The saree
is one of the world’s oldest and perhaps the only surviving unstitched garment
from the past. Over the millennia, it has not only become a sensuous, glamorous
all-time-wear for women, but also the ‘canvas’ for weavers and printers to
create artistic weaves, prints and jewelled or gold-silver embellishments!
They say cotton and the art of
weaving it into fabric came to India from the Mesopotamian civilisation. The
men and women of the contemporary Indus Valley Civilisation were therefore
familiar with cotton fabrics and wore long pieces of material which could best
be described as loin cloths. These lengths of fabric were worn in the kachcha
style, meaning that after draping it around the waist, the wearer passed one
end of the cloth or the centre pleat between the legs and tucked it up behind
to facilitate freer movement of the lower body and the legs. Early history
records that this style of clothing was not only limited to Mesopotamia or the
Indus Valley but was common to Egypt, Sumer, and Assyria. The relics of all
these civilisations, now available in seals and figurines, prove this fact.
Women of most of these civilisations, it seems from available evidence, wore
only such loin cloths, leaving the upper part of the body bare, except in
winter when animal skins or woollen shawl-like garments were used for protection
from harsh weather.
When the Aryans came into the
plains of the mighty north Indian rivers, they brought with them the word
vastra for the first time. Though a Sanskrit word originally meaning a garment
or cloth, for them it was a piece of treated leather made into wearable
clothing. Their wardrobes also included woollen clothing as they lived in
colder climates. As they moved southwards, they adopted the practice of wearing
cotton weaves, in the manner of the Indus Valley inhabitants. In time, this
style of wearing a length of cloth around the waist, especially for women, and
the cloth itself came to be known as neevi. Therefore, it is quite likely that
the simple loin cloth worn by the women of the Indus Valley civilisation was
the early precursor of the many-splendoured saree of India.
In the epics of India, which were
written much after the Indus Valley period, several assorted items of dress
were described. The kanchuki, mentioned in many of the legends which form the
narrative of the epics, was a piece of cloth worn across the breasts by women.
It was probably the earliest form of the choli. Many women, featuring in the
classical literature generated by the epics, were described as beautiful in
clothes made from silks encrusted with gold and gems.
Yellow silk neevis called Pitambar
and purple silk shawls called Patola were considered auspicious. Though there
were some elementary stitched garments, the neevi and the kanchuki remained the
major mode of apparel for women. The art of dyeing these fabrics with vegetable
dyes originated with the need of wealthier people in society to wear fancier
clothes. By the time the epic era came to a close, women were wearing
extraordinarily beautiful clothes with ornate embroidery. They wore exquisite
jewellery too. The word Patta for silk seems to have originated during this
time and todate, carries the same meaning in Telegu, Tamil, Kannada as well as
in several south Indian dialects.
As if to better use these arts of
dyeing and embroidery, the normal outfit of a woman progressively became a
three part ensemble. The lower garment wrapped around the waist was the neevi.
The kanchuki covered the breasts and a shawl-like garment, called the Uttariya,
completed the outfit. Many a time, these shawl-like Uttariyas were worn to
cover the kanchuki. Since they were the most immediately visible part of the
attire, they were ornamented, dyed or embroidered according to the status of
the women.
By and large, in the epic age or
even until much later in the Puranic age, women did not cover their heads as a
traditional or religious requirement. If they wore veils, it was only to
enhance the beauty of their elaborate hairstyles or to show off the bejewelled
ornamentation on the veils themselves. The Barhut and Sanchi relief sculptures
show women of all classes wearing the neevi or the length of cloth around the
waist just below their navels, and for the first time, with the pleats hanging
in the vikachcha style in front and touching their toes in a graceful fall. The
vikachcha style of wearing the neevi did away with the passing of the cloth
between the legs and the tucking of the central pleats behind. Instead, a short
decorative piece of cloth was draped around the hips and knotted in front. This
piece was called the Asana.
