[CPProt.net] Auctioning the Sword of Tipu Sultan
MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Thu Jul 28 20:52:40 CEST 2005
Auctioning the Sword of Tipu Sultan
By Darryl DMonte**
July 28, 2005
As many as 64 artefacts belonging to the 18th-century Indian ruler Tipu
Sultan fetched £1.23 million after two major Indian bidders vied with each
other at a controversial auction at Sothebys in London in May 2005.
The chief attraction, a gold-inlaid sporting gun belonging to Tipu Sultan
and decorated with Tipus signature, the roaring tiger, was sold for
£100,000. The beautifully engraved gun was presented to Lord Cornwallis
after the defeat of Tipu at Srirangapatnam in the former Mysore state in
south India in 1799.
The tremendous interest in the auction was evident from the very first item
to go under the hammer: an officers sword and gilt-edged saber with a tiger
on the hilt, which fetched £13,000well over the estimated price of £4,000.
The artifacts included swords, porcelain tiger toys, bows and arrows,
armbands, guns, tents, and even a tiger paw taken from the legs of Tipus
throne. There was much demand for a pearl model of a tiger mauling an
English solider, Tipus favorite image, which fetched £26,000. This is an
iconic representation of Tipus powerful persona: he fancied himself The
Tiger of Mysore, devouring recalcitrant Englishmen who came his way.
In a perceptive article in the Guardian newspaper on the eve of the auction,
William Dalrymple, author of the best-selling The White Moguls, described
how Tipu was a thorn in the flesh of the British Raj. He was portrayed as a
Muslim dictator whose family had usurped power in a military coup, he
writes. According to British sources, this chief of state was an intolerant
bigot a furious fanatic with a rooted and inveterate hatred of
Europeans who had perpetually on his tongue the projects of jihad. He was
also deemed to be oppressive and unjust ... [a] sanguinary tyrant, [and a]
perfidious negotiator.
It was, in short, time to take out Tipu Sultan of Mysore . Richard Wellesley
was sent out to India in 1798 as governor general with specific instructions
to effect regime change in Mysore and replace Tipu with a Western-backed
puppet. Recent work by scholars has succeeded in reconstructing a very
different Tipu to the one-dimensional fanatic invented by Wellesley .
The flamboyant liquor baron and MP, Vijay Mallya, has bought several of Tipu
Sultans former belongings and restored them to India where he means to set
up a museum.
Tipu, it is now clear, was one of the most innovative and far-sighted rulers
of the pre-colonial period. He tried to warn other Indian rulers of the
dangers of an increasingly arrogant and aggressive west. Know you not the
custom of the English? he wrote in vain to the Nizam of Hyderabad (one of
the worlds richest men) in 1796. Wherever they fix their talons they
contrive little by little to work themselves into the whole management of
affairs.
One of the buyers of Tipus artifacts, for which he spent £500,000, was the
Indian liquor baron and MP, Vijay Mallya, whose empirenow the second
biggest in the world in volumeis based in Bangalore , the capital of former
Mysore state. For Mallya, retrieving Tipus artifacts is plainly a matter of
lost honor. He is undeterred by the row over the import and reexport of
Tipus 3.5-foot golden sword with a diamond-studded scabbard, which he
bought at another London auction in 2003 for $350,000. He shipped it to
India and then sent it earlier this year to be displayed at the Asian Art
Museum in San Francisco.
Mallya is a flamboyant figure who loves the media and speaks his mind. His
Kingfisher beer once sponsored the West Indies cricket team. His groups
turnover exceeds $2 billion a year. He bid against Osians, a Mumbai-based
art auction house, also on the telephone. Supposedly neither knew of the
others identity during the auction.
Mallya said as a proud Indian he would like to bid for as many treasures of
Tipu as possible so that he could restore them to where they originally
belonged. He said he had consulted India s Finance Minister P. Chidambaram
on the procedures concerning the import of antique items that he said
rightfully deserve to be in India . Mallya intends to set up a museum to
house Tipus antiques.
The MP expressed surprise over the objections from India s Central Excise
and Customs on his decision to first import and reexport Tipus sword to the
United States . As an Indian citizen, I thought I was doing something good
for my country by acquiring this famous sword, he stated. I have kept the
finance minister fully informed, both personally and in writing, on the
import and reexport of the sword that was once wielded by the Tiger of
Mysore. He said Chidambaram had granted him exemption from customs duty to
be paid on the sword.
On the eve of the 2004 parliamentary elections, Mallya brandished the
gleaming sword with a 36-inch (90 cm) bladeat a rally of his party workers
in Bangalore . He also displayed the sword for a week at Srirangapatnam, the
capital of Tipus kingdom near Mysore , in May 2004, to mark the anniversary
of the rulers death.
>From the engraved border of the blade, it is learned that the glittering
sword was seized by British troops after Srirangapatnam fell after Tipus
death. The British Army later shipped Tipus many artifacts to London .
The sale came amid strong protests by many people in India , as well as
non-resident Indians. They said the treasures were looted by the
conquering British at the Battle of Srirangapatnam in 1799a defining moment
in Britains colonial sweep of Indiaand ought to have been handed back to
either the government of India or Tipus descendants who live in Kolkata.
The sale was preceded by strong protests by Indians abroad, who registered
their outrage by e-mail. Web sites such as Sulekha encouraged its members to
write their protests to Sothebys.
The British, when they ruled India , virtually walked away with many rare
artifacts and treasures from the various kings and empires, the Web site
said, adding, It was literally a royal loot and scoot. The appeal was
reproduced on the Cultural Property Protection Net, a global list-serve.
However, there was no Indian government move to either buy back any of the
artifacts or try to block the sale. According to Indian diplomatic sources,
there is no government policy on the issue. We have to look at these on a
case-by-case basis. Theres so much of Indian art abroadthe government
cannot buy all that back, sources quoted on a news Web site said.
A previous Indian high commissioner in London , L. M. Singhvi, was
instrumental in intervening in the matter of provenance of rare and valuable
Indian artifacts, managing to put a stop to an auction on one occasion.
He persuaded wealthy Indian businessmen to buy back a manuscript belonging
to Indian Nobel literary laureate Rabindranath Tagore and then handed it
back to the West Bengal state chief minister. In the 1990s, the government
also bought at a London auction letters written by Gandhi to his son.
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**Darryl DMonte is the founder-president of the International Federation of
Environmental Journalists. He is also the chairperson of the Forum of
Environmental Journalists of India (FEJI) and a syndicated columnist and
freelance writer. He has published two books: Temples or Tombs? Industry
Versus Environment: Three Controversies (New Delhi: Center for Science &
Environment, 1985) and Ripping the Fabric: The Decline of Mumbai and Its
Mills (New Delhi: OxfordUniversity Press, 2002). He was previously the
resident editor of the Indian Express (1979-1981) and of the Times of India
(1988-1994) in Mumbai. Your e-mails will be forwarded to him by contacting
the editor at artculture at iolteam.com.
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