Lot Essay
The bodywork of this carriage was certainly made in Bombay- the badge of the Fort Coach Company on the back of the cabin states this clearly. The decorative silver covering in thick sheet forming naturalistic flowers and animals such as birds worked in repoussé and with enamelled coloured highlights and areas of gold overlay, though exotic, seems more European than Indian in style. No expense has been spared in the decoration; the gold details are also executed in thick applied sheet rather than the plating one would normally expect to find. The colours of the enamels are also more varied than those normally found in India. Many of the working parts are decorated with or terminate in animals or animals' heads modelled in the round- swans, greyhounds, bulldogs. The latter certainly seems European- bulldogs in particular not being commonly found in India.
The distinctive coat of arms found in several places on the body, with the confronted bulls flanking a shield emblazoned with a golden eagle and surmounted by small dhow atop a helmet, demonstrate beyond doubt that this was commissioned for a Maharaja of Bhavnagar, formerly a princely state, now part of Gujarat, on the Gulf of Khambhat. The city of Bhavnagar, an important trading post for the cotton goods manufactured in Gujarat, was founded as a port in 1743. The motto in devanagari script reads manushya dhan- ishwar kripa /"man's wealth - (is) God's gift".
The carriage is relatively simply dismantled into its smaller component parts for ease of shipment.
The distinctive coat of arms found in several places on the body, with the confronted bulls flanking a shield emblazoned with a golden eagle and surmounted by small dhow atop a helmet, demonstrate beyond doubt that this was commissioned for a Maharaja of Bhavnagar, formerly a princely state, now part of Gujarat, on the Gulf of Khambhat. The city of Bhavnagar, an important trading post for the cotton goods manufactured in Gujarat, was founded as a port in 1743. The motto in devanagari script reads manushya dhan- ishwar kripa /"man's wealth - (is) God's gift".
The carriage is relatively simply dismantled into its smaller component parts for ease of shipment.