But soon, the next stage in the
development of the saree was to come. With the influence of the Greeks and the
Persians, the clothes of all classes of Indians were in for a major change. The
Greeks had already discovered the belt or a cummerbund-like cloth to clinch
their long flowing robes at the waist. The Persians were already wearing their
length of cloth gathered and held together at the shoulder and belted at the
waist. These new features of wearing the same garment immediately caught the fancy
of India's women, particularly of the affluent classes, who used the gathered
and waisted look, adapting it to suit their lighter, more ornamental fabrics.
The Persians were also the first
to introduce the art of stitching into India. Additionally, from Central Asia,
the migrating tribal hordes brought the style of wearing loose jackets and
coats of various shapes to the deserts of Rajputana and the plains of the
Punjab and the Ganga. Taking a cue from these, women in India began to wear a
stitched short jacket to cover their upper torsos. Such jackets are shown in
many sculptures of this period in Mathura and in the caves of Ajanta. In time,
this jacket became more compact and snugly fitted the bosom in the case of
women who wore the saree and longer, more flowing in the case of women who wore
the kurta. The shorter, tight fitting blouse acquired the name choli. Sant
Dnyaneshwar (1275-96 AD) has written the words ‘chandanachi choli’ in his
composition proving that the choli was known in the early years of this
millennium. The Persians also introduced to India the art of encrusting fabrics
with pearls and precious stones. While women of all classes wore simple cholis,
those of the upper classes used this art for special embellishment of their
silken ones. Others followed, using less precious materials like glass and
wooden beads and embroidery to decorate their cholis. Many royal women
commissioned weavers and craftsmen to produce exquisite examples of their art
to make their jackets. Costume historians have recorded that such gem-encrusted
clothes, which combined the art of weaving and embroidery, were called
Stavaraka in those days.
In spite of these advancements,
the saree and choli evolved very slowly through the ages. Its final form, as is
seen today, came about only in the Moghul period when women's garments went
through one more major revolution. The Moghuls had perfected the art of
stitching and with their royal riches and absolute power, the cities they
established flourished, with people emulating their way of life and their way
of dressing. They wore long coats made of silk and brocade with narrow
trousers. Their turbans were objects of great beauty and were studded with
invaluable jewels. Despite the fact that the majority of men of those ages changed
their lifestyle and began to wear a trouser and a coat instead of the
loincloth, the unstitched, magical saree still came out the winner as far as
the women were concerned. Miniature paintings of several schools and
hand-illustrated manuscripts of the medieval period of Indian history showed
the diaphanous garments of women developing into the gracefully draped saree of
today for the first time.
The paintings of this era, when
compared with the sculptures or frescos of the earlier centuries, suggest that
the saree in its modern form finally came into existence in the post-Moghul
period and could have been a natural mixture of the three-piece unstiched
garment of the earlier times and the stitched clothing which the Moghuls
brought into India. The pallu or daman as the upper end of the saree was
called, may have been invented and used from then on to cover the head or as a
veil, for this was required by the Muslim society in an empire ruled over by
Muslim dynasties. The modern way of draping a saree with a distinct pallu and
border, with or without an all over design, with one end pulled across the
front to fall over the shoulder to either hang at the back or to go over the
head to the other shoulder, appeared first in the paintings of the post-Moghul
period. Thus, it may well be said that the saree, the garment most identified
with India today, is a quaint mingling of influences from Greece, Persia and
several other Central Asian countries.
It is said that with all these
rich influences, the wealthy, royal families of medieval India created a
repertoire of clothing which was as classic as it was comfortable. They wore
nothing but the finest of fabrics. The queens and princesses who lived in
marble palaces surrounded by sylvan gardens and lily-filled pools, commissioned
the master weavers of the court to create such fine muslins and silks that a
length of several metres could pass through a dainty, jewelled ring on the
finger of a royal woman. This has been recorded in the chronicles of several
visitors to the Moghul courts. Often, such fabrics were embellished with gold
and silver wires and gems to create designs reminiscent of the splendour in
which the women lived. Together, the princely women and their master weavers
slowly became the progenitors of the world famous textile arts of India so
frequently portrayed in art and praised in the annals of trade around the
world.
