Pistol
1796-1797 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This flintlock pistol and its pair (IS.55-2005) were made in the royal workshops of Tipu Sultan. The gold Persian inscriptions decorating their steel barrels record that they were made by the leading armourer Sayyid Ma'sum in "Patan", referring to the capital, Srirangapatnam, known to the British as Seringapatam. They are dated 1224 according to Tipu Sultan's idiosyncratic "Mawludi" system that begins with the birth of the Prophet Muhammad, rather than according to the conventional Muslim system. To avoid confusion, Mawludi dates are given in reverse order (4221=1224), and 1224 falls between the years 1796 and 1797 AD.
The barrels are decorated with Persian verses inlaid in gold praising the ruler and eulogising the State. They also have a gold-inlaid tiger mask similar to those found on several of Tipu Sultan's personal weapons, composed of the Arabic words assadullah al-ghalib ("The Lion of God is Triumphant") and their mirror image. The carved wooden stocks have silver mounts chased with flower heads whose petals are in the shape of the tiger stripe found on most of the objects directly associated with Tipu Sultan.
The Muslim kingdom of Mysore was founded by Tipu Sultan's father Haider Ali, a soldier of fortune who deposed an ineffectual Hindu raja in 1766. He enlarged the boundaries of Mysore by conquest, and transformed it into a powerful state with an army reorganised on European lines, offering the only serious threat to British expansion in the region. A key element in the success of the Mysore army lay in its use of firearms incorporating the latest European technology, and replacing old-fashioned matchlocks with flintlocks. Mercenaries, predominantly French, were employed at Mysore and by the time Tipu Sultan inherited the throne, must have trained craftsmen such as Sayyid Ma'sum to make perfect imitations. The unique character of Tipu Sultan's weapons is the prolific use of tiger stripes and motifs in their decoration.
The barrels are decorated with Persian verses inlaid in gold praising the ruler and eulogising the State. They also have a gold-inlaid tiger mask similar to those found on several of Tipu Sultan's personal weapons, composed of the Arabic words assadullah al-ghalib ("The Lion of God is Triumphant") and their mirror image. The carved wooden stocks have silver mounts chased with flower heads whose petals are in the shape of the tiger stripe found on most of the objects directly associated with Tipu Sultan.
The Muslim kingdom of Mysore was founded by Tipu Sultan's father Haider Ali, a soldier of fortune who deposed an ineffectual Hindu raja in 1766. He enlarged the boundaries of Mysore by conquest, and transformed it into a powerful state with an army reorganised on European lines, offering the only serious threat to British expansion in the region. A key element in the success of the Mysore army lay in its use of firearms incorporating the latest European technology, and replacing old-fashioned matchlocks with flintlocks. Mercenaries, predominantly French, were employed at Mysore and by the time Tipu Sultan inherited the throne, must have trained craftsmen such as Sayyid Ma'sum to make perfect imitations. The unique character of Tipu Sultan's weapons is the prolific use of tiger stripes and motifs in their decoration.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Materials and techniques | Walnut, silver and steel with overlaid gold |
Brief description | Silver mounted flintlock pistol made for Tipu Sultan by Sayyid Ma'sum, Mysore, 1796-1797 |
Physical description | Silver mounted flintlock pistol with right-hand lock, with tapering steel barrel formed in two stages, and with gold overlaid lines at the breech and muzzle. Persian verses are overlaid in gold in four panels on the top of the barrel; the cartouches enclosing the two central panels terminate in a gold overlaid tiger calligramme. The walnut full stock is mounted with silver, and there is a silver side plate in tiger-stripe form. The cock in the form of a tiger stripe terminates in a tiger-head chiselled in thre round holding the flint between its jaws. |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Gallery label |
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Credit line | Purchased with Art Fund support |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This flintlock pistol and its pair (IS.55-2005) were made in the royal workshops of Tipu Sultan. The gold Persian inscriptions decorating their steel barrels record that they were made by the leading armourer Sayyid Ma'sum in "Patan", referring to the capital, Srirangapatnam, known to the British as Seringapatam. They are dated 1224 according to Tipu Sultan's idiosyncratic "Mawludi" system that begins with the birth of the Prophet Muhammad, rather than according to the conventional Muslim system. To avoid confusion, Mawludi dates are given in reverse order (4221=1224), and 1224 falls between the years 1796 and 1797 AD. The barrels are decorated with Persian verses inlaid in gold praising the ruler and eulogising the State. They also have a gold-inlaid tiger mask similar to those found on several of Tipu Sultan's personal weapons, composed of the Arabic words assadullah al-ghalib ("The Lion of God is Triumphant") and their mirror image. The carved wooden stocks have silver mounts chased with flower heads whose petals are in the shape of the tiger stripe found on most of the objects directly associated with Tipu Sultan. The Muslim kingdom of Mysore was founded by Tipu Sultan's father Haider Ali, a soldier of fortune who deposed an ineffectual Hindu raja in 1766. He enlarged the boundaries of Mysore by conquest, and transformed it into a powerful state with an army reorganised on European lines, offering the only serious threat to British expansion in the region. A key element in the success of the Mysore army lay in its use of firearms incorporating the latest European technology, and replacing old-fashioned matchlocks with flintlocks. Mercenaries, predominantly French, were employed at Mysore and by the time Tipu Sultan inherited the throne, must have trained craftsmen such as Sayyid Ma'sum to make perfect imitations. The unique character of Tipu Sultan's weapons is the prolific use of tiger stripes and motifs in their decoration. |
Associated object | |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | IS.56-2005 |
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Record created | July 27, 2005 |
Record URL |
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