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Kashmir shawl

The Kashmir shawl, the predecessor of the contemporary cashmere shawl, is a type of shawl identified by its distinctive Kashmiri weave and for being made of fine shahtoosh or pashmina wool. Contemporary variants include the pashmina and shahtoosh shawls (often mononymously referred to simply as the pashmina and shahtoosh). In the late 20th century, they evolved to middle-class popularity through generic cashmere products (rather than the higher-grade pashmina), and raffal, shawls woven in the Kashmiri style, but using thicker Merino wool. Originally designed as a covering for men in India, it has evolved in the popular cultures of India, Europe, and the United States as indicators of nobility and rank, heirlooms giving on a girl's coming-of-age and marriage, and subsequently, as artistic elements in interior design.

Kashmir shawl
A portrait of Empress Joséphine wearing a Kashmir shawl and a gown made of Kashmir shawl fabric
TypeShawl
MaterialWool (shahtoosh, pashmina)
Place of originKashmir

Valued for its warmth, light weight and characteristic buta design, the Kashmir shawl trade inspired the global cashmere industry. The shawl evolved into its high-grade, sartorial use in the 13th century and was used in the 16th century by Mughal and Iranian emperors, both personally and for honouring members of their durbar. In the late 18th century, it arrived in Britain, and then in France, where its use by Queen Victoria and Empress Joséphine popularised it as a symbol of exotic luxury and status. The Kashmir shawl has since become a toponym for the Kashmir region itself (cashmere, named after Kashmir), inspiring mass-produced imitation industries in India and Europe, and popularising the buta motif, today known as the Paisley motif after the factories in Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland that sought to replicate it.

Definition

The principal aspects of the shawl are its distinctive Kashmiri weaving technique and fine wool.[1] However, the Kashmir shawl's definition has varied in time and place, depending on various factors such as the material used and its cost, the method of construction, the intended use, and the status of the wearer.[1] Today, shahtoosh shawls are no longer made because of a ban on the trade of products made from the Tibetan antelope.

The definition of the Kashmir shawl has differed in India and in the West. In India, the shawl was worn by men, with the fineness of the shawl indicating nobility or royal favour. In the West, depending on the fashion of the moment, the Kashmir shawl represented different types of commodities, originally worn by men, but thereafter by women and then as decorative items in interior design. The definition has been confused through fakery and imitation. Scholars, vendors and journalists have sometimes mistakenly used the words cashmere and pashmina synonymously,[1][2] or assumed that they are the same because they derive from the same animal. In reality, pashmina is a particularly fine form of cashmere, so all pashmina is cashmere, but not all cashmere is pashmina. In the late 19th century AD, weavers who had migrated to Punjab set up an imitation industry, applying the Kashmiri technique to Merino wool.[3] The resulting shawls were called raffal, and have been classified by some as a species of Kashmir shawls, though the thicker wool means that they lack the distinctive lightness characteristic of the traditional Kashmir shawl.[3] More recently, in the late 1990s, western European and American sellers adopted the more exotic word pashmina to sell plain-weave shawls made from generic cashmere.[4] As a result, the associations with pashmina went from exclusive high fashion to middle-class popularity in 2000.[5][6]

Material

 
Pashmina goats in Ladakh

Kashmir shawls are traditionally made either of shahtoosh or pashmina.[1][7] Shahtoosh wool comes from the fine hairs on the underbelly of the Tibetan antelope.[7] Cashmere derives its name from the home of the Kashmir shawl, and is often incorrectly equated with pashmina. Pashmina and cashmere both come from the Changthangi goat, but pashmina is made from a fine subset of cashmere[2] ranging from 12–16 microns,[8] whereas generic cashmere ranges from 12–21 microns.[8]

Types of wool by fineness
Type of wool Diameter

(μm)

Shahtoosh 10–12
Pashmina 12–16
Cashmere 12–21
Merino wool 18–24
 
A 19th-century Kani shawl

Shahtoosh shawls are made from the hair of the Tibetan antelope which averaging 7–10 microns in diameter, is the finest hair in the world.[1] These derived only from wild animals, grown during the harsh winters and rubbed off on rocks and shrubs in the summer, from where they were collected for weaving.[7] As the fineness of a shawl in India was traditionally seen as a mark of nobility,[7] they were historically reserved for members of the Mughal aristocracy. In the mid-eighteenth century, they became popular after their use by Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and Empress Joséphine of France.[1] In Mughal times, they became known as "ring shawls", for being extremely light, and fine enough that a one metre by two-metre shawl could be pulled whole through a finger ring.[7] They remain known this way today.[9] They today serve as status symbol, valued on average between USD $2,000 and $3,000, but for up to $15,000.[9] Today, the export of shahtoosh shawls is banned under CITES[8] and their production and sale banned under wildlife protection laws in India, China and Nepal.[8] Domestic laws in the US prevent their sale.[8]

