{"id":73110,"date":"2026-02-10T21:25:54","date_gmt":"2026-02-11T02:25:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/articles\/how-the-raj-learned-to-love-chintz\/"},"modified":"2026-02-11T08:52:43","modified_gmt":"2026-02-11T13:52:43","slug":"how-the-raj-learned-to-love-chintz","status":"publish","type":"articles","link":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/articles\/how-the-raj-learned-to-love-chintz\/","title":{"rendered":"How the Raj learned to love chintz"},"content":{"rendered":"<p align=\"left\"><strong><em>By <\/em>Catriona Luke<\/strong>&nbsp; <strong><em> <\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><strong>The Friday Times<\/strong>: 18 Aug 2017 <\/p>\n<p>The design aesthetic of Pakistan continues to be unequalled  anywhere in the world. Catriona Luke traces its history <\/p>\n<p>        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"400\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image001.jpg\" alt=\"Description: How the Raj learned to love chintz\"> <\/p>\n<p>      Chintz, manufactured in  Europe, obtained from Peshawar, in 1869, by a British officer &#8211; the designs  imitate Indian patterns<\/p>\n<p>In the tragedy of August 1947, largely as the result of the  decisions made by Mountbatten, when seventeen per cent of the population of the  newly named Pakistan &ndash; around 4.7 million Hindus and Sikhs &ndash; crossed the border  into India and 6.5 million came the other way, it is largely forgotten how  despairing the remnants of the British Raj were in the western subcontinent.<\/p>\n<p>Over five generations, from the mid nineteenth century, so many  ICS officials and their families loved this part of the world. The most sought  after postings in British India were Peshawar and Quetta. Lahore, in the late  nineteenth century with little more than 70 ICS (Indian Civil Service)  officials, had been made a thriving city of education, impressive architecture  and brisk economy. For Karachi, clean water and sanitation systems were  delivered by rebellious former railway engineer and pani walla James Strachan,  often in the face of fierce Raj opposition. Railways connected the region  north-south, and west into Balochistan.<\/p>\n<p>I think they loved the western subcontinent too for its people.  The history of the region, always a strange British obsession, also fell into  their hands like a ripe plum. Kipling writes, &ldquo;Most assistant commissioners  develop a bent for some special work after their first hot weather in the  country&hellip;. [some are] bitten with a mania for district work, Ghuznivide coins or  Persian poetry; while some, who come of farmer&rsquo;s stock find that the smell of  the earth after the rains gets into their blood and calls them to &lsquo;develop the  resources of the Province&rsquo;.&rdquo; Under Alexander Cunningham, surveyor general of  archaeology in British India, it would unlock the history of Harappa and  Mohenjodaro.<\/p>\n<p align=\"left\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"619\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image001_0000.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-o.jpg\"> <br \/>\n        Made in Europe, obtained from Peshawar, 1869 &ndash; manufactured for  the South Asian market<\/p>\n<p>Rudyard Kipling&rsquo;s father, Lockwood Kipling, formerly head of the  JJ School of Art in Bombay, had arrived in Lahore to create a school of arts  and crafts. As Lockwood Kipling stepped out of the front entrance of the Mayo  School of Art, this is what he would have seen: a brilliant new city, in  complement to Lahore&rsquo;s historic old walled city, which swept dramatically down  the Victorian&nbsp; Mall comprising the Post Office, Lahore Museum, the Courts  of Justice, Aitchison College, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Lady McLagan Girls High  School, Government College and the Model Town housing area. It was all the work  of the great Ganga Ram, knighted by the British and executive engineer of the  British government in Punjab and Lahore.<\/p>\n<p>        The Mayo School of Art was established next door to the Lahore  Museum in 1875, to preserve the craft of Punjab, and to create a nexus for  artisan skill and industrial design such as architecture. Lockwood Kipling,  having moved from his position as head of the JJ School of Art in Bombay, was  its first principal, followed by the architect and designer Bhai Ram Singh and  the Indian modernist artist S. N. Gupta.<\/p>\n<p><em>The alpha male military men of the East India Company knew their  chintzes from their calicoes<\/em><br \/>\n        Personified in Lockwood Kipling who had left such a design mark  on Bombay, British interest in arts and crafts was significant because India  had already had such a massive impact on European design over three centuries.  The South Asia galleries at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London this  summer show how the warp threads of the artistic heritage of the subcontinent  were busily engaged by the weft threads of the British empire. It is the story  of chintz, of woodworking, of jewellery and of exquisite Mughal painting.