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KASHI , or KAsI, formerly the Persian word for all glazed and enamelled pottery irrespectively; now the acceptedSee also: term for certain kinds of enamelled tile-See also: work, including brick-work and tile-mosaic work, manufactured in See also: Persia and parts of See also: Mahommedan See also: India, chiefly during the 16th and 17th centuries.'
Undoubtedly originating in the Semitic word for See also: glass, kas,
Kashf, the See also: Hindu name for the sacred city of See also: Benares, has no ceramic significance.it is quite possible that the name kashi is immediately derived from See also: Kashan, a See also: town in Persia noted for its See also: faience
.
This See also: ancient pottery site, in turn, probably receives its name from the old-See also: time industry; as a " city of the plain " it would obviously have no claim to the farther-eastern suffix shan, meaning a See also: mountain
.
See also: Sir See also: George Birdwood wisely considers that " the See also: art of See also: glazing eathenware has, in Persia, descended in an almost unbroken tradition from the See also: period of the greatness of See also: Chaldaea and See also: Assyria
.
. . the name has, by which it is known in Arabic and See also: Hebrew, carries us back to the manufacture of glass and enamels for which See also: great Sidon was already famous 15oo years before Christ
.
. . the designs used in the decoration of See also: Sind and See also: Punjab glazed pottery also go to prove how much these See also: Indian wares have been influenced by Persian examples and the Persian tradition of the much earlier art of See also: Nineveh and See also: Babylon " (The See also: Industrial Arts of India, 1880)
.
The two native names for glass, kanch and shisha, See also: common to Persia and India, are, seemingly, modifications of kashi
.
The Indian tradition of See also: Chinese potters settling in bygone days at See also: Lahore and Hala respectively, still lingers in the Punjab and Sind provinces, and evidently travelled eastward from Persia with the Moguls
.
Howbeit in Lahore the name Chfnf is sometimes wrongly applied to kashi work; and the so-called Chfnf-ka-Rauza See also: mausoleum at See also: Agra is an instance of this misuse
.
It now seems an established fact that a colony of Chinese ceramic experts migrated to See also: Isfahan during the 16th century (probably in the reign, and at the invitation, of Shah Abbas I.), and there helped to revive the jaded pottery industry of that See also: district
.
Kashi work consisted of two kinds: (a) Enamel-faced tiles and bricks of strongly fired red earthenware, or terra-cotta; (b) Enamel-faced tiles and tesserae of lightly fired " lime-See also: mortar," or See also: sandstone
.
Tile-mosaic work is described by some authorities as the true kashi
.
From examination of figured tile-mosaic patterns, it would appear that, in some instances, the shaped tesserae had been cut out of enamelled slabs or tiles after firing; in other examples to have been cut into shape before receiving their facing of coloured enamel
.
Mosaic panels in the fort at Lahore are described by J . L . See also: Kipling as " showing a gul desta., or foliated See also: pattern of a branching See also: tree, each leaf of which is a See also: separate piece of pottery." Conventional representations of foliage, See also: flowers and fruit, intricate geometrical figures, interlacing arabesques, and decorative calligraphy—inscriptions in Arabic and Persian—constitute the ordinary kashi designs
.
The See also: colours chiefly used were See also: cobalt blue, copper blue (See also: turquoise colour), See also: lead-antimoniate yellow (See also: mustard colour), manganese See also: purple, iron See also: brown and tin
See also: white
.
A colour-scheme, popular with
See also: Mogul and contemporary Persian kashigars, was the design, in cobalt blue and copper blue, reserved on a ground of deep mustard yellow
.
Before applying the enamel colours, the rough face of the tile, or the tesserae, received a thin coating of slip of variable composition
.
It is probably owing to some defect in this See also: part of the See also: process, or to imperfect firing, that the enamelled tile surfaces on many old buildings, particularly on the See also: south See also: side, have weathered and flaked away
.
In India the finest examples of kashi work are in the Punjab and Sind provinces
.
At Lahore, amongst many beautiful structures, the most notable are the mosque of See also: Wazir Khan (A.D
.
1634) and the gateways of three famous pleasure gardens, the Shalamar Bagh (A.D
.
1637), the Gulabi Bagh (A.D
.
1640), and the Charburji (c
.
A.D . 1665) . At See also: Tatta the Jami Masjid, built by Shah Jahan (c
.
A.D
.
1645), is a splendid See also: illustration; whilst in that " vast cemetery of six square See also: miles " on the adjacent Malki See also: plateau, are numerous Mahommedan tombs (A.D
.
1570–1640) with extraordinary kashi ornamentation
.
See also: Delhi, See also: Multan, See also: Jullundur, Shandara, Lahore cantonment, Agra and Hyderabad (Sind), all possess excellent monuments of the best period viz. those erected during the reigns of See also: Akbar and See also: Jahangir (A.D
.
1556–1b28)
.
In Persia, at Isfahan, Kashan, Meshed and See also: Kerman are a fey buildings and ruins showing the old kashi work; the palace of Chehel Situn in Isfahan, built during the reign of Shah Abbas I
.
(c
.
A.D
.
1600), is a magnificent specimen of this art
.
Occasional revivals of the manufacture have taken place both in India and Persia . Mahommed Sharif, aSee also: potter of Jullundur in the Punjab, reproduced the Mogul enamelled tile-work in 1885, and there is a See also: manuscript record of a certain Ustad See also: Ali Mahommed, of Isfahan, who revived the Persian processes in 1887
.
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B.*; C
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varanasi is very holy and energetic city of india ... we travelled here and enjoyed here more and more morning start with people ganga bathing and sunrise and whole day people enjoy their life very smoothly .. saying here local language * shanti shanti* also here many many yoga center ,,, we did yoga here in yoga education training society .. there e.mal id is - ashokdutta3@yahoo.com.. nice class,, and yes bengalitola area is very nice area for cheap marketing ..but just need bargening .. we made also fool here by auto ricksaw... but it is o.k. overall good experience of varanasi,,,
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