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Subject:musikinstrument made of shells.
Posted By: steve Thu, Mar 19, 2009 IP: 123.231.93.134

How old is this musikintrument in shells. Are the instrument make in Tibet or China? They use it in tempel. 10 inch long. Somebody can tell more obout the intstrument. How old it is. Maybee value. What country it is made. If i is made of silver and what it is made of more than shells. The musikintrument was use in the tempel cermony.







Subject:Re: musikinstrument made of shells.
Posted By: Bill H Fri, Mar 20, 2009

Steve, the conch shell is one of the "Eight Treasures of Buddhism" (Ba Bao in Chinese) and would have been used traditionally as a horn, to call the faithful to worship. The practice has roots in Hindu legend, wherein a conch shell horn or "Sankh" was used to assemble forces for battle (see Wikipedia for more). This one is in the Tibetan style, which is common as well in Nepal, where the Vajrayana or Tantric form of Buddhism also is practiced. I believe the colored inlays usually are blue turquoise and red coral. In my opinion, formed during a couple of decades working, traveling and collecting in Asia, the quality of work on this piece is typical of late 20th century tourist and gift wares; i.e., the chased pattern in the silvery metal lacks refinement; the stone chips are irregularly spaced; and the piece appears to have been artificially dirtied to simulate age. Rubbing filth on an implement made for religious ritual is incongruous to its purpose and repugnant to believers, though something modern fabricators often do to appease the curious Western mindset that tends to equate grime with antiquity. Regards, Bill H


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