<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"571\" height=\"428\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image001_0001.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-m.jpg\"> <br \/>\n      Dress from Kohat<\/p>\n<p>        It&rsquo;s also the story of how the strongest pulse in this dialogue  was always the subcontinental. The design aesthetic and the colour palettes  refined and brought to fruition by the Mughals were never, and have never, been  equalled in Europe. The artisans of the Mughal workshops understood something  that was not properly understood in Europe until the early nineteenth century &ndash;  namely how design potential expanded through the juxtaposition of colours of  similar tone. You can create designs of pastel colours together in infinite  variations. This subcontinental genius was present in the early block print  designs and embroidery of flowers and birds that to the Europeans would become  chintz design. Mughal design was chintz design. It continues to flourish in  Pakistan, as everybody knows, as lawn.<\/p>\n<p>        But there are much older stories too and although much of it is  not on display, the entire V &amp; A collection from the lands of the Indus is  like the strata of some great archaeological find of textiles and trade.<\/p>\n<p>        William Finch, the East India Company agent of Surat and Lahore  (he was an indigo trader) in 1609 saw what a cloth trade might be for the  British. In the East India Company ledgers there is mention of khes (double  weave blankets) of Sind and Punjab being exported from Surat in 1625. By the  1670s the East India Company had moved away from spices and was trading mainly  in cloth from Surat and much further south from the Coromandel coast. Cotton  known as &ldquo;chintz&rdquo; literally clothed Europe.<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"459\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image002.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-n.jpg\"> <br \/>\n      From Bannu, a skirt of indigo dyed cotton, with an ocre  waistband, yellow wheat sheaf phulkari embroidery with shisha (mirror) work,  1867<\/p>\n<p>        It is of some fascination to me that the alpha male military men  of the East India Company knew their chintzes from their calicoes. In 1810,  Lieutenant Henry Pottinger (later Sir Henry Pottinger, governor of Madras) is  on a journey from Somniani to Bela and Kalat in eastern Balochistan. It is  February. In Kalat he meets Baubee (&ldquo;they were in general Uffghans&rdquo;) traders.  He describes in intricate details what they wear:<br \/>\n&ldquo;All of that class whom we saw were stout well-made men, with  good features, and their manners rather polite and refined than otherwise;  their dress at this season (winter) consists of a Pyrahun or shirt made of  white cloth or coloured silk, a chintz ulkaliq or tunic, quilted with cotton; a  pair of blue silk or cotton trousers, very long and wide and the better classes  wear variegated worsted socks; their turbands are moderately large, being  formed of a common sized loongee or silk cloth, under which they have a cap  that covers the whole skull&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>        On top, continues Henry Pottinger, &ldquo;when they go out of door  they wear a posteen or cloak made from sheep skins, with the woolly side  inward, an appendage of dress which gives an incredible deal of warmth; they  likewise usually carry in their hands, or tied over their shoulders, a spare  loongee.&rdquo; In summer, he is told, &ldquo;they discard all the warm parts of their  dress, wearing Pyrahuns or shirts of thin calico, a tunic of very light chintz  and in lieu of turband, many of them adopt a quilted cap.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>        Pottinger distinguishes between calico and chintz, with ease.  His presents for the Djam of Bela presented on 24 January 1810 have included  the highest quality of goods: one piece of Chinese silk, ditto one European  chintz, eight coffee cups and saucers, eight china bowls, eight cut glass  tumblers, one piece of Indian silk, six common knives, two pairs of common  scissors, one pound of gunpowder, one small telescope and a pair of horse  pistols. The Djam was &ldquo;amazingly gratified&rdquo; but asks the Hindu interlocutor who  they are and what they want.<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"366\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image003.