Weiner Mihályné szerk.: Az Iparművészeti Múzeum Évkönyvei 6. (Budapest, 1963)

HOPP FERENC MÚZEUM - MUSÉE FERENC HOPP - Tóth, Edit: Water-Pots with Gujarati Inscriptions in the Museum

the same. The vessel presented in Fig. 4, dated to the second half of the 17th century, shows only a single difference against the former ones: the lack of the thin ribbon, soldered separately to the support as a stand-ring. In our opinion this form was a carry-over from the shape of the earlier, cast water-pots (Fig. 16). The transition to hammering had a number of advantages against the cumbersome casting; the production of the vessel became simpler, less material was necessary, and the weight of the object decreased. The new tech­nique caused some changes in the form. In our later specimens the stand-ring is supplanted by a truncated cone-shaped pedestal, the concave arch of the shoulder disappears, the vessel takes the shape of a flattened sphere, the neck becomes narrower, the woven ring decorating the neck widens (Fig. 16). A more copious comparative material is necessary in order to define the exact date of this change. We are aware that a typological and chronological attempt to solve the problems, raised by the changes of the lotä-s, on the basis of the few available specimens, would be too bold a venture. As we mentioned before, we limited our study to the task of furnishing some data for an adequate treatment of this interesting group of Indian metallurgy.

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