Kashkuls carried the food donations on which Sufi dervishes and wandering ascetics relied for sustenance. They symbolised the emptying of the Sufi’s ego through the renunciation of worldly goods and aspirations. The bowls were produced in a variety of media and were held or hung from the shoulder by metal chains. The earliest examples date to the thirteenth or fourteenth century, and their form may have been derived from crescent- and boat-shaped wine bowls made in pre-Islamic Iran.
Detailed Description:
Item Number: 663
Country of Origin: Iran
Age: Late 1700s/ Beginning 1800s
Height (at its longest): 11 cm
Width (at its longest): 26 cm
Base: 5.5 cm
Material: Copper
Condition: Good for age.