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DOI: 10.1177/097194580400800108 The Wine-Cup in Mughal Court CultureFrom Hedonism to KingshipDepartment of History, PGDAV College, University of Delhi, New Delhi 110065. E-mail: kharemeera{at}yahoo.com This article traces the trajectory of a commonplace object, the wine-cup in Mughal court culture, using painting as a source. Initially associated with hedonistic pleasure alone, the wine-cup came to be represented, in allegories of wine and verse, as a locus for the realisation of divine reality, having gnostic values. The imagery of mystical intoxication further imbued the object with a political meaning, in which the cup became a world in miniature and the wine in it, the elixir of life, thereby legitimising the Mughal monarchy in a cosmological framework of universal and immortal rulership. However, the imagery came a full circle, when in the course of the eighteenth century, from its association with male rulership, it came to be exclusively associated with female eroticism and pure hedonism.
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