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The litter is a class of
wheel A wheel is a circular component that is intended to rotate on an axle Bearing (mechanical), bearing. The wheel is one of the key components of the wheel and axle which is one of the Simple machine, six simple machines. Wheels, in conjunction wi ...
less vehicles, a type of human-powered transport, for the transport of people. Smaller litters may take the form of open chairs or beds carried by two or more carriers, some being enclosed for protection from the elements. Larger litters, for example those of the Chinese emperors, may resemble small rooms upon a platform borne upon the shoulders of a dozen or more people. To most efficiently carry a litter, porters either place the
carrying pole A carrying pole, also called a shoulder pole or a milkmaid's yoke, is a yoke of wood or bamboo, used by people to carry a load. This piece of equipment is used in one of two basic ways: *A single person balances the yoke over one shoulder, with ...
s directly upon their shoulders or use a yoke to transfer the load from the carrying poles to the shoulders.


Definitions

A simple litter consists of a
sling sling may refer to: Places *Sling, Anglesey, Wales *Sling, Gloucestershire, England, a small village in the Forest of Dean People with the name * Otto Šling (1912–1952), repressed Czech communist functionary Arts, entertainment, and media * ...
attached along its length to poles or stretched inside a frame. The poles or frame are carried by porters in front and behind. Such simple litters are common on battlefields and emergency situations, where terrain prohibits wheeled vehicles from carrying away the dead and wounded. Litters can also be created quickly by the lashing of poles to a
chair A chair is a type of seat, typically designed for one person and consisting of one or more legs, a flat or slightly angled seat and a back-rest. They may be made of wood, metal, or synthetic materials, and may be padded or upholstered in vario ...
. Such litters, consisting of a simple cane chair with maybe an umbrella to ward off the elements and two stout bamboo poles, may still be found in Chinese mountain resorts such as the
Huangshan Mountains Huangshan (),Bernstein, pp. 125–127. literally meaning the Yellow Mountain(s), is a mountain range in southern Anhui Province in eastern China. It was originally called “Yishan”, and it was renamed because of a legend that Emperor Xuanyu ...
to carry tourists along scenic paths and to viewing positions inaccessible by other means of transport. A more luxurious version consists of a bed or couch, sometimes enclosed by curtains, for the passenger or passengers to lie on. These are carried by at least two porters in equal numbers in front and behind, using wooden rails that pass through brackets on the sides of the couch. The largest and heaviest types would be carried by draught animals. Another form, commonly called a sedan chair, consists of a
chair A chair is a type of seat, typically designed for one person and consisting of one or more legs, a flat or slightly angled seat and a back-rest. They may be made of wood, metal, or synthetic materials, and may be padded or upholstered in vario ...
or windowed
cabin Cabin may refer to: Buildings * Beach cabin, a small wooden hut on a beach * Log cabin, a house built from logs * Cottage, a small house * Chalet, a wooden mountain house with a sloping roof * Cabin, small free-standing structures that serve as in ...
suitable for a single occupant, also carried by at least two porters in front and behind, using wooden rails that pass through brackets on the sides of the chair. These porters were known in London as "chairmen". These have been very rare since the 19th century, but such enclosed portable litters have been used as an
elite In political and sociological theory, the elite (french: élite, from la, eligere, to select or to sort out) are a small group of powerful people who hold a disproportionate amount of wealth, privilege, political power, or skill in a group. D ...
form of transport for centuries, especially in cultures where women are kept secluded. Sedan chairs, in use until the 19th century, were accompanied at night by
link-boy A link-boy (or link boy or linkboy) was a boy who carried a flaming torch to light the way for pedestrians at night. Linkboys were common in London in the days before the introduction of gas lighting in the early to mid 19th century. The linkb ...
s who carried torches.Bath Chronicle
(December 2, 2002) ''Sedan Chairs Ride Again.'' Page 21.
Where possible, the link boys escorted the fares to the chairmen, the passengers then being delivered to the door of their lodgings. Several houses in Bath, Somerset, England still have the link extinguishers on the exteriors, shaped like outsized candle snuffers. In the 1970s, entrepreneur and Bathwick resident, John Cuningham, revived the sedan chair service business for a brief amount of time.


