Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T06:26:48.515Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Indian Art Objects as Loot

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

Get access

Extract

Let us imagine a graceful bronze image of Dancing Śiva before us. It was perhaps created by a Cola artist in eleventh-century Tamilnad to be installed in a temple to receive offerings of worship, and to parade around the town in a ceremonial palanquin on festival days. From there, this image might have followed any of several paths to stand before us now in a North American museum. Perhaps it was buried under a banyan tree in the fourteenth century when invading Islamic armies, feared for their iconoclasm, marched through the Kaveri delta on their way to Madurai. It could have been disinterred in the nineteenth century, during British rule, by a Tamil workman on a road crew, who showed it to the civil engineer, who brought it to the attention of the District Collector, who passed it on to the Director of Archaeology. In the twentieth century, perhaps, when an international market developed for such objects, it might have ended up in an auction room, a cosmic dance sold to the highest bidder. Or a government expert on culture might have selected it, after its long hibernation in the basement storehouse of its temple, as an image worthy to travel abroad as an ambassador of independent India in the international diplomatics of traveling exhibitions.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1993

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

List of References

Altekar, A. S. 1934. The Rashtrakutas and Their Times. Poona Oriental Series. Poona: Oriental Book Agency.Google Scholar
Balasubrahmanyam, S. R. 1975. Middle Chola Temples: Rājarāja I to Kulottun'ga I (A.D. 985-1070). Faridabad: Thomson Press.Google Scholar
Barthes, Roland. 1957. Mythologies. New York: Hill and Wang.Google Scholar
Bhandarkar, D. R. 1925–26. “Sanjan Plates of Amoghavarsha I.Epigraphia lndica 18:235–57.Google Scholar
Breckenridge, Carol Appadurai. 1977. “From Protector to Litigant— Changing Relations Between Hindu Temples and the Raja of Ramnad.” Indian Economic and Social History Review 14:75106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buhler, Georg, trans. [1886] 1984. The Laws of Manu. Sacred Books of the East, vol. 25. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.Google Scholar
Chidanandamurthy, M. 1973. “The Meaning of 'Pālidhvaja': A Reinterpretation.“In Srikanthika: Dr. S. Srikantha Sastri Felicitation Volume. Mysore: Geetha Book House.Google Scholar
Cohn, Bernard. 1985. “The Transformation of Objects into Artefacts, Antiquities and Art in 19th Century India.“Unpublished paper presented at National Endowment for the Humanities conference, “Patronage in Indian Culture.“Google Scholar
Davis, Richard H. Forthcoming. “Trophies of War: The Case of the Calukya Intruder.“In Asher, Catherine and Metcalf, Thomas, eds., Perceptions of India's Visual Past. Delhi: American Institute of Indian Studies.Google Scholar
Dirks, Nicholas B. 1987. The Hollow Crown: Ethnohistory of an Indian Kingdom. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Fleet, J. F. 1883. “Sanskrit and Old Canarese Inscriptions, No. 127.“Indian Antiquary 12:156-65.Google Scholar
Wilhelm, Geiger, ed. 1925. Cūlavamsa: Being the More Recent Part of the Mahāvamsa. Pali Text Society Text Series, No. 20. London: Humphrey Milford.Google Scholar
Wilhelm, Geiger, trans. 1929. Cūlavamsa: Being the More Recent Part of the Mahāvamsa. Pali Text Society Translation Series, No. 18. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Goetz, Hermann. 1974. “The Kailasa of Ellora and the Chronology of Rashtrakuta Art.“In Studies in the History, Religion and Art of Classical and Medieval India. Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag.Google Scholar
Goyal, Shriram. 1967. A History of the Imperial Guptas. Allahabad: Central Book Depot.Google Scholar
Gunawardana, R. A. L. H. 1979. Robe and Plough: Monasticism and Economic Interest in Early Medieval Sri Lanka. Association for Asian Studies: Monographs and Papers. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Hultzsch, E. 1899a. “Inscriptions in the Pasupatisvara Temple at Karuvur.“South Indian Inscriptions 3:3139.Google Scholar
Hultzsch, E. 1899b. “Inscriptions at Manimangalam.“South Indian Inscriptions 3:6471.Google Scholar
Inden, Ronald. 1985. “The Temple and the Hindu Great Chain of Being.“Purusārtha 8.Google Scholar
