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A '''chuckmuck''' is a belt-hung leather and metal tinder pouch. It is a distinct design of a flint-and-steel fire-lighting kit. It is also used as ethnic jewellery amongst Tibetans and Mongolians.
A '''chuckmuck''' is a belt-hung leather and metal tinder pouch with a thin long striking plate. It is a distinct design of a flint-and-steel fire-lighting kit, used as ethnic jewellery amongst Tibetans and Mongolians to this day. This large distinctive style of a worldwide daily utensil was noted in Victorian British India and the Anglo-Indian word Chuckmuck (derived from Chakmak) was adopted by museums worldwide from the 1880's on.


==Description==
==Description==

Revision as of 16:58, 23 January 2020

A chuckmuck is a belt-hung leather and metal tinder pouch with a thin long striking plate. It is a distinct design of a flint-and-steel fire-lighting kit, used as ethnic jewellery amongst Tibetans and Mongolians to this day. This large distinctive style of a worldwide daily utensil was noted in Victorian British India and the Anglo-Indian word Chuckmuck (derived from Chakmak) was adopted by museums worldwide from the 1880's on.

Description

The chuckmuck is constructed from a stiff leather purse with a thick curved steel striker attached by rivets to its base. The sides and flap of the purse are either sewn or fixed by ornamental metal plates or small plaques. Inside are kept a piece of flint and a little tinder (pulped woody material such as plant roots). On the top fold a thin metal plate with 1 - 3 small hooks allows the pouch to be hung from the belt with a chuckmuck strap: a chain, leather thong or embroidered cloth.

Chuckmucks vary in size and decoration, with the circular boss in the centre of the flap, which operates as a hook to keep the purse closed, sometimes being decorated by a semi-precious stone such as coral or turquoise. Other decorations on the mounts are in silver, brass or iron with geometric patterns, floral designs, Tibetan motifs, or in the animal style.[1][2] The steel striker is occasionally engraved: with two dragons[3] or Chinese characters. The University of Washington database contains a collection of fire steels including early chuckmucks on plates 45-48 from several countries.[4]

The chuckmuck is hung from the belt in both Mongolian and Tibetan traditional dress for men and women. For this reason it is sometimes described as a Chatelaine (chain) with strap ornaments, as in the British Museum exhibit.[5] It is sometimes accompanied by a 'chuckmuck purse' as a jewellery set[6] in exactly the same style only lacking the curved steel striker.

History

The container for a flint-and-steel kit can come in two main forms: the tinderbox[7] and the tinder pouch.[8] A fire lighting kit for 'striking a light' was essential until the gradual introduction of the match in the mid 19th century. The form of the chuckmuck is so different from other tinder pouches worldwide that categorising them together is misleading.[original research?] The decorated stiff leather purse of the chuckmuck with its attached curved striker make it a design classic.[peacock prose]

The chuckmuck design appears in many cultures from the 17th century[4] or earlier, stretching from the Silk Road to the Himalaya[9] and China[10][11] to Japan[12][13]

It is not known where or when the design originated, but it was manufactured locally in several countries in Central Asia.[citation needed] One known, still active, hub of metalwork was the area between Lanzhou, Xining and Labrang, the NE part of Amdo which incorporates the Amdo Tibetans, some Mongol regions, the Salar, the Hui and Han Chinese. In Tibet, apart from Lhasa and a very few other towns, only Derge[14] was renowned for the quality of its metalwork.

The 19th-century growth in museums and world expositions in several countries led to many exhibits on the theme of man making fire and several of these included examples of chuckmucks. As a result, many museums and old collections contain chuckmucks; they occasionally appear in antique auctions.[15][16][17]

In 1926 a British museum of Fire-Making Appliances catalogued 52 of these chuckmucks and illustrated 11. "Of all tinder-pouches, by far the handsomest and most interesting are those commonly known by this name, which form an exceeding well-marked group. All come from one part of the world covering Tibet, the Himalayan region, Mongolia and Northern China." [18] The whole museum collection was transferred to the Science Museum in 1937 [19][20]

Museums worldwide today classify them in a variety of different ways: "pouch (tinder flint)"[5] "tinder pouch ('mecha')"[4] fire-striker, flint-steel set, and rarely mention the chuckmuck design to distinguish it from other pouches.