Design

Kani shawl

The standard design of Kashmir shawl is the Kani shawl, named after the Kanihama village where it was originally produced.[4][1] It is distinctive for using a variant of the "twill tapestry technique", referred to as such because of its similarity to European tapestry weaving techniques. However, it differs from tapestry weaving because the loom is horizontal instead of vertical, and its operation is closer to brocading.[7] Kashmiri weavers used a distinctive technique, passing a weft over-and-under two warps. Using discontinuous wefts, it varied the weft colour and created distinct colour areas identical on both faces of the fabric. This also facilitated the creation of complex patterns like the buta to be woven onto the shawls.[1][10]

 
The buta design on an 18th-century Kashmiri shawl

Paisley shawl

The Kashmir shawl is closely associated with the Paisley shawl. The paisley design, originating in the buta, derives its name from the town of Paisley in Scotland, which became famous in the early 19th century for its imitation Kashmir shawls with the buta motif.[11] After 1850, many English speakers used to refer to any shawl with the buta design, Kashmiri or otherwise, as a Paisley shawl.[11] Missing fundamentals of the craftsmanship, imitations such as the Angola were short-lived.[12][13]

History

The origins of the Kashmir shawl are a matter of historical debate. The earliest known mentions of an established shawl weaving industry date back to the 11th century AD.[1] The industry was probably older[14] but some have suggested that Kashmir shawls were famous as far back as in the 3rd century BC, in Ashoka's reign.[15] In earlier times, shawls were used as a warm protective garment against cold weather. By the 13th century, Kashmir shawls had risen in status and quality and were commonly used as fashion statements.[1] Shawls were marketed towards the ruling elite and foreign markets.[1] In the 14th century AD, the industry was energised by the enthusiastic patronage of Sultan Zain-ul-Abidin of Kashmir.[1]

16th to 18th centuries

 
Hindu woman from Bombay wearing a Kashmir shawl

In 1526, Babur (1483–1530) founded the Mughal Empire in India, and established the practice of giving khil'at (or "robes of honour", typically made of expensive fabric) to members of their durbar to indicate high service, great achievement, or royal favour.[1] Under Babur, the Mughal khil'at was a set of clothes, which could include a turban, long coat, gown, fitted jacket, sash, shawl, trousers, shirt, and scarf.[4] One or all of these could be made of pashmina and embroidered in gold cloth.[4] In 1586, Kashmir was conquered by Babur's grandson Akbar.[4] In Akbar's time, a pair of Kashmir shawls were an expected part of khil'at ceremonies.[4] Akbar was also known for his love for shahtoosh shawls.[1] After conquering Kashmir, he introduced a requirement that they be woven into lengths long enough for the full body, spawning the jamawar shawl.[4] Until the rule of Shah Jahan (1592–1666), shahtoosh shawls were reserved for Mughal royalty, with only the more common pashmina shawls being gifted to nobility as khil'at.[4]

From the 16th to the early 20th centuries, the Safavid, Zand and Qajar emperors of Iran wore Kashmir shawl fabrics and gifted Kashmir shawls as khil'at within their political and religious practices.[4] In the Iranian elite, both men and women wore Kashmir shawl fabric as fitted clothes, rather than as a loose covering of the upper body.[4]

In the 17th and 18th centuries, political upheaval in Kashmir disrupted the shawl trade. Kashmir came under Afghan and subsequently Sikh rule.[4] In 1819, Ranjit Singh of Punjab conquered Kashmir.[4] In the 1840s, Ranjit Singh's court was lavishly decorated with Kashmir shawls and shawl cloth.[4] He encouraged Kashmiri weavers to settle in Punjabi cities, and used Kashmir shawl cloth to pay allowances to his followers, to grant robes of honour, and to send gifts to other rulers, including the British.[4]

In the Western world

The Kashmir shawl arrived in Europe towards the second half of the 18th century AD, by English and French individuals active in the Indian subcontinent.[1] These officials would gift Kashmir shawls to their wives and other high-status women.[1] Although these shawls later came to be worn exclusively by women,[1] they were originally worn exclusively by men, in line with the Indian practice.[4]

