Bull in Early Indian Art (Up to Sixth Century AD)/Bhogendra Jha.Bull in Early Indian Art (Up to Sixth Century AD)/Bhogendra Jha. New Delhi, D.K. Printworld, 2004, xx, 191 p., figs., $47. ISBN 81-246-0255-7. [Perspectives in Indian Art and Archaeology, No. 5]

    Contents: Foreword/T.K. Biswas. Preface. Introduction. 1. Bull in prehistoric and proto-historic India: (i) Bull in prehistoric art. (ii) Bull in proto-historic art. 2. Bull in the early Indian literature. 3. Bull in the early Indian numismatic and glyptic art: (i) Bull on early Indian coins. (ii) Bull on early Indian seals sealings. 4. Bull in the early Indian terracotta: (i) Mauryan terracotta. (ii) Sunga terracotta. (iii) Kusana terracottas. (iv) Gupta terracottas. 5. Bull in early Indian stone sculpture: (i) Bull in Mauryan sculptures. (ii) Bull in Sunga sculptures. (iii) Bull in Kusana sculptures. (iv) Bull in Gupta sculptures. Conclusion. Bibliography. Index.

    "The work deals with various aspects of the bull as reflected in Indian art and literature up to the sixth century AD. Perhaps the first effort to showcase the representation of the bull in ancient India, it examines the bull's domestication and migration, the Indian type of bulls, and the philosophical tenets associated with it and studies the importance attached to the bull's physical form and its psychological characteristics, its relation to the fertility cult and its usefulness as a domesticated animal as reflected in ancient Indian art.

    "It looks into the manner in which its significance was reinforced through art and the animal protected by associating it with religion-Hindu, Buddhist, Jaina and folk. Dr. Bhogendra Jha goes in-depth into the mode of revering the bull in stone, clay, metal and colours through modelling, moulding and painting: its depiction in coins, seals and sealings, and terracottas, with reference to different historical and dynastic periods. He includes depiction of the bull in prehistoric art and its description in writings, and also compares the position of the bull in ancient world cultures - of Egypt, Crete and Mesopotamia, for instance-with its position in ancient India to broaden the scope of the study.

    "The book will be useful for researchers - beginners and established scholars- of early Indian art."  (jacket)   

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