Accession No
TEMP.01083.7
Description
Sarong made of a length of starched cotton cloth. Woven with a checked pattern of white, red, orange, and blue stripes; denser area of reddish pink at each end.
Place
Asia; Southeast Asia; Malaysia; Peninsular Malaysia; Tremangan
Period
late 19th century
Source
Skeat, Walter William [field collector and vendor]
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
TEMP.01083.7; Skeat II: 392a
Cultural Affliation
Material
Cloth; Cotton
Local Term
Measurements
780mm x 2070mm
Events
Description (Labels & Markings)
Paper labels adhered to object with printed text reads: '392'. This corresponds to the numbering in the unpublished catalogue.
Event Date
Author: rachel hand
Context (Related Documents)
Large handwritten paper label attached "MALAY "SARONG" SERIES/ Malay waist cloth made of/ homespun tread: now [word crossed out]/ becoming rapidly obsolete in the Peninsular./ Tremangan [This replaces crossed out word [?] Belanbang [?]/ 5.5.1900/ [signed] W.S."
The number 392 has been added twice in pencil, but the one in the top left of the label has been crossed out.
Event Date
Author: rachel hand
Description (Labels & Markings)
Hand written pencil label attached "II 392a/ Homespun cloth/ [?] Treinangam [spelling unclear]".
Event Date
Author: rachel hand
Context (References)
Recorded as No. 392a in the MS Register of the Second Skeat Collection (MAA Archive, MM1/10/36).
Event Date 1900
Author: Nora J. Klages-Miller
Description (Physical description)
Manuscript Catalogue of Second Skeat Collection (1900), MAA Archive MM1/10/36: 'specimens of sarongs made from homespun thread. 8 - a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h. Tremangan.'
Event Date 1900
Author: Nora J. Klages-Miller
Context (Field collection)
This object was collected by Walter William Skeat on the Cambridge Exploring Expedition to the Malay Provinces of Lower Siam, 1899-1900.
Event Date 1900
Author: Nora J. Klages-Miller
Context (Amendments / updates)
Found in a box of unaccessioned Skeat Malaysian textiles. Twenty-two textiles were noted as belonging to the Skeat II series from 1902 but could not be matched to any of the object descriptions during the Shorts Textile Project according to a note by Fanny Veys and Jean Somerville, dated 24/11/20025.
Event Date 21/7/2020
Author: rachel hand
Context (Amendments / updates)
TEMP.01083.1-22 were found with hand written temporary paper labels numbering 1-22. These have been assumed to be part of a listing process intended to help the cataloguing and identification process during the Textile Project and are not part of a formal catalogue. They have been used as individual suffixes of the TEMP number.
Event Date 21/7/2020
Author: rachel hand
Description (Physical description)
waist cloth made of homespun cloth in red, orange, cream and blue checks, striped at ends. Cut and fraying on length ends
Event Date 21/7/2020
Author: rachel hand
Context (Amendments / updates)
W.W. Skeat made two collections in Southeast Asia. The first was made while he was District Magistrate in Selangor, Malaysia in 1896-1897 and is known as the First Skeat Collection or Skeat I. The Second was made in 1899-1900 on the Cambridge Exploring Expedition to the Malay Provinces of Lower Siam and known as the Second Skeat Collection, or Skeat II. Most objects were not given accession numbers on acquisition by MAA, and given Z Numbers during reorganisation in the 1980s. Several objects presumed to be from the Skeat Collections, but which cannot be traced either to an existing Z number or to Skeat’s catalogues, have been given TEMP numbers. Some of these are definitely Skeat, and some are not. The work of matching objects to their Skeat catalogue numbers is ongoing and likely to remain incomplete.
Event Date 24/10/2024
Author: Nora J. Klages-Miller
Description (Physical description)
Sarong made of a length of starched cotton cloth. Woven with a checked pattern of white, red, orange, and blue stripes; denser area of reddish pink at each end.
Event Date 24/10/2024
Author: Nora J. Klages-Miller
Conservation (Freezing)
CON.2024.6089 | Freezing
Event Date 11/11/2024
Author: Kirsty Kernohan
FM:287540
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