Fashioning Insurrection

From Imperial Resistance To American Orientalisms

About the Exhibit

A South Indian Sepoy and His Wife

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Unknown artist/workshop, Thanjavur, British East India
Opaque watercolor on paper, c. 1810
Brown University Library, Anne S. K. Brown Military Collection


Commercial company painters in Thanjavur (Tanjore) produced many examples of this type of character portrait featuring a sepoy and his wife. The husband wears the uniform of a sepoy private of Madras Native Infantry. His forehead bears a distinctive Hindu marking known as a tilak (pl. tilaka) in white, made from chalk, rice powder, and other materials depending on the individual’s religious beliefs. In 1806, the British Madras Army offended both Hindu and Muslim soldiers when it banned the wearing of tilaka and required Muslim soldiers to shave their beards. The resulting uprising at Vellore that year demonstrated that the BEIC needed to respect the customs of its men, and the new regulations were abolished. Such paintings often appear in albums, with images cataloguing different trades and occupations, sometimes bought separately and eventually bound together or left as individual works, as in the case here.