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Pitt Rivers Museum

1893.48.125

Cap worn by Udasi Sikh Fakirs


1893.48.125

Digital asset copyright: Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford

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Collection type
Object
Description
Cap worn by Udasi Sikh Fakirs
Geographical reference
Cultural groups
Udasi
Person
Field collector William Crooke
PRM source William Crooke
Date / Period
Date made: Before 1893
Date collected
Before 1893
Acquisition information
Donated: 1893
Object numbers
Accession number: 1893.48.125
Research and responses

Udasi sect within Sikhism, a religion of India. The Udasi (from the Sanskrit udas, "to renounce") sect, which requires celibacy and asceticism of its members, originated with the followers of Siri Chand, the son of the first Sikh guru (religious teacher and leader of the Sikh community), Nanak. Under the leadership of Baba Gurditta, the eldest son of the sixth guru, Hargobind, they served as missionaries, particularly north and east of the Punjab, the Sikh homeland. They did not adopt the five K's (unshorn hair, comb, sword, military shorts, and steel bracelet), emblems of the Khalsa order. Udasis may cut their hair and shave; they wear reddish garments and use caste marks, sacred threads, and prayer books more generally associated with Hindu ascetics. [Encyclopaedia Britannica on line] [AP 31/3/2000]

Search terms: Clothing Headgear, Religion, Hat