Traditional
Ornaments of Punjab
Rig-Veda, the oldest book in the world, mentions
ornaments worn by the gods. Rudra, a Vedic deity,
is described as "shining with brilliant gold
ornaments" and "wearing" an adorable, uniform
necklace". According to this book the demons
also had plenty of gold and jewels and the kings
and sages prayed to the God for valuables of
that kind. Kakshivat, the sage, prayed for a
son "decorated with golden earrings and jewel
necklace".
No doubt jewellery making is an ancient craft
that goes back to the cave man and its popular
use in ancient India is well established.
Jewellery in India also has had social and economic
implications. It is an investment as also a
saving for emergencies. The jewellery given
to the bride at the time of the marriage becomes
her own possession called stridhan, woman's
wealth. This was in addition to the love of
personal adornment inherent in the women folk.
But for mortal humans it also symbolises the
concept of immortality. Precious stones and
precious metals, distinguished by this classification
from other substance have, throughout the ages,
stood for power and wealth. And this concept
of power and wealth, as imbibed through ornaments,
seems to have remained integrated in the psyche
of the Punjabi women through the ages and remarkably
so despite a stream of war and rapine that marked
the life of the people of the land of five rivers
with continuous vicissitudes.
Ornaments, as symbol of power, wealth and feminity,
and also as an investment by the Punjabi women,
are found in many varieties and forms. B.H.
Baden-Powell, in his book Handbook of the Manufactures
and Arts of the Punjab, published in 1872, lists
97 names of ornaments used in Punjab. And this
list is by no means exhaustive, because an endless
variety of ornaments are used in local parlance,
often only locally understood, and each little
change in the size or pattern of an ornament
merits a different name.
The reason for the prolification of names is
the multiple variations of the same piece of
ornament. For instance, an ornament called sagi
is a central head stud that supports the phulkari
or dupatta or other headgear. It is a hemispherical
boss with raised work, all over with floral
patterns carved out in horizontal circles, encased
in lines and dots and dashes, and a star in
the centre. Now there are half-a-dozen varieties
of sagi. When at the top-centre a coloured stone
is fixed in it, it becomes sagi uchhi. Where
several round beads are hung at the edge with
silver chains, it becomes sagi motianwali. When
two additional sagis are linked to the upper
side they are known as sagi phul. A slight variation
in its complex shape turns it into sagi chandiari.
When green or blue enamelling is done on it,
it becomes sagi meenawali. This ornament is
also known as sisphul, chaunk or choti phul.
In addition to it there are more ornaments used
for the head, followed by ornaments used for
the ears, the neck, the arms, the fingers, the
anklets and the feet. Thus the names of traditional
ornaments used in Punjab may well run into hundreds.
According to the handbook of Manufactures and
Arts of the Punjab, there is a complete range
of traditional jewellary worn by the Men and
Women of Punjab, not only for the enhancement
of physical beauty but also for the retainment
of the traditional Punjab culture.
Athough ornaments are much influenced by changing
fashions, their continuity remains alive by
peridocial revivals. And this is also true of
the ornaments used by Punjabi Women, for many
discarded designs have recently been gaining
a fresh popularity. Some designs, however, remain
always in vogue.
Gold has remained the most valuable as well
as the most prominent metal for making ornaments.
It was procured from several sources. According
to Monograph on the Gold and Silver Works of
the Punjab, compiled by E.D. Maclagan, and published
in 1890, gold was procured from several sources.
Its local source has been several of the small
seasonal rivulets that descend from lower reaches
of Himalaya and the Shivalik range of mountains.
But the gold found in the sand of rivers has
been - quite insignificant, and has had to be
imported. The English, Australian and European
gold was termed locally as passa and it came
in the form of a lump or ingot. Panna or patra
is the gold in the form of leaves. When old
ornaments are melted down and sold in lump they
appear in various sizes and shapes with various
rates, and is known as desi passa.
Several types of coins used to be melted and
then made into ornaments in Punjab, such as
Russian mohar, Jaipur mohar and ashrafi, Dutch
ducats, Aurangzeb mohar, old mohars of Murshedabad
and Farrukhebad etc. Russian gold was imported
largely in the shape of five-rouble pieces,
known as battis. The purest gold of all is known
as kundan and is used for beating out gold leaves.
It is also very generally used in setting stones,
whence the seller of stones or murassakar is
often known as kundansaz.
The interest in getting ornaments of gold has
not dwindled despite the fact that the price
of the gold has gone up more than three thousand
times in nearly a hundred years. One may not
be inclined to believe that the prices of gold
ornaments as recorded in the North Indian Notes
and Queries of January 1892 were as under:
Kara sada, or plain bracelet., 2 annas per tola
of gold, of which 1/2 anna went to the goldsmith;
karajarau, orjewelled bracelet, one rupee per
tola, of which the goldsmith took half; gokharu
or serrated bracelet, two annas a tola; bahi
or solid tube-like armlet, 6 annas per tola,
of which the goldsmith took half; paunchi or
beaded wristlet, 12 annas per tola; bazuband,
12 annas a tola, of which the goldsmith got
rupee one a pair.
After gold, the next metal of priority was the
silver. The only source of its local availability
was Waziri Rupi Mines in Kulu which have now
been worked for many decades. Most of the. silver,
therefore, was imported from Europe into Amritsar
via Bombay. Chinese silver was also imported.
The coin most commonly melted for silver was
the Nanakshahi or Sikh rupee, the silver of
which was very commonly used for ornaments.
More modern Sikh coins were known to the trade
as Rajshahi and mainly represented by Patiala
coinage. The Nandrami rupee from Kabul was used
in the western districts, and was considered
the next best silver after the Nanakshahi. Shah
Shuja's and Dost Muhammad's coins were also
held to be the best and were much in use in
making ornaments on the frontier. Silver prepared
from melted ornaments was also in use.
The gold and silver work, as far as the plain
form of the article required, or as far as it
can receive the required pattern by merely hammering
on to a die or into a cold mould, is done by
the sunar or gold-smith. If the ornament has
then to be ornamented with bossed patterns,
it goes to the chatera, the embosser and chaser.
If jewels are to be set, the enamelling at the
back is done by a minakar, and then the stone
is set into the places prepared by the goldsmith
by the marassiakar or kundansaz, whose sole
*ork consists in putting some lac into the receptacle
or hollow in the gold prepared to receive the
stone, putting on a tinsel or foil prepared
by the bindligar and then pressing in the stone,
putting an a gold rim to keep it in place.
Who can resist the spell that is cast by the
sparkle of a precious stone, by the mysterious
glow of a pearl, or by the transcendent purity
of gold . It has been said the 'purpose of ornaments
is to light a kind of fire in a women's heart',
it is, therefore, equally important to get ornaments
made of pure metal.