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Volltext: A classified and descriptive catalogue of the Indian department, Vienna Universal Exhibition 1873

SECTION II—ANIMAL PRODUCTS. 
A.—SILK COCOONS. 
Silk culture, although known in India from very 
ancient times, was only established on a firm basis 
by the energetic patronage and assistance ot the East 
India Company. The Company’s trade in silk was 
confined to the province of Bengal, and betöre the 
middle of the eighteenth Century was mconsiderable; 
the silk was moreover inferior in quality, being wound 
from thecocoons and reeled into skeins in the rüde 
manner immemorially practised by the natives of 
India The industries on which the production ot 
marketable silk depend are mulberry cultivation, 
worm-rearing, and silk-reeling. . 
Although the silkworm is undoubtedly a native qt 
China yet there are several distinct species indi- 
genous in India which yield silk, also quite dis 
tinct from those of China. 
The worms reared appear to have been ot three 
kinds —the bara palu, an anmial worm, introduced 
early in the 18th Century, probably front China or 
some country bordering thereon ; the desi palu_ or 
indigenous worm, a multivoltine; and the nisln, a 
species of uncertain origin and apparently less widely 
distributed than the other two. All these worms 
werefed for the most part onthe leaves of the Morus 
indica, the plant being kept down to the size of a 
shrub by continual pruning, 
In 1769, enegetic and successful efforts were 
made by the East India Company, in the improve- 
ment and extension of silk culture, by the mtroduc- 
tion (1) of the exact mode of winding practised in the 
filatures of France and Italy, and (2). of the China 
worm and mulberry plant. The cultivation of the 
mulberry was also urged upon the Zemmdars, or 
landholders, and encouragement given in the Clearing 
of lands suited to this purpose. Large exportations, 
amounting to nearly twice the weight of the English 
importations from France and Italy, were the results o 
the improvements in winding; but in consequence ol 
the diminished consignments of raw silk in 1<~ , 
further steiis were taken to obtain an increased 
supply; experiments attended with more or less 
success were instituted at Santipore, in 1826, and 
at Howrah in 1831. In 1866, the Agn-Horticul- 
tural Society of India, a society which has always 
exerted itself vigorously in directmg attention to and 
encouraging improvements in the cultivation of the 
great Staples of Indian commerce, successfully mtrq- 
duced the Japanese silkworm, the silk from which is 
stated to be nearly equal to that of the Italian worm. 
At the present time the production of mulberry-worm 
silk in the lower provinces (excludmg Assam) seems 
to be confined to the districts of Rajshahye, Maldali, 
Moorshedabad, Midnapore, Beerbhoom, Hooghly, 
Burdwan, Bograh, Howrah, Nuddea Jessore, and 
the 24 Pergunnahs, the first five are the great silk 
producing districts. In the district of Rajshahye 
there are 97 filatures, containing 5,760 basms, and 
employing between 11,000 and 12,000 hands. O 
the 97 filatures, 34 are owned by Europeans, the re- 
mainum 63 by natives. The average yield of raw 
Silk is estimated at about 400,000 lbs. per annum, 
and it is believed thatno less an areathan lo0 square 
miles is under mulberry cultivation, while a quarter 
of million of people derive their support from the 
industry in one or other of its branches in this dis 
trict alone. It is worthy of note that the English Im 
ports of Bengal silk amounted in 1829 to 1,387,754 
lbs.; in 1835, a few years afterthe cessation oftlie East 
India Company’s trade with India, 727,535 lbs. only. 
For the last thirty years, however, the quantity of 
raw silk exported from Bengal has not varied much, 
being about 1,500,000 lbs.; on the other hand, the 
exports from China and Japan have enormously in 
creased. While the exports of Bengal silk have 
remained almost stationary, the price has nearly 
doubled. The rise is undoubtedly to a great extent 
due to the introduction of European improvements 
in the System of reeling. Still the prices decidedly 
rule below those of China and Japan, and, a fortiori, 
below the better Italian and Bruttia silks. The 
exports of country-made silk piece goods have greatly 
declined. . 
In Southern India, silk culture is carned on at 
Mysore, a dass of Mahomedans being engaged in the 
production ; although of late years the industry has 
suffered from the ravages of the silkworm disease. 
The cultivation has spread though but slightly to the 
neighbouring districts in the Madras Presidency, as 
Salem and Coimbatore. 
Silk is also produced in Assam, Burmah, and 
Cashmere, ehiefly for local use, however. 
The occupation of silk culture in British 
Burma is a lucrative one, and many parts of the 
country are admirably adapted for it. 1 hat under 
these circumstances the occupation is not more ex- 
tensively followed than it is, is due mainly to the 
Buddhistic prejudice against the taking of life, the 
manufacture of raw silk of the best quality in- 
volving the death of the chrysalis in the cocoon. 
Thus, the silk-growers live in villages by themselves, 
holding but little social intercourse with their neigh- 
bours, for fear of being taunted with allusions to the 
wickedness of their calling. 
Repeated attempts have been made to introduce 
the silk-culture into the Punjab, but with out any 
definite success, as yet; the industry has established 
itself in Goordaspore, where natives, especially Ma- 
hommedans, are engaged in the production. 
In Berar, Oudh, Dharwar, and other parts of 
India, silk culture seems capable of great extension, 
the climate being adapted both to the cultivation of 
the mulberry, which abounds in many districts, and 
to the rearing and thriving of silk-worms. 
Quantity and value of Raw Silk exported from India 
in the official year 1871-2. 
TVom lbs. Riipoes. 
Bengal - - 2,174,344 - 13,229,993 
Burmah - 1,260 - 4,050 
Madras- - 1,516 - 9,373 
Bombay- - 55,945 - 150,833 
Sind - - 1,683 - 9,507 
2,234,749 
13,403,756 
Bengal Committee. 
8,345. Cocoons of “ Arindi ” moth (Attacus ricini). 
From Dinagepore. Not an article of commerce; 
cultivated by Mussulman ryots, in small qunn- 
tities, near their houses. 2 annas per seer of 2 lbs,
	        
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