These shawls acquired near-mythical status following their patronage by Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and Empress Joséphine of France, the latter of whom went on to own a collection of between three and four hundred Kashmir shawls.[16][1] Article 10 of the Treaty of Amritsar (1846) which constituted the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, required the Maharaja of Kashmir Gulab Singh to send three pairs of Kashmiri shawls to the British government every year, to be given to Queen Victoria.[17] Even before becoming Empress of India, Queen Victoria adopted the Mughal practice of gifting shawls to visiting dignitaries.[11]

In 19th century England

In nineteenth-century English writing, despite the fact that shawls were worn by men, Kashmiri shawls became coded as women's luxuries. They acquired the status of heirlooms, worn by a girl on her marriage and coming-of-age,[7] and as heirlooms that women would inherit rather than purchase.[11] Their romantic but inaccurate associations with a "mysterious and unchanging East" were encouraged by popular journalism.

 
Painting by John Singer Sargent of women in Kashmir shawls

In 1852, Charles Dickens wrote in the magazine Household Words that "if an article of dress could be immutable, it would be the (Kashmir) shawl; designed for eternity in the unchanging East; copied from patterns which are the heirlooms of caste; and woven by fatalists, to be worn by adorers of the ancient garment, who resent the idea of the smallest change".[18][7] By the 1780s, there were imitation textile centres in Norwich, Edinburgh, and Lyon attempting to recreate the Kashmir shawl.[1] By the 19th century, the original Kashmir shawl (and to some extent the European imitations) were a fashion staple for Western high society.[1] Over time, the shawls began to be seen as a ritual casting off for the European man returning from India, restoring himself to England and Englishness by handing to a woman a garment commonly understood in India to be worn by men.[11] Kashmir shawls thereby came to play different roles in the two societies: a status symbol for Indian men, and a luxury garment for European noblewomen.[1] In Vanity Fair, Jos Sedley returns from Bengal with a "white Cashmere shawl", an indication that it was an original, as imitations were generally patterned.[11] Patterned shawls could take up to 18 months to make and were therefore more likely to be worn by nobility than the prosperous middle class.[11]

Kashmir shawls came to evoke fairytale status and marriage for bourgeois women. In Elizabeth Gaskell's 1854 novel North and South, Margaret, the heroine, modelled a Kashmir shawl, with Gaskell describing the shawl as having a "spicy Eastern smell", "soft feel" and "brilliant colour".[19] When Margaret met her future husband, Gaskell described her attire as completed by "a large Indian shawl which hung about her in heavy folds and which she wore as an empress wears her drapery".[20]

As heirlooms, Kashmir shawls came to be seen as items of great value. Since English law restricted women's abilities to inherit land, the Kashmir shawl served as an item of high exchange value that a woman could carry.

In 19th century France

 
In this French fashion plate, the woman on the right wears a gown made from Kashmir shawl fabric and an apple-green Kashmir shawl, with white gloves, and white sandals.

The Kashmir shawl first appeared in French fashion magazines and portraits in 1790, but only arrived in significant quantities after the French campaign in Egypt and Syria (1798–1801). When initially presented with them Empress Joséphine wrote to her son Eugène, "I find them hideous. Their great advantage lies in their lightness, but I doubt very much if they will ever become fashionable."[16] However, she changed her mind quickly and eventually collected three or four hundred shawls, some made of lace, gauze and muslin, but most being Kashmiri shawls.[16] French magazines were attentive to her dress styles and reinterpreted in fashion plates, giving the shawl widespread influence.[16] Through her enthusiastic example, the Kashmir shawl gained status as a fashion icon in Paris.[16] The cashmere shawls suited the French well, providing the needed warmth, while adding visual interest to white French gowns through the traditional teardrop buta pattern and discreet floral motifs.[16] It became a symbol of French bourgeois status from the Bourbon Restoration (1815–48) through the Second French Empire (1852–70).[4] As a class marker, they fulfilled 19th century French tastes because they looked rich, had extensive ornamentation, artistic qualities, and were made of expensive raw materials.[4] Just as in England, they acquired the status of wedding gifts.[4] Unmarried women were discouraged from wearing Kashmir shawls because doing so would "lead people to believe that they are possessed of an unbridled love of luxury and deprive themselves of the pleasure of receiving such finery from a husband".[4]

In 19th century America

 
A painting of Château de Malmaison, the residence of the Empress Joséphine; a Kashmir shawl in characteristic buta design is draped over the fauteuil.

