Wagoner suggests the far-reaching
while in the private, domestic domain, he remains bare-chested, wearing only a lungī(the “decency-clout” described by Babur above) around his waist. Wagoner suggests that the far-reaching process of Islamization did indeed replace select Indic cultural practices at the Vijaynagara court but only in “key public contexts.”Though some have argued that the Mughals also observed this distinction (between the public and private dress/personas of the king), the situation is more complex. Two paintings from Jahangir’s period imply that the Mughal emperor’s relationship to dressing in public was far more complicated than the one we encounter in Vijaynagara. In the first painting, Jahangir appears bare-chested and seated in the padmāsana, or lotus position, in the company of, perhaps, one of the female “kin” members of his royal household. สล็อต