Ronald, Inden. 1990. Imagining India. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Ganganatha, Jha, trans. 1920–26. Manusmrti: The Laws of Manu with the Bhāsya of Medhātithi. Calcutta: University of Calcutta.Google Scholar
Julius, Jolly, ed. 1887. Manusmrti; The Code of Manu. London: Trubner.Google Scholar
Keith, Arthur Berriedale, trans. 1920. Rigveda Brahmanas: The Aitareya and Kausitaki Brahmanas of the Rigveda. Harvard Oriental Series, Vol. 25. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Swami, Kevalananda , and Gharpure, J . R , eds. Manusmrti with the Bhāshya of Bhatta Medhātithi. Collections of Hindu Law Texts, No. 9. Poona: Aryasamskriti Mudranalaya.Google Scholar
Khare, G. H. 1936. “Krishnadevaraya of Vijayanagara and the Vitthala Image of Pandharpur.“In Vijayanagara Sexcentenary Commemoration Volume. Dharwar: Vijayanagara Empire Sexcentenary Association.Google Scholar
Kielhorn, F. 1892. “Inscriptions from Khajuraho.“Epigraphia Indica 1:121-52.Google Scholar
Krishna SASTRI, H. 1912. “The Second Vijayanagar Dynasty; Its Viceroys and Ministers.“Annual Report, Archaeological Survey of India, 1908-09. Calcutta: Government Printing.Google Scholar
Krishna Sastri, H. 1920. “The Tiruvalangadu Copper-Plates of the Sixth Year of Rajendra- Chola I.“South Indian Inscriptions 3:385439.Google Scholar
Krishna Sastri, H. 1923. South Indian Inscriptions 4.Google Scholar
Krishnan, K. G. 1984. Karandai Tamil Sangam Plates of Rajendrachola I. Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India, No. 79. Delhi: Archaeological Survey of India.Google Scholar
Krishnasvami Aiyangar, S. 1936. “The Character and Significance of the Empire of Vijayanagara in Indian History.“In Vijayanagara Sexcentenary Commemoration Volume. Dharwar: Vijayanagara Empire Sexcentenary Association.Google Scholar
Longhurst, A. H. 1916–17. “Udayagiri Fort and Temple, Nellore District; The Krishna Temple at Vijayanagar.“In Annual Report of the Archaeological Department, Southern Circle, Madras, 1916-17.Google Scholar
Madras Government, Museum. 1951. Centenary Souvenir (1851-1951). Madras: Government Press.Google Scholar
Mirashi, V. V. 1955. “Bilhari Stone Inscription of Yuvarajadeva II.“Corpus Inscriptionum Indicarum 4:204–24.Google Scholar
Mltter, Partha. 1977. Much Maligned Monsters. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Nagaswamy, R. 1970. Gangaikondacholapuram. Madras: Tamilnadu State Department of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Nelson, J. H. 1868. The Madura Country: A Manual. Madras: Asylum Press.Google Scholar
Nilakanta Sastri, K. A., and Venkataramanayya, N. 1946. Further Sources of Vijayanagara History. Madras: University of Madras.Google Scholar
Parker, Samuel. 1987. “Structure, History and Creativity in the Visual Arts: The Sarnath Asokan Pillar.” Unpublished essay, University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Pathak, K. B. 1907–8. “Kendur Plates of Kirtivarman II.“Epigraphia Indica 9: 200-6.Google Scholar
Pathak, K. B. 1909–10. “Rayagad Plates of Vijayaditya.“Epigraphia Indica 10:1417.Google Scholar
Sitaram Pandit, Ranjit, trans. 1935. Rājataranginī: The Saga of the Kings of Kashmir. Allahabad: The Indian Press.Google Scholar
Sivaramamurti, C. 1964a. Nolamba Sculptures in the Madras Government Museum. Bulletin of the Madras Government Museum, n.s. No. 9. Madras: Government of Madras.Google Scholar
Sivaramamurti, C. 1964b. Royal Conquests and Cultural Migrations in South India and the Deccan. Calcutta: Indian Museum.Google Scholar
Sivasankara Pandiyaji, S. N.d. Celebration ofthe Navaratri Festival at Ramnad in 1892. The Miniature Hindi Excelsior Series, Vol. 4. Madras: Adyar Theosophical Society Library.Google Scholar
Stein, Burton. 1983. “Mahānavami: Medieval and Modern Kingly Ritual in South India.“In Smith, Bardwell, ed., Essays on Gupta Culture. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.Google Scholar
Stein, M. A., ed. 1892. Kalhana's Rājataranginī or Chronicle of the Kings of Kashmir. Bombay: Education Society's Press.Google Scholar
Tartakov, Gary, and Dehejia, Vidya. 1984. “Sharing, Intrusion, and Influence: The Mahisāsuramardinī Imagery of the Calukyas and the Pallavas.“Artibus Asiae 45:287345.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, William. 1835. Oriental Historical Manuscripts. Madras: C. J. Taylor.Google Scholar
Wickremasinghe, Don Martino De Zilva. 1912. “Jetavanarama Slab- Inscription (no. 1) of Mahinda IV.“Epigraphia Zeylanica 1: 213-29.Google Scholar
Williams, Joanna Gottfried. 1982. The Art of Gupta India: Empire and Province. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Yule, Henry, and Burnell, A. C. [1903] 1968. Hobson-Jobson. Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal.Google Scholar