Antiquity

In pharaoh, pharaonic Egypt and many other places such as India, Rome, and China, the ruler and divinities (in the form of an idol like lord Krishna) were often transported in a litter in public, frequently in procession, as during state ceremonial or religious festivals. The instructions for how to construct the Ark of the covenant#Construction and description, Ark of the Covenant in the Book of Exodus resembles a litter. In Ancient Rome, a litter called ''lectica'' or "sella" often carried members of the imperial family, as well as other dignitaries and other members of the rich elite, when not mounted on horseback. The habit must have proven quite persistent, for the Third Council of Braga in 675 AD saw the need to order that bishops, when carrying the relics of martyrs in procession, must walk to the church, and not be carried in a chair, or litter, by deacons clothed in white. In the Catholic Church, Popes were carried the same way in Sedia gestatoria, which was replaced later by the popemobile.


In Asia


Indian subcontinent

A palanquin is a covered litter, usually for one passenger. It is carried by an even number of bearers (between two and eight, but most commonly four) on their shoulders, by means of a pole projecting fore and aft. The word is derived from the Sanskrit ''palyanka'', meaning bed or couch. The Malay and Javanese form is ''palangki'', in Hindi and Bengali, ''palki'', in Telugu ''pallaki''. The Portuguese apparently added a nasal termination to these to make ''palanquim''. English adopted it from Portuguese as "palanquin". Palanquins vary in size and grandeur. The smallest and simplest, a cot or frame suspended by the four corners from a bamboo pole and borne by two bearers, is called a ''doli''. Larger palanquins are rectangular wooden boxes eight feet long, four feet wide, and four feet high, with openings on either side screened by curtains or shutters. Interiors are furnished with bedding and pillows. Ornamentation reflects the social status of the traveller. The most ornate palanquins have lacquer paintwork and cast bronze finials at the ends of the poles. Designs include foliage, animals, and geometric patterns. Ibn Batutta describes them as being "carried by eight men in two lots of four, who rest and carry in turn. In the town there are always a number of these men standing in the bazaars and at the sultan's gate and at the gates of other persons for hire." Those for "women are covered with silk curtains." Palanquins are mentioned in literature as early as the ''Ramayana'' (c. 250BC). Indian women of rank always travelled by palanquin. The conveyance proved popular with European residents in India, and was used extensively by them. Pietro Della Valle, a 17th-century Italian traveller, wrote: Being transported by palanquin was pleasant. Owning one and keeping the staff to power it was a luxury affordable even to low-paid clerks of the East India Company. Concerned that this indulgence led to neglect of business in favor of "rambling", in 1758 the Court of Directors of the company prohibited its junior clerks from purchasing and maintaining palanquins. Also in the time of the British in India, ''dolis'' served as military ambulances, used to carry the wounded from the battlefield. In the early 19th century, the most prevalent mode of long-distance transport for the affluent was by palanquin. The post office could arrange, with a few days notice, relays of bearers to convey a traveller's palanquin between ''Stagecoach, stages'' or stations. The distance between these in the government's ''dak (mail service), dak'' (Hindi: "mail") system averaged about , and could be covered in three hours. A relay's usual complement consisted of two torch-bearers, two luggage-porters, and eight palanquin-bearers who worked in gangs of four, although all eight might pitch in at steep sections. A passenger could travel straight through or break their journey at dak bungalows located at certain stations. Until the mid-19th century, palanquins remained popular for those who could afford them, but they fell out of favor for long journeys as steamers, railways, and roads suitable for wheeled transport were developed. By the beginning of the 20th century they were nearly "obsolete among the better class of Europeans". Pulled rickshaw, Rickshaws, introduced in the 1930s, supplanted them for trips around town. Modern use of the palanquin is limited to ceremonial occasions. A ''doli'' carries the bride in a Indian wedding, traditional wedding, and they may be used to carry religious images in Hindu processions. Many parts in Uttar Pradesh, India like Gorakhpur and around places Vishwakarma communities has been involved in making the ''dolis for wedding'' processions. The last known doli making dates back around 2000 by Sharmas(Vishwakarmas) in Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh.