Around the time the Kashmir shawl became fashionable in Britain, Euro-American women on the northeastern coast of the United States began wearing them.[4] Shawl fashion in the United States followed western European fashion trends. Shawls were popular holiday presents throughout the 1860s, and Indian shawls were considered wise purchases in 1870. By the end of the 1870s, however, imitation shawls began to eclipse the genuine Indian shawls in advertisements. Between the 1880s and World War I (1914–1918), wealthy European and Euro-American women began using Kashmir shawls as decorative pieces on pianos instead of on themselves.

Influences

The paisley design, originating in the Indian buta, derives its name from Paisley, Scotland, where imitation shawls were manufactured.[11] In French, the word cachemire refers to the paisley's teardrop-shape itself, because of the close links between the pattern and the material.[11] A talcum powder named "Cashmere Bouquet" is still sold by an American mail order business which specializes in commodity nostalgia, with an advertisement situating the product in the 1870s.[4] Over time, repeated European and Euro-American usage disassociated the word "cashmere" from its geographical origin and may have weakened its link to the "exotic".[4] China and Mongolia have become geographical references for cashmere sweaters in thirty-eight U.S. mail order catalogs such as Lands' End.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Skarratt, Ben (August 2018). "From India to Europe: The Production of the Kashmir Shawl and the Spread of the Paisley Motif" (PDF). Global History of Capitalism Project.
  2. ^ a b Franck, Robert R (2001). Silk, Mohair, Cashmere and Other Luxury Fibres. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. ISBN 1-59124-772-1. OCLC 57250698.
  3. ^ a b Hāṇḍā, Omacanda (1998). Textiles, Costumes, and Ornaments of the Western Himalaya. New Delhi: Indus. ISBN 81-7387-076-4. OCLC 1008525135.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Maskiell, Michelle (Spring 2002). "Consuming Kashmir: Shawls and Empires, 1500–2000". Journal of World History. University of Hawai'i Press (on behalf of World History Association). 13 (1): 27–65. doi:10.1353/jwh.2002.0019. JSTOR 20078943. S2CID 144868279.
  5. ^ "Pushing Pashmina: Securing a Wrap". Wall Street Journal. 1999-11-06. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  6. ^ Safire, William (2000-01-16). "The Way We Live Now: 1-16-00: On Language; Pashmina". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h Irwin, John (1973). The kashmir shawl. London: H.M. Stationery Off. ISBN 0-11-290164-6. OCLC 3241655.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Identification Guidelines for Shahtoosh and Pashmina" (PDF). US Fish and Wildlife Service: National Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratory, Ashland, Oregon. 2002. (PDF) from the original on 27 March 2020. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  9. ^ a b Colacello, Bob (28 June 2011). "O.K., Lady, Drop the Shawl". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 2020-03-26.
  10. ^ Emery, Irene (1994). The Primary Structures of Fabrics: An Illustrated Classification. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-01623-2. OCLC 31607600.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i Daly, Suzanne (2011). The Empire Inside: Indian Commodities in Victorian Domestic Novels. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-07134-0. OCLC 617509005.
  12. ^ McCarthy, Mary (1969). A Social Geography of Paisley. Paisley Public Library. p. 79. ISBN 978-0-9500416-0-5.
  13. ^ Montgomery, Florence M. (1984). Textiles in America 1650-1870 : a dictionary based on original documents, prints and paintings, commercial records, American merchants' papers, shopkeepers' advertisements, and pattern books with original swatches of cloth. Internet Archive. New York ; London : Norton. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-393-01703-8.
  14. ^ Moti, Chandra (1954). Bulletin of the Prince of Wales Museum of Western India. Bombay: the Trustees. p. 7.
  15. ^ Brar, Prabhdip (2014). "The Rungs in the Making of the Indigenous Shawl from Kashmir". Contemporary Issues and Trends in Fashion, Retail and Management. Hyderabad: National Institute of Fashion Technology. pp. 509–515. ISBN 978-81-7800-297-2.
  16. ^ a b c d e f DeLorme, Eleanor P.; Chevallier, Bernard (2005). Joséphine and the Arts of the Empire. Los Angeles: J.P. Getty Museum. p. 167. ISBN 0-89236-801-2. OCLC 57432294.
  17. ^ Treaty of Amritsar.
  18. ^ Dickens, Charles (1852). "Shawls". Household Words. 5 (127): 552–556.
  19. ^ Gaskell 2010, p. 39.
  20. ^ Gaskell 2010, p. 99.