All through Indian literature,
women were described as resplendently beautiful when wearing fabrics of
extraordinary beauty woven out of silk, cotton and other natural fibres. Soon,
each weave and garment began to acquire specific names. Fabrics were specially
woven for auspicious and religious ceremonies and these too acquired generic
names such as Pitambar. Many of the plays and poems written by the court
writers of this age described how shimmering and fine the garments worn by the
higher classes were.
In fact, historic records say that
these silks and muslins were so highly prized all over the world that they were
sold in faraway countries including those around the Mediterranean Sea. Several
names were given to these fabrics depending upon their origin or texture. For
example, Kausheya was a silk made from the finest cocoons. Chinnavastra was a
fabric akin to Chinese silk. Tasara or today's Tassar silk, was made by using a
particular kind of shuttle. The Moghuls wore brocades of such exquisite quality
that throughout the world this fabric came to be described as Kinkhwab or
'Golden Dream'. The Europeans who imported this fabric turned this name into
Kinkob. To this day, brocade is known by this name in many European languages.
As far back as the Biblical age,
India's dyeing processes and the results they could produce were considered
dazzling by connoisseurs even in Rome and Greece. The luminescent hued silks
worn by high class women in India were the envy of the world and many a
traveller wrote glowing accounts of what he saw during his visits to the
flourishing empires. In the golden age of Indian textiles, all the dyes were
made from vegetables or other natural sources. It is reported that in the
earliest age of dyeing during the Moghul era, there were over five hundred
kinds of natural dyes.
These traditional dyes were made
from turmeric, the indigo plant, barks of several trees, gums, nuts, flowers,
fruits and berries. The silk cotton tree, for example, was reputed to yield a
gentle yellow-orange colour called kesari, which was favoured not only by royal
families for their raiments, but also for the robes made for the idols in many
famous temples. The colours navy blue, khaki, mustard yellow, rust, rani pink
and pista green seem to have originated during these years and have stayed on
as names for identifying colours even now.
Fabrics were dyed in various ways.
They were wholly dipped in tubs of dyes or separately dyed in different colours
for a magical, shaded effect, or yarns were dyed and then used in the weave to
create specific patterns. In the age of the Moghuls, both hand block printing
and tie-and-dye techniques reached their zenith and added new dimensions to the
Indian textile industry's flourishing trade. The Bandhanis and Leheriyas made
with the tie-and-dye process were used for the most colourful turbans and the
festive sarees and odhanis later.
With the advent of synthetic dyes,
the number of natural dyes used by the industry began to dwindle considerably
so that today there are hardly sixty varieties of natural dyes in use. Though
these methods of traditional dyeing continue to create ethnic fabrics for sarees
and headgear, the chemical dyes imported from other countries together with
newer techniques of dyeing and printing have given Indian women sarees of a
vast variety in an unimaginable spectrum of shades.
Many new designs and techniques of
weaving, dyeing and printing came to India with the repeated invasions of
various clans. For instance, the tie-and-dye method of fabric dyeing was
brought into Gujarat and Rajasthan by the nomadic Central Asians. By the tenth
century, Patolas, famous even today, Bandhanis and Leheriyas from this areas
were exported by the caravans of the Arabs to Egypt, Java, Sumatra, China and
other middle and far eastern countries. The coming of the Muslims to India in
the twelfth century brought several new textile crafts. Phulkari, which is the
heritage of the Punjab, came from Central Asian Bedouins and its geometric
designs, done in earthy colours like rust, magenta and green, often embellished
the fine muslins used for sarees and odhanis, the latter garment originating
with the Muslim women's traditional outfit of a salwar and kurta. By their
cultural heritage, Muslims often avoided wearing pure silks. Since they were
the ruling class, their needs originated several varieties of textiles which
used mixtures of silk with other fibres. These textiles were called Mushroo,
Himroo and Jamawar.