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-p.jpg\"> <br \/>\n      NWFP, early 20th century &ndash; black,&nbsp;rose, crimson dress<\/p>\n<p>        The answer comes by way of &ldquo;a very well dressed man called Fyz  Mohummud, who said he had been on intimate terms with an English gentleman who  was formerly resident at Kurachee in Sinde. &hellip; after a few minutes he made use  of the word &ldquo;company&rdquo; and wished to be informed how old she was. At first I  could not conceive his aim; but he soon explained it, by saying that he had  always understood that the &ldquo;Company&rdquo; was an old woman, with an immense deal of  money&rdquo;. The Company, it was being put about, as well as being a woman had a lot  of money and a mania for cloth.<br \/>\n      Politically the geopolitics of trade had changed dramatically in  the years between William Finch, visitor to the Mughal court, and Lt.  Pottinger&rsquo;s visit to the Khan of Kelat. The flood of Indian textiles into  Europe had been met with a massive rebellion by the mill workers of industrial  Britain in the eighteenth century. A law was passed in 1720 to forbid &ldquo;the use  and wearing of apparel of imported chintz, and also for its use or wear in or  about any bed, chair, cushion or other household furniture.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>        In India the rural design and handloom industries were  suppressed by the East India Company and then the Raj, who made bonfires of  printing blocks and destroyed the local industries, leaving the rural poor  destitute. The chintz that Pottinger describes, presented to the Djam of Bela  in 1810, is imported cotton from India now manufactured in Britain.<\/p>\n<p><em>It wasn&rsquo;t the British who destroyed local pride and textile  trades. It was the pressures of identity in Pakistan beyond 1947 that took away  regional and tribal dress and highly sophisticated weaving skills<\/em><\/p>\n<p>        But mostly this doesn&rsquo;t seem to have been the widespread case in  what is today Pakistan. While the British pressed their own exports &ndash; the  rather unlovely chintzes of British design that were for sale in Peshawar in  1859 (in the V&amp;A collection) and woollen broadcloth &ndash; they were also in awe  of the local industries and their design aesthetics.<\/p>\n<p>        In 1843, when Thomas Postans writes an account of Sinde, he  notes: &ldquo;instead of cotton and muslin garments worn throughout the year in India,  the wealthy people of Sindh wear English broadcloth, wadded silk, and chintz  dresses, Cashmere shawls, and rich thick scarfs of Multan manufacture, over  which they commonly throw a warm posteen of Cabul or fur cloak.&rdquo;<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"751\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image004.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-t.jpg\"> <br \/>\n        Woman&rsquo;s dress &ndash; black, crimson, with pearl buttons, 20th  century, of NWFP origin<br \/>\n      Thatta, he says [the river Indus has ruined the town] was  formerly a place of great renown for its trade and manufactures &ldquo;but its glory  has departed, it presents a ruined and dilapidated appearance and where it  boasted formerly 3,000 looms, and until the beginning of the present century  was famous for its embroidery and a silk fabric called lunghi these are now  only obtained with great difficulty. Thatta had a population of 80,000; now it  does not probably have a tenth of that number. The town is so flooded &hellip; the  climate of Thatta is particularly bad.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>        The picture in 1843 is that whereas the looms of Sindh used to  make silk and cotton and silk-cotton, the weaving skills are now in Multan and  Bhawulpur which supply Sindh. &ldquo;Raw silk was imported from China, Persia,  Turkistan and dyed in Sindh with cochineal and madder, but now the dyes in  general use are brought from the north west.&rdquo;<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"896\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image005.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-r.jpg\"> <br \/>\n      Shalwar from Kohat, blue with crimson stripe, 1855<\/p>\n<p>        By the time Lockwood Kipling is appointed head of the Mayo  School of Art, the British reverence for the artisan skills they find in  Punjab, Sindh, NWFP and Balochistan means they are now actively promoting  western subcontinental design. (Amin Jaffer, curator at the V &amp; A has  written a book on the furniture of the Raj. Although there are few examples  from the western subcontinent, it does include rough sketches for Anglo-Indian  furniture by Lockwood Kipling, dated 1884.)<\/p>\n<p>        The industry in the North West Frontier Province is dynamic. We  learn that silk weaving is carried out at Kohat and Peshawar, mostly for  turbans and lungis. The <em>Imperial Gazette of India<\/em> of 1908 singles out  Gholam Hussein of Peshawar, Abdul Jabbar of Kohat and the lungi-weavers of  Punjab, whose &ldquo;beautiful goods&rdquo; could be seen at the Delhi exhibition of 1903.  While &ldquo;coarse cotton fabrics are woven in every part of the province&rdquo;, the  weaving of silk and cotton in NWFP takes place in Kohat, Peshawar and Bannu.