Etymology

Mechag style cloth and leather belt straps for suspending chuckmucks

Chuckmuck is derived via the British Indian word chakmak [21] from the Turkish word for flint, çakmaktaşı.[22] This word of Turkic origin was simplified and incorporated as slang in many languages of Central Asia. When encountered in British India during contact with Himalayan Tibetan tribes, it became identified as a particular form of fire-steel - the chuckmuck. Since this coincided with the introduction of the friction match, the function of the tinderbox and tinder pouch gradually became unnecessary, and by the end of the 19th century, only its use as ethnic jewellery by Mongolians and Tibetans kept the chuckmuck in daily use.

Chuckmuck

For a few decades in mid 19th century, chuckmuck and chakmak were used almost interchangeably as the ‘Indian’ word for any type of fire-steel.

The first known use of the word chuckmuck comes from 1843 from British India: “the coolness of the British soldier is shewn by his sitting down and lighting his chuckmuck and enjoying the solace of his pipe while the arrows of death were bustling around his ears”.[23]

In central India, north west of Mumbai, a British officer [24] describes a local guide: “Round his waist was a broad leather belt, hung round with numerous pouches…and a chuckmuck, or leather bag, with flint, steel and tinder.” This would best be described as a tinder pouch, and, that of the pipe smoking soldiers a simple metal tube with striker.[25]

A camping book in 1871 details "a very convenient and portable means of carrying fire, sold under the name of "strike-a-light" or "chuckmuck"; it is formed of a brass tube of 1in. caliber and 3in. in length, which has a cap and a sliding bottom to it : it is filled of tinder….it contains also a gun flint or bit of agate, and its chain passes through an oval of steel or case-hardened iron” costing around a shilling [26] - clearly one of the plethora of short-lived metal tinderbox designs.

However, after the 1889 publication of Hindu-koh[27] by Donald Macintyre (VC), a prominent British Gurkha officer, containing the first known illustration and description of a chuckmuck, the word became more strictly defined in academic circles. Macintyre actually made his hunting trip, on which the book is based, in the Himalaya in 1853-4, and was a prominent fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and other Indian societies.[28]

The museum categorisation of chuckmuck dates from this time. After that, all academic descriptions, where they were catalogued in English, used the word to refer to the classic design of the chuckmuck. Chakmak does not appear to have been used as a descriptive term outside India.[29]

Chuckmuck was defined as an Anglo-Indian word.[30] It continues to be used in books in English about the history of fire-lighting.[31]

Chakmak

Catholic missionaries had a presence in Western Tibet from 1624 to 1640. The initial reports of the Jesuit António de Andrade, including dictionaries, were supplemented by many others in the 19th century on the eastern fringes of the Tibetan plateau, leading to an 1899 dictionary[32] citing lcags ma and lcags mag, pronounced as chagmag,[33] as vulgar slang for me lcags, itself often transliterated as mechag.[34]

In Nepal, a traditional kukri features two little knives attached at the back of the sheath. One is called a chakmak. It is blunt on both sides and it works like a knife sharpener or when struck on a limestone creates sparks to start fire.[35]

Chakmak, as an Indian word, was widely used in reports and books in British India. “In Ladakh both men and women wore in their waste-clothes or girdles a chakmak (or leather case ornamented with brass, containing a flint, steel and tinder)”.[36]

William Moorcroft, extensively catalogued the Himalayan regions around Ladakh in the 1820s, noting “Every man carries a knife hanging from his girdle, and a chakmak,or steel for striking a light”. As he was describing Tibetan dress, these were of the classic chuckmuck design.[37]

In 1891 William Woodville Rockhill recorded some of Salar language, an archaic Turkic dialect spoken near Lanzhou between the Tibetan plateau and Mongolia. He derived the Salar word cha’-ma from Ottoman Turkish chakmak.[38] Similarly, in Uyghur language, a Turkic language spoken in western China, the word for flint is chaqmaq teshi.[39]

In Persian and Arabic, chakmak means "flint" or "fire-striker".[40] An early example dated 1716 is from Persia, where the Islamic inscription reads “The fire steel (chakmak) of his heart is so filled with sparks that his charged sight intensifies the burning” [41]

In the Kyrgyz language, as noted by an 1899 Danish expedition, the "apparatus for striking fire is called Chakmak. It is possible that flint is found by this lake of Chakmaktinkul and that the name may arise therefrom in relation to the striking of fire from flint".[42]

In other languages

  • In Mongolian, kete[43]
  • In Japanese, hiuchi-bukuro [44]

