Flintlock Gun 17th–18th century Sri Lankan This long, dramatically shaped gun is one of only five highly decorated Sinhalese long arms (bondikula thuwakkuwa) known to survive from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Measuring more than seven feet in length it features a bifurcated butt––a characteristic unique to Sinhalese guns, thought to be in use since as early as the sixteenth century––and is distinguished by its remarkable ornamentation. Pierced ivory panels, sensitively carved with scrolling foliate designs (liya vela and liya pata) that emanate from and around two central flowers
Flintlock Gun 17th–18th century Sri Lankan This long, dramatically shaped gun is one of only five highly decorated Sinhalese long arms (bondikula thuwakkuwa) known to survive from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Measuring more than seven feet in length it features a bifurcated butt––a characteristic unique to Sinhalese guns, thought to be in use since as early as the sixteenth century––and is distinguished by its remarkable ornamentation. Pierced ivory panels, sensitively carved with scrolling foliate designs (liya vela and liya pata) that emanate from and around two central flowers (s?na-mala), are inset into the stock, which itself is carved with scrolling foliate ornament (liya pata). Silver plates embossed with screwpine flowers (vetakeyiya mala) frame the lock, which is positioned on the left side of the gun, as was standard on Sinhalese firearms of the period. The two-stage barrel, with brass-inlaid transverse bands at its transition, is silver-damascened with an undulating vegetal motif (liya vela).The weapon is a superlative representative of the long and distinguished tradition of gunmaking in Sri Lanka. European accounts from the late sixteenth through the late seventeenth century enthusiastically attest to the quality of fine firearms made in Ceylon, praising them for both their beauty and their functional excellence. The prominent incorporation of carved ivory, too, speaks to a specialized Sinhalese craft. This material, a principal medium of Sinhalese artisans for centuries, was employed to embellish everything from architectural elements and book covers to knife handles, combs, and fan is the only gun in Moore's collection, and with his bequest it became the first firearm acquired by The Met. The reasons for its appeal to Moore seem obvious, chiefly among them its striking, unusual form. Perhaps not surprisingly, echoes of its design feature in Tiffany's firearms, including the sculptural treatments of the silver pistol g
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