<br \/>\n        <img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"599\" height=\"489\" src=\"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/pictures\/index_clip_image006.jpg\" alt=\"Description: http:\/\/www.thefridaytimes.com\/tft\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/08\/tft-81817b-q.jpg\"> <br \/>\n      Printing block, Bannu district<\/p>\n<p>        Shawls with dark-blue cotton central fields and brilliant silk  bands and ends were a speciality of Waziristan. A deep blue cotton cloth was  &ldquo;extensively used by both sexes in the valleys west of Kohat&rdquo;. Further east,  the Hazara district is famous for its interlocking rhomboid phulkari-type  stitch and in Swat an Englishman, John Biddulph, in 1880 notes the  sophisticated materials, patterns, techniques and motifs used, which include  the central Asian Turkmen designs. The silk looms of Lahore have been busy  since Mughal times. The British simply watch on in awe. In the 19th century out  splash the bright Punjabi silks in primary rainbow colours: yellow, lime  greens, red.<\/p>\n<p>        You can only take so much Punjabi bling, so for me the subtle  sense of design aesthetics west of the Indus is most appealing. Centuries of  the indigo trade and the silk trade from Bokhara have formed dress and style in  delicate palettes that draw directly on the landscape for inspiration.<\/p>\n<p>        In the V &amp; A collection, the lungi or lacha of silk and  cotton with gold-wrapped threads and borders, dating from Rawalpindi from  around 1855 is a shimmering piece of silk that describes the colour of the  Indus above Attock ( https:\/\/collections.vam.ac.uk\/item\/O480532\/mans-garment\/  ). I love the woman&rsquo;s dress (khat) from Kohat, also mid-19th century, in plain  indigo-dyed cotton, that you know with wear and washing will turn to the soft  mauve of the mountains. The stripe round its way to Europe, but its origins  were in the western subcontinent &ndash; clearly visible in Mughal paintings of the  early 17th century &ndash; and here it is in the women&rsquo;s shalwar of Dera Ghazi Khan,  also mid-19th century, the indigo cotton woven with silk stripes (  https:\/\/collections.vam.ac.uk\/item\/O476896\/trousers-unknown\/ )<br \/>\n      The landscape informs that local design in Waziristan, where the  colours are black, grey, pink and sand. Tonal earth colours, with splashes of  red, continue in Balcohistan. Lt. Pottinger writes of the Baloch women in 1810:  &ldquo;The women&rsquo;s attire is very similar to that of the men, their shifts are  usually cotton cloth dyed red or brown, very long, quite down to the heels; their  trowsers are preposterously wide, and made of silk, or a fabrication from that  and cotton mixed. The young women, both married and unmarried, have a very  ingenious method of fastening their hair up, by dividing it into different  locks, twisting them round the head and inserting all the ends in a knot on the  crown; it looks very tidy and at a short distance I mistook it for a cap. The  old women tie handkerchiefs round their heads, flowered with worsted or silk.  When they go abroad, both young and old muffle up their faces so as not to be  seen, but in their houses they are not.&rdquo;<\/p>\n<p>        Now, you may like your chintz and I may like my chintz &ndash; the V  &amp; A frequently puts on exhibition the cloth and designs that changed Europe  &ndash; and the fine cotton lawn block prints were the founding business of such  emporia as Liberty of London in Regent Street who until the 1990s sold the  slightly glazed, beautifully designed highly prized Tana lawns, but there is  something far more special about their western subcontinental collections.<\/p>\n<p>      It wasn&rsquo;t the British who destroyed local pride and textile  trades. It was the pressures of identity in Pakistan beyond 1947 that took away  regional and tribal dress and highly sophisticated weaving skills. In cities  such as Peshawar these survived right up until the 1980s.<\/p>\n<p>        Then, with the horrendous shift in geo-politics and the war in  Afghanistan, they were gone.<\/p>\n<p><em>Catriona Luke is an editor and writer based in London. All  photographs courtesy of the&nbsp;Victoria&nbsp;and Albert Museum collections<\/em> <\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":73111,"template":"","language":[],"class_list":["post-73110","articles","type-articles","status-publish","has-post-thumbnail","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articles\/73110","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/articles"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/articles"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/73111"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=73110"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"language","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/apnaorg.com\/wp\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/language?post=73110"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}