China

In Han Dynasty, Han China the elite travelled in light bamboo seats supported on a carrier's back like a backpack. In the Northern Wei Dynasty and the Northern and Southern Liu Song dynasty, Song Dynasty, wooden carriages on poles appear in painted landscape scrolls. A commoner used a wooden or bamboo ''civil litter'' (), while the mandarin (bureaucrat), mandarin class used an ''official litter'' () enclosed in silk curtains. The chair with perhaps the greatest importance was the bridal chair. A traditional bride is carried to her wedding ceremony by a "shoulder carriage" (), usually hired. These were lacquered in an auspicious shade of red, richly ornamented and gilding, gilded, and were equipped with red silk curtains to screen the bride from onlookers. Sedan chairs were once the only public conveyance in Hong Kong, filling the role of cabs. Chair stands were found at all hotels, wharves, and major crossroads. Public chairs were licensed, and charged according to tariffs which would be displayed inside.A Hong Kong Sedan Chair
Illustrations of China and Its People, John Thomson 1837–1921, (London, 1873–1874)
Private chairs were an important marker of a person's status. Civil officers' status was denoted by the number of bearers attached to his chair. Before Hong Kong's Peak Tram went into service in 1888, wealthy residents of Victoria Peak, The Peak were carried on sedan chairs by coolies up the steep paths to their residence including Richard Graves MacDonnell, Sir Richard MacDonnell's (former Governor of Hong Kong) summer home, where they could take advantage of the cooler climate. Since 1975 an annual sedan chair race has been held to benefit the Matilda International Hospital and commemorate the practice of earlier days.


Korea

In Korea, royalty and aristocrats were carried in wooden litters called ''gama'' (가마). ''Gama''s were primarily used by royalty and government officials. There were six types of ''gama'', each assigned to different government official rankings. In traditional weddings, the bride and groom are carried to the ceremony in separate ''gama''s. Because of the difficulties posed by the mountainous terrain of the Korean peninsula and the lack of paved roads, ''gama''s were preferred over wheeled vehicles.


Japan

As the population of Japan increased and less and less land remained available for the grazing of animals, restrictions were placed upon the use of horses for non-military purposes, with the result that human-powered transport grew increasingly important and eventually came to prevail. ''Kago'' (Kanji: 駕籠, Hiragana: かご) were often used in Japan to transport the non-samurai citizen. ''Commons:Norimono (Japanese palanquin), Norimono'' were used by the warrior class and nobility, most famously during the Tokugawa shogunate, Tokugawa period when regional samurai were required to spend a part of the year in Edo (Tokyo) with their families, resulting in yearly migrations of the rich and powerful (Sankin-kōtai) to and from the capital along the central backbone road of Japan. Somewhat similar in appearance to kago are the mikoshi, portable shrines that are used to carry the "god-body" (goshintai), the central totemic core normally found in the honden, most sacred area of Jinja (Shinto), Shinto Shrines, on a tour to and from a shrine during some matsuri, religious festivals.


Vietnam

Traditional Vietnam employed two distinct types of litters, the ''cáng'' and the ''kiệu''. The ''cáng'' is a basic bamboo pole with the rider reclining in a hammock. More elaborate cáng had an adjustable woven bamboo shade to shelter the occupant. Dignitaries would have an entourage to carry parasols. The ''kiệu'' resemble more of the sedan chair, enclosed with a fixed elaborately carved roof and doors. While the cáng has become obsolete, the ''kiệu'' is retained in certain traditional rituals a part of a temple devotional procession.


Thailand

In Thailand, the royalty were also carried in wooden litters called wo ("พระวอ" Phra Wo, literally, "Royal Sedan") for large ceremonies. Wos were elaborately decorated litters that were delicately carved and colored by gold leaf. Stained glass is also used to decorate the litters. Presently, Royal Wos and carriages are only used for royal ceremonies in Thailand. They are exhibited in the Bangkok National Museum.


Indonesia

In traditional Javanese people, Javanese society, the generic palanquin or ''joli'' was a wicker chair with a canopy, attached to two poles, and borne on men's shoulders, and was available for hire to any paying customer. As a status marker, gilded throne-like palanquins, or ''jempana'', were originally reserved solely for royalty, and later co-opted by the Dutch, as a status marker: the more elaborate the palanquin, the higher the status of the owner. The ''joli'' was transported either by hired help, by nobles' peasants, or by slaves. Historically, the palanquin of a Javanese people, Javanese king (''raja''), prince (''pangeran''), lord (''raden mas'') or other noble (''bangsawan'') was known as a ''jempana''; a more throne-like version was called a ''pangkem''. It was always part of a large military procession, with a yellow (the Javanese colour for royalty) square canopy. The ceremonial parasol (''payung'') was held above the palanquin, which was carried by a bearer behind and flanked by the most loyal bodyguards, usually about 12 men, with pike (weapon), pikes, sabres, lances, muskets, keris and a variety of disguised blades. In contrast, the canopy of the Sumatran palanquin was oval-shaped and draped in white cloth; this was reflective of greater cultural permeation by Islam. Occasionally, a weapon or heirloom, such as an important keris or tombak, was given its own palanquin. In Hindu culture in Bali today, the tradition of using palanquins for auspicious statues, weapons or heirlooms continues, for funerals especially; in more elaborate rituals, a palanquin is used to bear the body, and is subsequently cremated along with the departed.


