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File:Shan saophas (sawbwas) at the Durbar, Delhi, India.jpg

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Shan_saophas_(sawbwas)_at_the_Durbar,_Delhi,_India.jpg (425 × 486 pixels, file size: 220 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)

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Description
English: Stereoscopic pair of photographs taken by Underwood & Underwood of Burmese princes at the Coronation Durbar held in January 1903 at Delhi in India. The photographs show two Shan rulers (sawbwas) standing with their wives seated between them, the group posed against an ornamental backdrop and shaded by a tiered royal umbrella, at the grand durbar held in honour of the coronation of Edward VII. The prints are from a collection of 36 stereoscopic views of Burma, one in a series of "stereoscopic tours" of foreign countries published as the ‘Underwood Travel Library’. Stereoscopic views became enormously popular from the mid-19th century onward as they enabled observers to imagine that they were really “touring” around distant parts of the world. Each pair of views, made using a special camera with two lenses, is mounted on stout card for insertion in a stereoscope or binocular viewer. This device creates the illusion of a single three-dimensional image in the mind of the observer by using the binocular function of human sight to combine the two images, which are seen from fractionally different viewpoints. The photographs in this set are generally of high quality and selected for their clarity and instructive value. A few of the mounts also have a detailed descriptive caption printed on the reverse, with instructions (presumably for the guidance of teachers) as to what general topic the photograph illustrates.
Date
Source http://www.bl.uk/onlinegallery/onlineex/apac/photocoll/b/019pho000000180u00003000.html
Author Underwood and Underwood
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Public domain
This work is in the public domain in India because its term of copyright has expired.

The Indian Copyright Act applies in India to works first published in India. According to the Indian Copyright Act, 1957, as amended up to Act No. 27 of 2012 (Chapter V, Section 25):

  • Anonymous works, photographs, cinematographic works, sound recordings, government works, and works of corporate authorship or of international organizations enter the public domain 60 years after the date on which they were first published, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year (i.e. as of 2024, works published prior to 1 January 1964 are considered public domain).
  • Posthumous works (other than those above) enter the public domain after 60 years from publication date, counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
  • Any kind of work other than the above enters the public domain 60 years after the author's death (or in the case of a multi-author work, the death of the last surviving author), counted from the beginning of the following calendar year.
  • Text of laws, judicial opinions, and other government reports are free from copyright.
The Indian Copyright Act, 1957 is not retroactive, so any work in which copyright did not subsist when it commenced did not have its copyright restored, and is in the public domain per the Copyright Act 1911.

You must also include a United States public domain tag to indicate why this work is in the public domain in the United States.

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current07:50, 15 December 2015Thumbnail for version as of 07:50, 15 December 2015425 × 486 (220 KB)XufancReverted to version as of 09:33, 20 August 2010 (UTC)
20:58, 5 April 2012Thumbnail for version as of 20:58, 5 April 20124,000 × 1,992 (2.65 MB)Aavindraafull res
09:33, 20 August 2010Thumbnail for version as of 09:33, 20 August 2010425 × 486 (220 KB)HinthaCropped
09:32, 20 August 2010Thumbnail for version as of 09:32, 20 August 2010976 × 486 (409 KB)Hintha{{Information |Description={{en|1=Stereoscopic pair of photographs taken by Underwood & Underwood of Burmese princes at the Coronation Durbar held in January 1903 at Delhi in India. The photographs show two Shan rulers (sawbwas) standing with their wives

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