Tarafdar Sitar

Sale!

Tarafdar Sitar

Original price was: ₹45,000.00.Current price is: ₹42,500.00.

Technical Specification:

  • Double Gourd Thumba
  • Dried Tun Wood Body
  • 7 Main & 13 Sympathetic Strings
  • Professional Quality
  • Deer Bone Bridge
  • Curved Rosewood Tuning Pegs
  • Inlay Work
  • International Pitch ( A = 440 Hz )
  • Free Mizrab
  • Free Cloth Cover
  • Free Hard Case Cover

 

SKU: CMD/TS/900 Categories: , ,

Description

Tarafdar Sitar

Special Features:

Both side engraving works of Tabli and Dandee, Mango leafs on the neck of the Sitar, Rose pegs half decorated.

Delivery Time: 12-15 Working Days after Successful Payment.

For More information SMS 900 Name Email Country and Send to +919830066661

N.B: All prices are inclusive of Shipping (International Air Mode)/ Packing/ Tax/ Insurance. No hidden cost. Read our Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy and Shipping Policy.

In The Box: Tarafdar Sitar, Mizrub, Cloth Cover, Hard Case Cover

History (Wikipedia):

From where we get Tarafdar Sitar- Small history below:

Our knowledge about the Tarafdar Sitar is from Wikipedia. As per Wikipedia, we shared this small history to let our customers know about the Sitar history. Scholars theorized that Amir Khusrow (c. 1253–1325), a renowned Sufi inventor, poet, and pioneer of Khyal, Tarana, and Qawwali, invented or developed the sitar during the 13th century. However, many consider this tradition discredited, as no records from that period refer to the instrument as a “sitar.” Furthermore, an ambiguous statement in a 19th-century work by Captain N. Augustus Willard may have led to the incorrect association of the famous poet Amir Khusrow with a later figure, possibly named Khusrau Khan, who lived in the 18th century

The earliest mention of the sitar, in fact, dates back to 1739 AD, as found in the “Muraqqa-i-Dehli,” which was written by Dargah Quli Khan during the reign of Muhammad Shah Rangila. Moreover, historians analyzing both oral and textual evidence suggest that Khusrau Khan, an 18th-century figure from the Mughal court, originated the sitar from the small Persian three-stringed setar. Consequently, during the late Mughal Empire, the instrument began to evolve into its modern shape, featuring a wider neck, a bowl made of gourd instead of glued wooden lathes, metal frets, and, importantly, a bone nut on the neck, this provides a basic history of the Sitar.

You may also like…