Philippines

In pre-colonial Philippines, litters were a way of transportation for the elite (''maginoo'', ''ginu'', ''tumao''); ''Rajahs'', ''Lakans'', ''Datus'', sovereign princes (''Rajamuda'') and their wives use a ''Sankayan'' or ''Sakayan'', a wooden or bamboo throne with elaborate and intricate carvings carried by their servants. Also among their retinue were ''payong'' (umbrella)-bearers, to shade the royalty and nobility from the intense heat. Princesses (''binibini'', ''dayang dayang'') who were sequestered from the world were called ''Binukot'' or ''Binocot'' (“set apart”). A special type of royal, these individuals were forbidden to walk on the ground or be exposed to the general populace. When they needed to go anywhere, they were veiled and carried in a hammock or a basket-like litter similar to bird's nests carried by their slaves. Longer journeys required that they be borne inside larger, covered palanquins with silk covers, with some taking the form of a miniature hut. In Spanish-colonial Philippines, litters remained one of the options of transportation for the Spanish inhabitants and members of the native principalia class.


In Africa


Ghana

In Southern Ghana the Akan and the Ga–Dangme people, Ga-Dangme carry their chiefs and kings in palanquins when they appear in their state durbar (court), durbars. When used in such occasions these palanquins may be seen as a substitutes of a state coach in Europe or a horse used in Northern Ghana. The chiefs of the Ga (''mantsemei'') in the Greater Accra Region (Ghana) use also figurative palanquins which are built after a chief's family symbol or totem. But these day the figurative palanquins are very seldom used. They are related with the fantasy coffin, figurative coffins which have become very popular among the Ga in the last 50 years. Since these figurative coffins were shown 1989 in the exhibition "Les magicians de la terre" in the Centre Pompidou in Paris they were shown in many art museums around the world.Regula Tschumi: ''The Figurative palanquin, Figurative Palanquins of the Ga. History and Significance.'' In: ''African Arts'', 46 (4), 2013, S. 60–73.


Angola

From at least the 15th century until the 19th century, litters of varying types known as ''tipoye'' were used in the Kingdom of Kongo as a mode of transportation for the elites. Seat-style litters with a single pole along the back of the chair carried by two men (usually slaves) were topped with an umbrella. Lounge-style litters in the shape of a bed were used to move one to two people with a porter at each corner. Due to the tropical climate, horses were not native to the area nor could they survive very long once introduced by the Portuguese. Human portage was the only mode of transportation in the region and became highly adept with missionary accounts claiming the litter transporters could move at speeds 'as fast as post horses at the gallop'.


In the West


In Europe

Portuguese and Spanish navigators and colonisers encountered litters of various sorts in India, Mexico, and Peru. Such novelties, imported into Spain, spread into France and then to United Kingdom, Britain. All the European names for these devices ultimately derive from the root ''sed-'', as in Latin ''sedere'', "to sit", which gave rise to ''seda'' ("seat") and its diminutive ''sedula'' ("little seat"), the latter of which was contracted to ''sella'', the traditional Classical Latin name for a chair, including a carried chair. In Europe this mode of transportation met with instant success. Henry VIII of England (reigned 1509–1547) was carried around in a sedan chair—it took four strong chairmen to carry him towards the end of his life—but the expression "sedan chair" did not appear in print until 1615. Trevor Fawcett notes (see link) that British travellers Fynes Moryson (in 1594) and John Evelyn (in 1644–45) remarked on the ''seggioli'' of Naples and Genoa, which were chairs for public hire slung from poles and carried on the shoulders of two porters. From the mid-17th century, visitors taking the waters at Bath, Somerset, Bath would be conveyed in a chair enclosed in baize curtains, especially if they had taken a heated bath and were going straight to bed to sweat. The curtains kept off a possibly fatal draft. These were not the proper sedan chairs "to carry the better sort of people in visits, or if sick or infirmed" (Celia Fiennes). In the 17th and 18th centuries, the chairs stood in the main hall of a well-appointed city residence, where a lady could enter and be carried to her destination without setting foot in a filthy street. The neoclassicism, neoclassical sedan chair made for Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, Queen Charlotte (Queen Consort from 1761 to 1818) remains at Buckingham Palace. By the mid-17th century, sedans for hire had become a common mode of transportation. London had "chairs" available for hire in 1634, each assigned a number and the chairmen licensed because the operation was a monopoly of a courtier of King Charles I of England, Charles I. Sedan chairs could pass in streets too narrow for a carriage, helping to alleviate the crush of coaches in London streets, an early instance of traffic congestion. A similar system later operated in Scotland. In 1738 a fare system was established for Scottish sedans, and the regulations covering chairmen in Bath are reminiscent of the modern taxicab, Taxi Commission's rules. A trip within a city cost six pence and a day's rental was four shillings. A sedan was even used as an ambulance in Scotland's Royal Infirmary. Chairmen moved at a good clip. In Bath they had the right-of-way: pedestrians hearing "By your leave" behind them knew to flatten themselves against walls or railings as the chairmen hustled through. There were often disastrous accidents, upset chairs, and broken glass-paned windows.


