the end of archery tradition of south india
  • http://www.atarn.org/india/maharaja.htm

    Tanjavur Bows

    The raja described the bows he trained with as shorter recurved
    bows, made out of metal. He recalled a tradition that the bow
    should be as tall as the individual, but he remembered his bows as
    shorter, maybe 36" when braced. A couple of examples of these short
    metal recurve bows are on display in the Government Museum of
    Madras. Both steel and brass bows were used by members of royal
    families in competition during the eighteenth and nineteenth
    centuries.

    Steel bows have a long history in India, as very early texts make
    mention of steel bows. By the time of the Mughal period (beginning
    mid-1500s), steel bows that were highly decorated, sometimes with
    gold and silver inlay, were fixtures in royal households. Though
    there is evidence that steel bows were earlier used in warfare, by
    the end of the seventeenth century of so, they may have become
    weapons for royal display. Several sources maintain that the range
    of a steel bow was limited in comparison with the composite bows of
    India. However, Robert P. Elmer, in his classic work, Target
    Archery, notes an advantage of a steel bow. Being of metal,
    it "never needed to be unstrung and so it could be kept at hand in
    the house as a weapon for instant defense."

    The Tanjavur raja stated he trained with a bow made out of brass, a
    metal that many archery aficionados whom I have since spoken with
    have questioned. But the king was emphatic: his bow was brass. He
    may have meant bronze, as in India, the two terms are used inter-
    changeably.

    The king described his bow as short, rounded, both in the grip and
    along its body, and decorated with a floral motif etched in the
    back. The ears of the bow were highly articulated, curling towards
    the back of the bow. He also drew a picture of what he called the
    kalasam (see figure 1), a tear-drop shaped plate projecting out from
    the back of the bow above the grip that served to fix the aiming
    point when shooting. He recalled the strength drawing the bow
    required of him, noting that the extent to which a bow was drawn
    depended upon an individual's ability. He remembered the bow string
    being made out of animal--perhaps cow--gut.

    The raja said he has no idea what happened to the bows he remembers
    in the palace. Simply lost is how he put it. He did remember one
    bow that represented the royal line when his father held public
    audiences, or durbar as it is known in India. He had an idea that
    the bow might be found in a local goddess temple where it was
    routinely kept, as a number of royal rituals centred around the
    power derived from and associated with the goddess tradition.

    One important annual ritual known as Dasara comes at the end of the
    autumn Navaratra goddess festival also called Durgapuja. In part
    the Navaratra festival celebrates the goddess's association with
    military success as there are several mythic accounts of the goddess
    Durga slaying a demon to restore order in the world. The festival
    is also associated with an episode from the Ramayana that
    exemplifies royal military success.

    Undertaken on Vijayadasami, the tenth day of Navaratri, Dasara
    likewise has overtones of a victory celebration, recalling victories
    of the past and ensuring continued success in the future. It is
    marked by the worship of the royal weapons, today symbolized by two
    swords. In the past royal bows were also consecrated in this
    ceremony. This rite which pays homage to the emblems of kingship is
    rooted in an understanding of the relationship between the goddess
    and sovereign power. In this rite, the royal weapons are understood
    to be empowered by the goddess's presence.

    _ivaji, the seventeenth century Marathi military leader who founded
    the Tanjavur royal line, is said to have received his sword from the
    goddess Bhavani, his line's tutelary deity. According to one
    account, he kept the sword on the goddess's altar when not in use;
    likewise the present raja thought the bow that represented his line
    was kept in, and might still be found in the goddess temple. He
    also noted that the Dasara celebration is still undertaken in
    Tanjavur, though the victory now invoked is conquest of evil rather
    than military success.

    In addition to the consecration of royal weapons on the day of
    Vijayadasami, the Maratha kings of Tanjavur demonstrated their
    archery skills in a pavilion in front of the goddess temple. That
    pavilion is called the seemollanghan chavadi, a name that translated
    to mean the site representing the imperial power, or ability to
    cross borders (seema=border; ullanghan=to cross; chavadi=building).

    There in an event that echoes the scene in the Mahabharata that I
    have described above, the king would take aim and shoot at an
    specified object to symbolize his prowess as well as his ability to
    overcome any adversary, whether human or in the form of a malevolent
    force. The demonstration was a statement of the king's sovereignty
    and the extension of his protection over his domain. Likewise,
    because of its auspiciousness, the day of Vijayadasami was when
    princes were introduced to martial arts, including archery. The day
    marked the beginning of their formal training under an eminent guru.

    Initiation Rite

    The present raja was initiated into archery at the age of 13, the
    age of puberty, with a formal ceremony. In this initiation, he was
    ritually bound both his teacher and to his bow, before he was
    allowed to draw it. The rite was undertaken at the proper
    astrological moment, the avittam nakshatra, an asterism identified
    with Mahisa, a form of the goddess, that occurs during the Tamil
    month of Avani. The initiation ceremony was done in accordance with
    South Indian ritual procedure; the young prince was tied to his guru
    with a yellow thread fastened around his wrist as a priest chanted
    mantras that fortified the bond. The preceptor then handed the
    prince the bow he was to use during his training, whereupon he was
    instructed in the ritual process that followed. First he was to
    place flowers on the bow and arrows--in effect to invoke and honour
    the force of the goddess present in the weapon--and to recognize the
    divine presence in that bow by consecrating it with kumkum, a red
    powder used on temple images. After anointing the bow with kunkum,
    the prin

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