Palanquin Ring, 1100s-1200s. Creator: Unknown.

Palanquin Ring, 1100s-1200s. Creator: Unknown.

2-737-270 - Heritage Art/Heritage Images

Palanquin Ring, 1100s-1200s. When members of the royal family or priesthood traveled in a public festival procession or to a temple like Banteay Chhmar to make offerings or participate in a ceremony, they would be carried in a palanquin, or a covered litter. Portable objects of veneration, such as bronze images or a sacred fire, were also carried on palanquins. The palanquins had wooden poles, hanging seats or raised platforms, and bronze fittings cast in intricate forms and gilt, lending the palanquins a sumptuous quality. This ring, which supported a suspended seat, would have hung on a hook attached to a wooden pole. The body of the ring is shaped in the form of a pair of nagas , or serpents. The flanges, or protrusions, on the top and sides are stylized spines of the serpent’s body, and the heads rear up on either side. In a richly textured cluster of separately cast figures on both sides of the ring are images of composite bird-human, monkey-human, and elephant forms.


Image Details


Medium
  1. Bronze

Picture Type
  1. Sculpture

Digital Image Size

Pixel Dimensions (W x H) : 4217x4237
File Size : 52,346kb


Aliases

  1. 2011.151
  1. 169272
  1. 0940025565
  1. 2-737-270
  1. 2011.151
  1. 2737270


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