The end of a tradition

In Great Britain, in the early 19th century, the public sedan chair began to fall out of use, perhaps because streets were better paved or perhaps because of the rise of the more comfortable, companionable and affordable hackney carriage. In Glasgow, the decline of the sedan chair is illustrated by licensing records which show twenty-seven sedan chairs in 1800, eighteen in 1817, and ten in 1828. During that same period the number of registered hackney carriages in Glasgow rose to one hundred and fifty.


In the Americas

The wealthy are recorded to have used sedan chairs in the cities of colonial America and the early period of the United States. In 1787, Benjamin Franklin, at the time 81 years old, gouty, and in generally declining health, is noted to have travelled to meetings of the United States Constitutional Convention (United States), Constitutional Convention in a sedan chair carried by four prisoners.


Colonial practice

In various colonies, litters of various types were maintained under native traditions, but often adopted by the colonials as a new ruling and/or socio-economic elite, either for practical reasons (often comfortable modern transport was unavailable, e.g. for lack of decent roads) and/or as a status symbol. During the 17–18th centuries, palanquins (see above) were very popular among European traders in Bengal, so much so that in 1758 an order was issued prohibiting their purchase by certain lower-ranking employees.koron


The traveling "silla" of Latin America

A similar but simpler palanquin was used by the elite in parts of 18th- and 19th-century Latin America. Often simply called a ''silla'' (Spanish for seat or chair), it consisted of a simple wooden chair with an attached tumpline. The occupant sat in the chair, which was then affixed to the back of a single porter, with the tumpline supported by his head. The occupant thus faced backwards during travel. This style of palanquin was probably due to the steep terrain and rough or narrow roads unsuitable to European-style sedan chairs. Travellers by ''silla'' usually employed a number of porters, who would alternate carrying the occupant. The porters were known as silleros, cargueros or silleteros (sometimes translated as "saddle-men"). A chair borne on the back of a porter, almost identical to the ''silla'', is used in the mountains of China for ferrying older tourists and visitors up and down the mountain paths. One of these mountains where the ''silla'' is still used is the
Huangshan Mountains Huangshan (),Bernstein, pp. 125–127. literally meaning the Yellow Mountain(s), is a mountain range in southern Anhui Province in eastern China. It was originally called “Yishan”, and it was renamed because of a legend that Emperor Xuanyu ...
of Anhui province in Eastern China.


See also

* Bath chair * Litter (rescue basket) * Sling (furniture) * Mikoshi * Sedia gestatoria, the portable throne of the popes * Ark of the Covenant, described in the Hebrew Bible as a portable sacred container and throne of God, sharing similarities with portable shrines and covered sedan chairs * Howdah (carriage positioned on the back of an elephant or camel) * Pall-bearer to carry a casket during a funeral procession *Gurney


References

*


Further reading

* Regula Tschumi: ''Concealed Art. The Figurative Palanquins and Coffins in Ghana.'' Berne, Edition Till Schaap 2014. * Regula Tschumi: ''The Figurative Palanquins of the Ga. History and Significance.'' In: ''African Arts (journal), African Arts'', Vol. 46, Nr. 4, 2013, S. 60–73.
Trevor Fawcett, "Chair transport in Bath"
from ''Bath History,'' II (1988): richly detailed social history

Historical exhibit at Kamat.com {{DEFAULTSORT:Litter (Vehicle) Chairs Human-powered vehicles Animal-powered vehicles Taxi vehicles Objects used in Hindu worship