Offering tray (talam) 12th–14th century Indonesia In medieval Javanese Hindu ritual, large metal offering trays were regularly employed for the preparation of ritual utensils and paraphernalia. The term used in Old Javanese is tahas, and they are referred to in modern Javanese and Indonesian as talam. Both variant terms can be sourced to the Tamil word for the same utensil, tattam. Fragmentary bronze trays of this type, together with other metal temple utensils, have been excavated from a mid-10th century shipwreck in the Java Sea in the past decade, affirming their antiquity. The traditions a


Offering tray (talam) 12th–14th century Indonesia In medieval Javanese Hindu ritual, large metal offering trays were regularly employed for the preparation of ritual utensils and paraphernalia. The term used in Old Javanese is tahas, and they are referred to in modern Javanese and Indonesian as talam. Both variant terms can be sourced to the Tamil word for the same utensil, tattam. Fragmentary bronze trays of this type, together with other metal temple utensils, have been excavated from a mid-10th century shipwreck in the Java Sea in the past decade, affirming their antiquity. The traditions and ritual practices of Central Java (8th to 10th century) were largely preserved in the following centuries in the Hindu-Buddhist centres of East Java, up to the coming of Islam in the 15th century. This offering tray has an upturned and beveled rim and in the centerfield, an engraved design of a flowering vase of plenty (purnaghata). The swelling body of the vase evokes fecundity, and lush lotus stems with two magnificent blooms fill the upper space, bracketing the vase. The purnaghata stands on a presentation stand represented as open lotus petals. Framing this central image are three bands of decoration consisting of simple chiseled patterns, the central one serrated to likely suggest the radiating Offering tray (talam). Indonesia. 12th–14th century. Copper alloy. East Javanese period. Metalwork


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