Masculine
Jewelery
Vanity, a love of opulence and deep aesthetic sense gave the Rajas and Ranas
of Rajasthan a great fondness for jewellery. The men were as elaborately and
dazzling dressed as the women, with jewelry that often rivaled that of their
wives. It was a status symbol and a portable display of wealth, and consequently,
power Turban jewellery was the prerogative of king, his close family or the
members of his entourage (including his horse).
The turbian itself would be heavily encrusted (with jewels and fastened with
a gem set kalangi or aigrette. Men also wore necklaces of pearls and precious
stones, earrings, jeweled sashes around their waists and several rings on every
finger. The ornament worn in front on the turban is called a sarpech. It was
often extended into a golden band set with emeralds, rubies, diamonds.
Pearls were greatly valued by the Maharajas and they often wore double or triple
strings of pearls with pendants of precious stones round their necks. The sashes
round their waists were heavily jewelled as were the clasps or buckles of their
sword belts. They wore armlets and amulets around their forearms, and their
wrists strings of pearls and bracelets of gold and gems. Even the slippers of
the royalty were encrusted with pearls and gems.
Emperors wore rings of diamonds emeralds, rubies and other precious stones at
least one on each finger and often more. Traditionally gold is not enough on
the feet since it is considered a metal of the gods, but in Rajasthan the anklet
of gold worn on one or both feet by men was a sign of nobility.
Tod's Annals and Antiquities of Rajasthan notes that after the siege of Chittaur,
the equivalent of 170 lbs. Of gold bangles or anklets were found on the bodies
of men who had fallen, all the men who wore them having been of noble blood
or knights. Masculine jewellery was not confined to the articles worn on the
body alone. The Rajasthani princes had gold epaulets, gem encrusted sword hilts.
Dagger sheath swords scabbards and hookah mouthpieces. Their horses were as
finely bedecked as they themselves were, and it is said that the horse of Rajasthani
Maharaja was worth more than our cities on account of the jewels he wore. The
commoner of Rajasthan has traditional worn jewellery too, though what he wears
is made from more modest metals like silver and gems are substituted by colored
glass. Earrings, armlets and anklets of silver are still commonly seen adorning
the rural Rajasthani male. Males also wear necklace, earnings and lucky charms,
which are considered to ward off evil.
Gems & Jewelery in Rajasthan
: Masculine Jewelery | Feminine
Jewelery | Textile Ornamentation
| Other Materials | Gemstones
| Jewelery Centres
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