja commissioned a quiver in 1838 to wear at the wedding of his eldest son and heir, Kharak, and he appears to be wearing the one in the sale – or one extremely similar to it – in a painting of the same year by the French artist Alfred de Dreaux, now in the Louvre Museum in Paris, the auction house said.

Ranjit Singh died in 1839, plunging the Punjab into instability which prompted the East India Company to invade and annex the state.

At the conclusion of the First Anglo- Sikh war in 1846, the victorious Company acquired the Royal Treasury in Lahore, including the famed Koh-i-Noor diamond and the Timur Ruby, which were sent back to London as many of the gifts for Queen Victoria in England. According to historical records, at some point, the quiver passed into the hands of the First Marquess of Dalhousie, Governor General of India 1847-54.

“The Treasury also served as a workshop making luxury items for the court and it seems certain that the quiver for sale was produced there,” a Bonhams statement notes.PTI

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