Sources

kashmir, shawl, predecessor, contemporary, cashmere, shawl, type, shawl, identified, distinctive, kashmiri, weave, being, made, fine, shahtoosh, pashmina, wool, contemporary, variants, include, pashmina, shahtoosh, shawls, often, mononymously, referred, simply. The Kashmir shawl the predecessor of the contemporary cashmere shawl is a type of shawl identified by its distinctive Kashmiri weave and for being made of fine shahtoosh or pashmina wool Contemporary variants include the pashmina and shahtoosh shawls often mononymously referred to simply as the pashmina and shahtoosh In the late 20th century they evolved to middle class popularity through generic cashmere products rather than the higher grade pashmina and raffal shawls woven in the Kashmiri style but using thicker Merino wool Originally designed as a covering for men in India it has evolved in the popular cultures of India Europe and the United States as indicators of nobility and rank heirlooms giving on a girl s coming of age and marriage and subsequently as artistic elements in interior design Kashmir shawlA portrait of Empress Josephine wearing a Kashmir shawl and a gown made of Kashmir shawl fabricTypeShawlMaterialWool shahtoosh pashmina Place of originKashmirValued for its warmth light weight and characteristic buta design the Kashmir shawl trade inspired the global cashmere industry The shawl evolved into its high grade sartorial use in the 13th century and was used in the 16th century by Mughal and Iranian emperors both personally and for honouring members of their durbar In the late 18th century it arrived in Britain and then in France where its use by Queen Victoria and Empress Josephine popularised it as a symbol of exotic luxury and status The Kashmir shawl has since become a toponym for the Kashmir region itself cashmere named after Kashmir inspiring mass produced imitation industries in India and Europe and popularising the buta motif today known as the Paisley motif after the factories in Paisley Renfrewshire Scotland that sought to replicate it Contents 1 Definition 1 1 Material 1 2 Design 1 2 1 Kani shawl 1 2 2 Paisley shawl 2 History 2 1 16th to 18th centuries 2 2 In the Western world 2 2 1 In 19th century England 2 2 2 In 19th century France 2 2 3 In 19th century America 2 3 Influences 3 References 4 SourcesDefinition EditThe principal aspects of the shawl are its distinctive Kashmiri weaving technique and fine wool 1 However the Kashmir shawl s definition has varied in time and place depending on various factors such as the material used and its cost the method of construction the intended use and the status of the wearer 1 Today shahtoosh shawls are no longer made because of a ban on the trade of products made from the Tibetan antelope The definition of the Kashmir shawl has differed in India and in the West In India the shawl was worn by men with the fineness of the shawl indicating nobility or royal favour In the West depending on the fashion of the moment the Kashmir shawl represented different types of commodities originally worn by men but thereafter by women and then as decorative items in interior design The definition has been confused through fakery and imitation Scholars vendors and journalists have sometimes mistakenly used the words cashmere and pashmina synonymously 1 2 or assumed that they are the same because they derive from the same animal In reality pashmina is a particularly fine form of cashmere so all pashmina is cashmere but not all cashmere is pashmina In the late 19th century AD weavers who had migrated to Punjab set up an imitation industry applying the Kashmiri technique to Merino wool 3 The resulting shawls were called raffal and have been classified by some as a species of Kashmir shawls though the thicker wool means that they lack the distinctive lightness characteristic of the traditional Kashmir shawl 3 More recently in the late 1990s western European and American sellers adopted the more exotic word pashmina to sell plain weave shawls made from generic cashmere 4 As a result the associations with pashmina went from exclusive high fashion to middle class popularity in 2000 5 6 Material Edit Pashmina goats in Ladakh Kashmir shawls are traditionally made either of shahtoosh or pashmina 1 7 Shahtoosh wool comes from the fine hairs on the underbelly of the Tibetan antelope 7 Cashmere derives its name from the home of the Kashmir shawl and is often incorrectly equated with pashmina Pashmina and cashmere both come from the Changthangi goat but pashmina is made from a fine subset of cashmere 2 ranging from 12 16 microns 8 whereas generic cashmere ranges from 12 21 microns 8 Types of wool by fineness Type of wool Diameter mm Shahtoosh 10 12Pashmina 12 16Cashmere 12 21Merino wool 18 24 A 19th century Kani shawl Shahtoosh shawls are made from the hair of the Tibetan antelope which averaging 7 10 microns in diameter is the finest hair in the world 1 These derived only from wild animals grown during