Sub-Project MC 9.2 A Pilgrimage Scroll (tīrthapaṭṭa) from Rajasthan: Visual Journeys and Confluences of Devotion at the three Cities of Gayā, Kāśī and Prayāg
Project Leaders: Jörg Gengnagel, Eric Decker
This project started in early 2016 and created a fully annotated digital representation of a pilgrimage scroll from Rajasthan, India. The scroll is in form, style and content a unique representation of sacred spaces.
The Scroll
Painted on cloth, this tīrthapaṭṭa from Mewar has a size of 178 x 70 cm. Dating back to the beginning of the 18th century it depicts from top to bottom the three pilgrimage places Gayā, Kāśī (Vārāṇasī) and Prayāg (Allahabad). Although it is on display at the National Museum in New Delhi, its structure and content have not yet been studied. The National Museum kindly provided high quality reproductions and generously granted the rights for online publication.
Presentation
The interactive presentation offered an identification of the more than 550 objects, a complete reading of all legible inscriptions, as well as a first documentation of the structure of the map. An important characteristic of the three cities’ sacred territory is their complex waterscape: confluences of the rivers Gaṅgā and Yamunā as well as Asi and Varaṇā are depicted on the map as well as numerous wells and ponds. Mythological scenes, such as the depiction of the families of Śiva and Viṣṇu in a central position, frame the visual journey through the three cities. In addition to numerous shrines and temples, ritual specialists, saints and ascetics of various traditions could be identified.
Analysis
Our analysis of the scroll made use of the HyperImage platform and expanded the successful results presented with the "Mirror of Kāśī (Kāśīdarpaṇa 1876)". While the “Mirror of Kāśī” was part of a specific category of visual representations of space, which flourished in Banaras itself and made use of new printing technology introduced during the 19th century, the pictorial map "Pilgrimage Scroll from Rajasthan" does represent a completely different category of visualisation of pilgrimage spaces. The tīrthapaṭṭa, rather than picturing a single place, hints at the interconnectedness of pilgrimage sites, thus illustrating well-diffused patterns of Indian sacred geographies, such as the overlapping and multiplicity of places. In contrast to the Mirror of Kāśī that clearly draws on local expertise and spatial knowledge, the Pilgrimage Scroll relates to practices of royal patronage dominant in Rajasthan.
The project benefitted from new HyperImage functionalities that were developed in the course of the "Hachiman Digital Handscrolls Project", directed by Melanie Trede.