In the mountains of Kashmir, the
cooler climate encouraged the weaving of Pashmina, a woollen fabric used for
shawls. However, the silks woven for the Sardars and the Rajas who were vassals
of the Delhi Durbar encouraged a whole spectrum of textures, colours, weaves
and designs. These were so resplendent that they were often compared to a
peacock's feathers; silvery moon beams; gurgling, prismatic streams; the
glistening feathers of blackbirds; the rain-washed young leaves of trees; the
fusion of colours in the rainbow; the gentle blossoming of flowers; the
icy-cool glimmer of dew; the coolness of the moist western breeze or even the
foam on the crest of lapping waves. So finely was cotton and silk woven that
these fabrics were reputed to be fit for kings and queens all over the world.
This is probably why many words in European languages, describing textiles,
originate from Indian languages.
The all round development of
textiles in India had a definite impact on the design of sarees. Paisleys used
on shawls, figures from Jamawar weaves, floral patterns and bird and animal
motifs used in brocades – all these slowly acquired the status of traditional
saree motifs. Colours to suit the Indian woman's complexion were accurately
identified. Peacock coloured shot silks, shiny-spun muslins in the purples of
the aubergines, sunshine yellow jacquards, moon glow silk chiffons and the
dusky rose coloured raw silks – these became the favourites of the weavers of
the saree. To enrich the saree even further, during the reign of the Moghuls,
hand block printing was discovered and quickly took the place of hand painting
on textiles. Sarees were printed with vegetable dyes, using wooden blocks
carved expertly with fashionable motifs brought into India with the advent of
the French, the Portuguese and the British. The various prints used by
designers showed the influence of European motifs which were more gentle and
subdued compared to the ornate, rich Indian motifs. This was the first time;
too, that fabric by the yard could be duplicated by the printers. On the other
hand, combining the use of various blocks into myriads of permutations, they
could also economically produce an unimaginable variety of prints in innumerable
colour schemes. However, by the time the industrial revolution brought power
looms into the weaving industry together with mechanised printing, the
traditional weavers and dyeing experts were on their way out.
These descriptions prove that the
weavers and designers of India were the masters of their craft for many
centuries. Nimble fingered and ever alert to new concepts, they created a
treasurehouse of ideas which continue to support and inspire millions of
weavers in India even today. Indisputably, the greatest heritage these weavers
gave to the Indian woman was the saree, five and half metres in length and
about one and one-eighth metres in width. They created such a vast variety of
sarees that if a woman wore a different saree each day, the weaves, prints and
designs would tally up to more than the days of her entire life span. Very
often, the sarees she would wear, could be exclusive, one-of-a-kind creations
made from the most humble, rough woven cotton to the finest hand crafted silk
tissue spiked with soft gold threads. This relatively small length of fabric
has since then become the canvas upon which every imaginable kind of creative
experiment has been made by the way of weaving, printing, embroidery, appliqué
and gold, silver and precious stone work.
Though centuries have passed since
the saree was conceived as the Indian woman's hereditary costume, the charm of
this beautiful and extraordinary feminine garment, suited to the youngest of
girls or the most elderly among woman, has not waned. In fact, even with each
new decade of technological progress, it has been well accepted by even the
most modern women of the subcontinent. Today, its chequered history has become
hazy and lost in the distant past. In spite of the limited scope for any change
in the garment, it seems to have a limitless future because of the endless
experimentation used to recreate its beauty for every new generation of women.
Thus, in the modern world, it
continues to be an economical and easy-to-wear garment, suitable for work,
leisure or luxury. Over a period of time, several cities in India have become
renowned saree manufacturing centres. Each centre is known for creating
traditional sarees which have acquired their names not only from the cities of
their origin, but also from the weaving or printing techniques used or the
motifs, colours or designs utilised in their manufacture. Throughout the
history of textile development in India, the saree continues to be produced on
handlooms, powerlooms and in gigantic mills with the most modern machinery in
all these famous cities.
Even in the modern age, women continue to buy sarees with great
enthusiasm, especially during festivals and wedding seasons.
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