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Kamanche

ca. 1880

The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
New York City, United States

Kamānches, or bowed lutes, are often elegantly inlaid or painted, but this example is decorated with minute pieces of wood, bone, and brass in a mosaic technique called "khatam-kari." First described in the tenth century, the kamanche is the earliest documented bowed instrument and is frequently depicted being played by angels in Persian miniatures. Held upright on its spike, it is bowed with the right hand in a palm-up position, a handgrip used when bowed instruments were introduced to Europe and one still used around the world when playing spike fiddles.

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  • Title: Kamanche
  • Location Created: Tehran, Iran (Persia)
  • Type: Chordophone-Lute-bowed-unfretted
  • External Link: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Collection Online
  • Medium: Wood, metal, bone, gut
  • Dimensions: Height: 40 1/2 in. (102.9 cm) Width: 6 in. (15.3 cm) Diameter: 5 1/2 in. (14 cm)
  • Date Created: ca. 1880, ca. 1880
  • Culture: Iranian (Persian)
  • Credit Line: Purchase, Mr. and Mrs. Thatcher M. Brown III Gift, 1998
  • Accession Number: 1998.72
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

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