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Kambiron

Kambiron, 1931

 

During their raids in February 1931, the British forces destroyed ‘Jadonang temples’ in places such as Kambiron.  A number of artefacts were also taken from these temples. The temple in Kambirion housed two clay figures representing a god and goddess. When British officers arrived at the temple during military operations, they believed that the figures “bore a strong resemblance” to Jadonang and Gaidinliu. They destroyed the figures but the fabrics they had been dressed in were collected by J.C. Higgins, a member of the Cachar Road Column (along with J.P. Mills) in February-March 1931. These were then donated to the Pitt Rivers Museum.

 

S.J. Duncan, SDO of Tamenglong with the clay figures captured from the Jadonang temple. Kambiron, February 1931. From the Hutton Collection at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge.

A photograph of Jadonang’s house, with the lower level of the Jadonang temple visible in the background. Kambiron, February 1931. From the Hutton Collection, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge.

A view of the upper level of the Jadonang temple. Kambiron, February 1931. From the Hutton Collection, Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, Cambridge.

The following artefacts in the Gaidinliu Collection were taken from Kambiron:

Shoulder Cloth—Black and White
White cotton machine-printed fabric with floral patterns in black dye along the border. Shoulder cloth used to dress a clay figure of a goddess at the Jadonang temple.
Dimensions: 178 x 90.5 cm

 

Body Cloth—Black, Red and White
Lower body cloth made of six narrow panels of woven cotton stitched together. This was used to dress a clay figure of a goddess at the temple of Jadonang, Kambiron village.
Dimensions: 95 x 69 cm

 

Waist Cloth—White
Narrow cloth of woven white cotton with a fringe of tasselled yellow orchid stem and red twisted cotton. This was used to dress a clay figure of a goddess at the temple of Jadonang, Kambiron village.
Dimensions: 113 x 21.5 cm

 

 

Shoulder Cloth—Red and White
Shoulder cloth made of four narrow panels of woven cotton stitched together, and a design of red and black mithun heads in wool in 3 lines down the centre. This cloth was used to dress a clay figure of a god at the Jadonang temple in Kambiron.
Dimensions: 148 x 20 cm

 

Body Cloth—Red and White
Lower body cloth made of four narrow panels of woven cotton stitched together in alternating stripes of white and brick-red, separated by a thin black line. This cloth was used to dress a clay figure of a god at the Jadonang temple in Kambiron.
Dimensions: 117 x 29 cm,

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