The Indian CraftsmanDescription: The author has treated his subject from three points of view; the village, the town and the palace or temple, i.e. where the craftsman lived, worked and had their patrons. He has also minutely examined how the caste system, religion and the guild set up standards of quality and enforced their strict adherence. He has devoted an entire chapter to throw light on the system of education and training that ensure and regulated the right number of craftsmen for every craft at a particular period so that at no period there was neither a surplus nor a deficit of craftsmen. Ten appendices add further information from different angels. This book is indeed a welcome resurection at this particular time; for the traditional craftsmen are disappearing. The philosophy that sustained them through vicissitudes seems no longer valid. All those who have a love for Indian crafts and who want to either practise or preserve them will find this an excellent book. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 16
Page 3
... receiving a fixed proportion of sheaves of grain from the crop collected on the threshing floor , or they might be ... received each a share of grain for each " plough " of cultivated Interesting light on village self - government is ...
... receiving a fixed proportion of sheaves of grain from the crop collected on the threshing floor , or they might be ... received each a share of grain for each " plough " of cultivated Interesting light on village self - government is ...
Page 9
Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy. Besides the amount received from fines , the different guilds draw an income by levying fees on any person beginning to practise his craft . This custom prevails in the cloth and other industries , but no fee ...
Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy. Besides the amount received from fines , the different guilds draw an income by levying fees on any person beginning to practise his craft . This custom prevails in the cloth and other industries , but no fee ...
Page 11
... received the cattle , themselves and their people , viz . , their relations , and the relations of the latter , had to supply ghi to the treasury of the Lord , as long as the sun and moon endure , at the daily rate of one urakku of ghi ...
... received the cattle , themselves and their people , viz . , their relations , and the relations of the latter , had to supply ghi to the treasury of the Lord , as long as the sun and moon endure , at the daily rate of one urakku of ghi ...
Contents
THE VILLAGE CRAFTSMAN | 1 |
THE CRAFT GUILDS OF THE GREAT CITIES | 5 |
THE FEUDAL CRAFTSMAN IN INDIA AND CEYLON | 14 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Indian Craftsman: With a Short Biography and Tributes Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
Ahmedabad Ananda ancient art and craft artisans artist Arts of India beautiful blacksmith Brahmans Buddha Buddhist builders building carpenter caste century ceremony Ceylon cloth colour competition Coomaraswamy Craft Guilds craftsmanship craftsmen cultivated culture decorated departmental Disava district duties E.B. Havell European festival five give gold goldsmiths granted handicraft hereditary Hindu honour important Indian Art Indian craftsman Industrial Arts inscription interesting Jataka jewellery kammalar Kandy Kandyan king's kiriya of land Kosala Kottal-badde labour Lafcadio Hearn lamp living Mahavamsa manors Maratha master mediaeval merchant Mitrananda modern one's organisation ornament painter painting palace Pataliputra patron payment person piece plaster potters practice present pupil Raja Ramayana received regulation relation religious royal armoury Sanskrit servants share Sinhala Sinhalese Sir George Birdwood skill Smith social society Sopara Sultan supply tamarind seed temple tenant things tion trade guilds traditional vihara village community wages washerman workshop