Millennium Post

UK puts export ban on Clive of India’s huqqa set, flask

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LONDON: The UK government has put a temporary export ban on an extremely rare jewelled flask worth over 6 million pounds given to former commander-in-chief of India Robert Clive after the Battle of Plassey in 1757.

UK culture minister Matt Hancock has placed a temporary export bar on the items to find a Uk-based buyer for the flask, at an asking price of 6,000,000 pounds, and 240,000 pounds for the huqqa set.

The governor and commander-in-chief of India during the early years of the British Raj, who is known as Clive of India, is believed to have been presented the Mughal ruby and emerald flask and the sapphire and ruby huqqa as a gift after the Battle of Plassey in 1757.

“These treasures are not only exquisite, they provide us with a glimpse into the fascinatin­g lifestyle and traditions of the Mughal Court and the British presence in India at the time. I hope that we are able to keep these unique artefacts in the country to learn more about this extraordin­ary history,” Hancock said.

Clive became famous for his victory over the Nawab of Bengal during the famous Battle of Plassey. The flask itself is described as “incredibly rare” because there is no other object

An extremely rare jewelled flask worth over £6 million was given to former Robert Clive after the Battle of Plassey in 1757. It has a silver interior and a gold exterior decorated in jade, emeralds and rubies

like it anywhere in the world. It has a silver interior and a gold exterior decorated in jade, emeralds and rubies.

The huqqa set is adorned with white sapphires and rubies and was part of an original collection at the imperial court in Delhi at the time. The huqqa set is also considered to be an extremely rare survival as such lavish courtly objects were often broken down for their component parts, the UK government’s culture, media and sport department said.

It isn’t known how Clive of India acquired the set, but smoking was widespread in India at the time and had become popular among the British living there as well, it added. The decision to defer the export licence follows a recommenda­tion by the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA), administer­ed by the UK’S Arts Council.

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