Begging Bowl thumbnail 1
Not on display

Begging Bowl

late 19th century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This carved bowl was originally described in the South Kensington Museum's registers as a 'dervish's wallet', as receptacles of this type were used to carry alms by Muslim mendicant holy men. It is also known by the Iranian term kashkul. It is made from one quarter of a double coconut or coco-de-mer (Lodoicea maldivica or sechellarum), the largest seed in the world and endemic to only two of the 115 Seychelle Islands in the Indian Ocean; the first part of the name derives from the Latin form of 'Louis' (after Louis XV). These enormous seeds, which have separate sexes, were originally known to Europeans only from specimens found floating in the water and were given the designation 'maldivica' from the mistaken belief that they originated in the Maldives. They also once had the name Lodoicea callipyge ('beautiful rump') from their fanciful resemblance in their complete form to a woman's disembodied buttocks.

Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Coconut, carved
Brief description
Begging bowl, carved coconut, India, late 19th century
Physical description
Beggar bowl of carved coconut, secured with two brass handles, carved with flowers and inscriptions.
Dimensions
  • Height: 11.5cm
  • Length: 25.5cm
  • Width: 12.7cm
Object history
This object was donated to the South Kensington Museum (today the V&A) in 1875. Over the course of 1875, Robert Murdoch Smith (the Museum's agent in Iran) negotiated his first major purchase from Jules Richard, a French art-dealer living in Tehran. This consignment was considerable, with valuable artworks in many media: ceramics, metalwork, woodwork, oil paintings, manuscripts and carved stone. Towards the end of the negotiation, Richard added a further list of objects, which included this one: these were given to the museum for free.
Summary
This carved bowl was originally described in the South Kensington Museum's registers as a 'dervish's wallet', as receptacles of this type were used to carry alms by Muslim mendicant holy men. It is also known by the Iranian term kashkul. It is made from one quarter of a double coconut or coco-de-mer (Lodoicea maldivica or sechellarum), the largest seed in the world and endemic to only two of the 115 Seychelle Islands in the Indian Ocean; the first part of the name derives from the Latin form of 'Louis' (after Louis XV). These enormous seeds, which have separate sexes, were originally known to Europeans only from specimens found floating in the water and were given the designation 'maldivica' from the mistaken belief that they originated in the Maldives. They also once had the name Lodoicea callipyge ('beautiful rump') from their fanciful resemblance in their complete form to a woman's disembodied buttocks.
Collection
Accession number
734-1876

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Record createdMay 3, 2005
Record URL
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