the harsh winters and rubbed off on rocks and shrubs in the summer from where they were collected for weaving 7 As the fineness of a shawl in India was traditionally seen as a mark of nobility 7 they were historically reserved for members of the Mughal aristocracy In the mid eighteenth century they became popular after their use by Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and Empress Josephine of France 1 In Mughal times they became known as ring shawls for being extremely light and fine enough that a one metre by two metre shawl could be pulled whole through a finger ring 7 They remain known this way today 9 They today serve as status symbol valued on average between USD 2 000 and 3 000 but for up to 15 000 9 Today the export of shahtoosh shawls is banned under CITES 8 and their production and sale banned under wildlife protection laws in India China and Nepal 8 Domestic laws in the US prevent their sale 8 Design Edit Kani shawl Edit Main article Kani ShawlThe standard design of Kashmir shawl is the Kani shawl named after the Kanihama village where it was originally produced 4 1 It is distinctive for using a variant of the twill tapestry technique referred to as such because of its similarity to European tapestry weaving techniques However it differs from tapestry weaving because the loom is horizontal instead of vertical and its operation is closer to brocading 7 Kashmiri weavers used a distinctive technique passing a weft over and under two warps Using discontinuous wefts it varied the weft colour and created distinct colour areas identical on both faces of the fabric This also facilitated the creation of complex patterns like the buta to be woven onto the shawls 1 10 The buta design on an 18th century Kashmiri shawl Paisley shawl Edit Main article Paisley shawls The Kashmir shawl is closely associated with the Paisley shawl The paisley design originating in the buta derives its name from the town of Paisley in Scotland which became famous in the early 19th century for its imitation Kashmir shawls with the buta motif 11 After 1850 many English speakers used to refer to any shawl with the buta design Kashmiri or otherwise as a Paisley shawl 11 Missing fundamentals of the craftsmanship imitations such as the Angola were short lived 12 13 History EditThe origins of the Kashmir shawl are a matter of historical debate The earliest known mentions of an established shawl weaving industry date back to the 11th century AD 1 The industry was probably older 14 but some have suggested that Kashmir shawls were famous as far back as in the 3rd century BC in Ashoka s reign 15 In earlier times shawls were used as a warm protective garment against cold weather By the 13th century Kashmir shawls had risen in status and quality and were commonly used as fashion statements 1 Shawls were marketed towards the ruling elite and foreign markets 1 In the 14th century AD the industry was energised by the enthusiastic patronage of Sultan Zain ul Abidin of Kashmir 1 16th to 18th centuries Edit Hindu woman from Bombay wearing a Kashmir shawl In 1526 Babur 1483 1530 founded the Mughal Empire in India and established the practice of giving khil at or robes of honour typically made of expensive fabric to members of their durbar to indicate high service great achievement or royal favour 1 Under Babur the Mughal khil at was a set of clothes which could include a turban long coat gown fitted jacket sash shawl trousers shirt and scarf 4 One or all of these could be made of pashmina and embroidered in gold cloth 4 In 1586 Kashmir was conquered by Babur s grandson Akbar 4 In Akbar s time a pair of Kashmir shawls were an expected part of khil at ceremonies 4 Akbar was also known for his love for shahtoosh shawls 1 After conquering Kashmir he introduced a requirement that they be woven into lengths long enough for the full body spawning the jamawar shawl 4 Until the rule of Shah Jahan 1592 1666 shahtoosh shawls were reserved for Mughal royalty with only the more common pashmina shawls being gifted to nobility as khil at 4 From the 16th to the early 20th centuries the Safavid Zand and Qajar emperors of Iran wore Kashmir shawl fabrics and gifted Kashmir shawls as khil at within their political and religious practices 4 In the Iranian elite both men and women wore Kashmir shawl fabric as fitted clothes rather than as a loose covering of the upper body 4 In the 17th and 18th centuries political upheaval in Kashmir disrupted the shawl trade Kashmir came under Afghan and subsequently Sikh rule 4 In 1819 Ranjit Singh of Punjab conquered Kashmir 4 In the 1840s Ranjit Singh s court was lavishly decorated with Kashmir shawls and shawl cloth 4 He encouraged Kashmiri weavers to settle in Punjabi cities and used Kashmir shawl cloth to pay allowances to his followers to grant robes of honour and to send gifts to other rulers including the British 4 In the Western world Edit The Kashmir shawl arrived in Europe towards the second half of the 