References

  1. ^ J.N.Roerich 1930 'the animal style among the nomad tribes of Northern Tibet'
  2. ^ "John Vincent Bellezza: Thogchags, Ancient Amulets of Tibet". asianart.com.
  3. ^ "Tinder pouch | V&A Search the Collections". Collections.vam.ac.uk. 2015-08-10. Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  4. ^ a b c "Steel plate images". Arl.wustl.edu. Retrieved 2015-08-15.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b "British Museum - Collection search: You searched for". British Museum.
  6. ^ "Bradley Rowe". Pinterest.
  7. ^ "Colonial Sense: Antiques: Other Antiques: Early Lighting: The Common Tinder-Box". colonialsense.com.
  8. ^ Pitt Rivers Museum. "Methods of Making Fire - Pitt Rivers Museum". ox.ac.uk.
  9. ^ "British Museum - Collection search: You searched for As1983,07.115.a". British Museum.
  10. ^ "British Museum - Collection search: You searched for As1878,1230.956". British Museum.
  11. ^ "British Museum - Collection search: You searched for As1911,1007.1". British Museum.
  12. ^ "Bonhams". bonhams.com.
  13. ^ "Batemans". Batemans.
  14. ^ Donald LaRocca. "Recent Acquisitions of Tibetan and Mongolian Arms and Armor in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (part 2)". academia.edu.
  15. ^ National Museum of Scotland Museum reference A.1927.661
  16. ^ Christie?s. "A brass-mounted tinder pouch or "chuckmuck"". christies.com.
  17. ^ "Bonhams". bonhams.com.
  18. ^ The Bryant and May Museum of Fire-Making appliances: catalogue of the exhibits" London 1926 (and supplement 1928) pages 66-73 and 221
  19. ^ "The Bryant & May collection of fire-lighting devices - About us". Science Museum. 2007-02-12. Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  20. ^ "Chuckmuck images". Collectionsonline.nmsi.ac.uk. Retrieved 2015-08-15.
  21. ^ Ivor Lewis 1991 Sahibs, nabobs and boxwallahs: a dictionary of the words of Anglo-India
  22. ^ "Tureng - flint - Turkish English Dictionary". tureng.com.
  23. ^ Smith, Elder, and Company, 1843 The British Friend of India Magazine, and Indian Review
  24. ^ Henry Astbury Leveson 1860 The hunting grounds of the Old world, by 'The old shekarry'
  25. ^ "Making Sparks a Brief History of Firemaking". southpadretv.tv.
  26. ^ W.B. Lord & T. Baines 1871 Shifts and expedients of camp life, travel & exploration
  27. ^ Donald Macintyre 1889 Hindu-Koh: Wanderings and Wild Sport on and Beyond the Himalayas
  28. ^ "Macintyre, Donald (DNB12)". wikisource.org.
  29. ^ A.J.Cruse 1946 Match-box Labels of the World: With a History of Fire-making Appliances from Primitive Man to the Modern Match
  30. ^ Sir Henry Yule 1903 Anglo-English Words and Phrases.
  31. ^ Ad Van Weert Dutch Lighter Museum 1995 The Legend of the Lighter
  32. ^ Société des Missions Étrangères, 1899. Les Missionaire Catholiques du Thibet: Dictionnaire Tibétain-Latin-Français
  33. ^ Alexander Csoma de Koros 1834 A Dictionary of Tibetan and English
  34. ^ Thubten Jigme Norbu, Colin Turnbull 1968 Tibet
  35. ^ "Kukri history:: Khukuri history:: Khukri history:: Origin of Gurkha knife/kukri". khukuriblades.com.
  36. ^ Raj Kumar 2006. Paintings and lifestyles of Jammu Region : from 17th to 19th century A.D.
  37. ^ William Moorcroft 1841 Travels in the Himalayan Provinces of Hindustan From 1819 to 1825
  38. ^ WW Rockhill 1894 Diary of a journey through Mongolia and Tibet
  39. ^ "flint - Search Results - English Uyghur Dictionary". uighurdictionary.com.
  40. ^ John Richardson 1829 A Dictionary, Persian, Arabic, and English
  41. ^ plate 35.201[permanent dead link]
  42. ^ the Second Danish Pamir Expedition 1898-99 Through the Unknown Pamirs
  43. ^ F D Lessing 2014 Mongolian-English Dictionary
  44. ^ "Japanese Pipe & Accessories 7 (netsuke)". loringpage.com.