18th century AD by English and French individuals active in the Indian subcontinent 1 These officials would gift Kashmir shawls to their wives and other high status women 1 Although these shawls later came to be worn exclusively by women 1 they were originally worn exclusively by men in line with the Indian practice 4 These shawls acquired near mythical status following their patronage by Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom and Empress Josephine of France the latter of whom went on to own a collection of between three and four hundred Kashmir shawls 16 1 Article 10 of the Treaty of Amritsar 1846 which constituted the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir required the Maharaja of Kashmir Gulab Singh to send three pairs of Kashmiri shawls to the British government every year to be given to Queen Victoria 17 Even before becoming Empress of India Queen Victoria adopted the Mughal practice of gifting shawls to visiting dignitaries 11 In 19th century England Edit In nineteenth century English writing despite the fact that shawls were worn by men Kashmiri shawls became coded as women s luxuries They acquired the status of heirlooms worn by a girl on her marriage and coming of age 7 and as heirlooms that women would inherit rather than purchase 11 Their romantic but inaccurate associations with a mysterious and unchanging East were encouraged by popular journalism Painting by John Singer Sargent of women in Kashmir shawls In 1852 Charles Dickens wrote in the magazine Household Words that if an article of dress could be immutable it would be the Kashmir shawl designed for eternity in the unchanging East copied from patterns which are the heirlooms of caste and woven by fatalists to be worn by adorers of the ancient garment who resent the idea of the smallest change 18 7 By the 1780s there were imitation textile centres in Norwich Edinburgh and Lyon attempting to recreate the Kashmir shawl 1 By the 19th century the original Kashmir shawl and to some extent the European imitations were a fashion staple for Western high society 1 Over time the shawls began to be seen as a ritual casting off for the European man returning from India restoring himself to England and Englishness by handing to a woman a garment commonly understood in India to be worn by men 11 Kashmir shawls thereby came to play different roles in the two societies a status symbol for Indian men and a luxury garment for European noblewomen 1 In Vanity Fair Jos Sedley returns from Bengal with a white Cashmere shawl an indication that it was an original as imitations were generally patterned 11 Patterned shawls could take up to 18 months to make and were therefore more likely to be worn by nobility than the prosperous middle class 11 Kashmir shawls came to evoke fairytale status and marriage for bourgeois women In Elizabeth Gaskell s 1854 novel North and South Margaret the heroine modelled a Kashmir shawl with Gaskell describing the shawl as having a spicy Eastern smell soft feel and brilliant colour 19 When Margaret met her future husband Gaskell described her attire as completed by a large Indian shawl which hung about her in heavy folds and which she wore as an empress wears her drapery 20 As heirlooms Kashmir shawls came to be seen as items of great value Since English law restricted women s abilities to inherit land the Kashmir shawl served as an item of high exchange value that a woman could carry In 19th century France Edit In this French fashion plate the woman on the right wears a gown made from Kashmir shawl fabric and an apple green Kashmir shawl with white gloves and white sandals The Kashmir shawl first appeared in French fashion magazines and portraits in 1790 but only arrived in significant quantities after the French campaign in Egypt and Syria 1798 1801 When initially presented with them Empress Josephine wrote to her son Eugene I find them hideous Their great advantage lies in their lightness but I doubt very much if they will ever become fashionable 16 However she changed her mind quickly and eventually collected three or four hundred shawls some made of lace gauze and muslin but most being Kashmiri shawls 16 French magazines were attentive to her dress styles and reinterpreted in fashion plates giving the shawl widespread influence 16 Through her enthusiastic example the Kashmir shawl gained status as a fashion icon in Paris 16 The cashmere shawls suited the French well providing the needed warmth while adding visual interest to white French gowns through the traditional teardrop buta pattern and discreet floral motifs 16 It became a symbol of French bourgeois status from the Bourbon Restoration 1815 48 through the Second French Empire 1852 70 4 As a class marker they fulfilled 19th century French tastes because they looked rich had extensive ornamentation artistic qualities and were made of expensive raw materials 4 Just as in England they acquired the status of wedding gifts 4 Unmarried women were discouraged from wearing Kashmir shawls because doing so would lead people to believe that they are possessed of an unbridled love of luxury and deprive themselves of the pleasure of receiving such finery from a husband 4 In 19th century America Edit A painting of Chateau de Malmaison the residence of the Empress Josephine a Kashmir shawl in characteristic buta design is draped over the fauteuil Around the time the Kashmir shawl became fashionable in Britain Euro American women on the northeastern coast of the United States began wearing them 4 Shawl fashion in the United States followed western European fashion trends Shawls were popular holiday presents throughout the 1860s and Indian shawls were considered wise purchases in 1870 By the end of the 1870s however imitation shawls began to eclipse the genuine Indian shawls in advertisements Between the 1880s and World War I 1914 1918 wealthy European and Euro American women began using Kashmir shawls as decorative pieces on pianos instead of on themselves Influences Edit The paisley design originating in the Indian buta derives its name from Paisley Scotland where imitation shawls were manufactured 11 In French the word cachemire refers to the paisley s teardrop shape itself because of the close links between the pattern and the material 11 A talcum powder named Cashmere Bouquet is still sold by an American mail order business which specializes in commodity nostalgia with an advertisement situating the product in the 1870s 4 Over time repeated European and Euro American usage disassociated the word cashmere from its geographical origin and may have weakened its link to the exotic 4 China and Mongolia have become geographical references for cashmere sweaters in thirty eight U S mail order catalogs such as Lands End 4 References Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cashmere wool shawls a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Skarratt Ben August 2018 From India to Europe The Production of the Kashmir Shawl and the Spread of the Paisley Motif PDF Global History of Capitalism Project a b Franck Robert R 2001 Silk Mohair Cashmere and Other Luxury Fibres Boca Raton FL CRC Press ISBN 1 59124 772 1 OCLC 57250698 a b Haṇḍa Omacanda 1998 Textiles Costumes and Ornaments of the Western Himalaya New Delhi Indus ISBN 81 7387 076 4 OCLC 1008525135 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Maskiell Michelle Spring 2002 Consuming Kashmir Shawls and Empires 1500 2000 Journal of World History University of Hawai i Press on behalf of World History Association 13 1 27 65 doi 10 1353 jwh 2002 0019 JSTOR 20078943 S2CID 144868279 Pushing Pashmina Securing a Wrap Wall Street Journal 1999 11 06 ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved 2020 03 27 Safire William 2000 01 16 The Way We Live Now 1 16 00 On Language Pashmina The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 03 27 a b c d e f g h Irwin John 1973 The kashmir shawl London H M Stationery Off ISBN 0 11 290164 6 OCLC 3241655 a b c d e Identification Guidelines for Shahtoosh and Pashmina PDF US Fish and Wildlife Service National Fish and Wildlife Forensics Laboratory Ashland Oregon 2002 Archived PDF from the original on 27 March 2020 Retrieved 27 March 2020 a b Colacello Bob 28 June 2011 O K Lady Drop the Shawl Vanity Fair Retrieved 2020 03 26 Emery Irene 1994 The Primary Structures of Fabrics An Illustrated Classification London Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 01623 2 OCLC 31607600 a b c d e f g h i Daly Suzanne 2011 The Empire Inside Indian Commodities in Victorian Domestic Novels Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 07134 0 OCLC 617509005 McCarthy Mary 1969 A Social Geography of Paisley Paisley Public Library p 79 ISBN 978 0 9500416 0 5 Montgomery Florence M 1984 Textiles in America 1650 1870 a dictionary based on original documents prints and paintings commercial records American merchants papers shopkeepers advertisements and pattern books with original swatches of cloth Internet Archive New York London Norton p 147 ISBN 978 0 393 01703 8 Moti Chandra 1954 Bulletin of the Prince of Wales Museum of Western India Bombay the Trustees p 7 Brar Prabhdip 2014 The Rungs in the Making of the Indigenous Shawl from Kashmir Contemporary Issues and Trends in Fashion Retail and Management Hyderabad National Institute of Fashion Technology pp 509 515 ISBN 978 81 7800 297 2 a b c d e f DeLorme Eleanor P Chevallier Bernard 2005 Josephine and the Arts of the Empire Los Angeles J P Getty Museum p 167 ISBN 0 89236 801 2 OCLC 57432294 Treaty of Amritsar Dickens Charles 1852 Shawls Household Words 5 127 552 556 Gaskell 2010 p 39 Gaskell 2010 p 99 Sources EditGaskell Elizabeth Cleghorn 5 May 2010 North and South London ISBN 978 1 4070 9088 7 OCLC 881282240 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kashmir shawl amp oldid 1138308599, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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