In historical Europe, women did not wear the saree as a fully draped, unstitched garment the way women do in India. Instead, they were deeply infatuated with the textiles, fabrics, and shawls imported from Bengal and Kashmir, repurposing them entirely to fit European silhouettes. [1, 2, 3, 4]
The historical phenomenon of who was "wearing" or utilizing sarees in Europe centers on three main groups:
1. French Royalty and Aristocrats (The Chemise Craze)
During the late 18th century, Queen Marie Antoinette of France revolutionized European fashion by abandoning heavy, structured silk gowns for a loose, breathable, white cotton dress known as the Chemise Γ la Reine (the Queen's shift). [5, 6, 7, 8]
- The Saree Link: This dress was made almost exclusively from Dhaka Muslin—the ultra-fine, transparent, hand-woven cotton fabric from Bengal that was used to make the most luxurious sarees. [9, 10, 11, 12, 13]
- High-society women in Paris and London wore these sheer cotton fabrics draped heavily around their bodies, mimicking classical Greek and Roman styles rather than Indian drapes. [14]
2. British Women in Colonial Europe (The Exotic Shawl)
During the 18th and 19th centuries, British women returning from India introduced high-quality saree fabrics to European wardrobes. [1]
- Because they did not know how to wrap a 6-yard unstitched cloth—and their heavy Victorian corsets wouldn't allow it anyway—they cut the fabrics. [1, 15]
- They converted rich Banarasi silk sarees and fine Jamdanis into luxurious evening cloaks, ball gowns, and exotic shoulder shawls (outerwear) to flaunt their colonial wealth. [1]
3. The 20th-Century European Aristocracy
In the 1920s and 1930s, the saree became a symbol of extreme high-fashion in European elite circles, driven by two fascinating groups:
- The European Maharanis: Elegant women like Maharani Indira Devi of Cooch Behar and Maharani Sita Devi of Kapurthala traveled frequently to Europe. They shocked the fashion capitals of Paris and London by wearing flowy French chiffon sarees decorated with European lace. This look became so popular that European fashion houses started producing chiffon fabric specifically for sarees.
- European Converts: High-profile European women who married into Indian royalty or adopted Indian philosophies—such as Mirabehn (Madeleine Slade) or Nellie Sengupta (an Englishwoman who became the President of the Indian National Congress)—fully adopted and wore traditional hand-woven khadi and cotton sarees in Europe as a political statement. [16, 17, 18, 19]
The Cultural Exchange Went Both Ways
As a banker from Bengal, you will find this ironic: while European aristocrats were cutting up Bengal's muslin and silk to make dresses, the British and French were simultaneously changing how women wore sarees in India. [5, 15, 20]
Before European contact, women in Bengal traditionally draped the saree without any undergarments. It was the introduction of the French chemise and Victorian modesty codes that forced the adoption of the stitched blouse and petticoat, a style popularized by Jnanadanandini Devi (the sister-in-law of Rabindranath Tagore) just down the road from your home in the Hooghly/Calcutta region. [5, 15, 16, 21, 22]
Since you are looking into how Indian textiles moved globally, would you like to:
- Learn how Dhaka Muslin was systematically destroyed by British industrial mills
- Explore how Jnanadanandini Devi invented the modern "Nivi" style of saree draping
- Discover the history of Indian handlooms that were highly prized in European trade
[11] https://medium.com
[19] https://swtantra.com
- GoogleAI
It is absolutely mind-boggling when you think about the sheer logistics of that era! Long before a fast 9-hour commercial flight from Kolkata to London existed, these Indian women were rewriting the rulebooks of European high fashion. [1, 2]
When air travel was a distant luxury, a voyage from India to Europe meant a three-week journey by massive steamships navigating through the Suez Canal. Yet, these ladies stepped off the docks in Marseille, France, and completely captivated Western high society. [3, 4]
The scale of their influence shows how they commanded the luxury capitols of Europe during the 1920s and 30s:
π’ 1. The Logistics of Royal Moving
Because travel was slow, these Indian royal families did not travel light. When Maharani Indira Devi of Cooch Behar or Princess Sita Devi of Kapurthala went to Europe for the summer season, they traveled with massive trunks containing hundreds of hand-woven sarees, family diamonds, silver sets, and even their own private cooks to ensure strict dietary customs were met over months-long stays. [1, 4, 5, 6]
π«π· 2. Re-engineering French Mills for the Saree
The story of how Indira Devi of Cooch Behar single-handedly introduced chiffon to Indian royalty is a prime example of global commercial leverage: [1, 7, 8]
- While summering in Paris and Lyon (the silk capital of France), she fell in love with French silk chiffon. However, French mills only manufactured fabric rolls at a standard 34-inch width. [7, 9]
- A standard Indian saree requires a 45-inch width to drape properly from waist to floor. [7, 10]
- Rather than giving up on the fabric, she used her immense wealth to commission French textile designers to custom-modify their industrial looms. They created 45-inch wide, 6-yard long chiffon runs specifically for her. [1, 7, 10, 11]
- French weavers eventually set up dedicated corporate export lines, like Sarees France Limited, purely to serve the sudden boom in orders from Indian aristocrats. [7]
π 3. Serving as Modern Muses to Elite Paris Designers
In the 1930s, Princess Sita Devi of Kapurthala (known in Parisian salons as "The Rose of India" or "Princess Karam") became a legendary fixture of the global Jazz Age. [4, 12]
- The iconic Italian-born designer Elsa Schiaparelli was so starstruck by the way Sita Devi carried herself in public that she constructed her entire 1935 Haute Couture winter collection around the silhouette of the Indian saree, featuring evening gowns that draped over the shoulder and dresses styled with harem pants.
- Mainbocher, the American couturier in Paris who famously designed the wedding dress for the Duchess of Windsor (Wallis Simpson), spent months tailoring custom fur-trimmed cloaks meant to perfectly showcase the delicate silk borders of Sita Devi’s sarees.
- Renowned global jewelry houses like Cartier and Boucheron regularly held private viewings for her, designing heavy, geometric Art Deco pieces inspired directly by the traditional motifs of her Indian necklaces. [4, 12, 13, 14, 15]
πΈ 4. Becoming the First Global Media Icons
Even in a pre-television world, these women dominated global media through fashion journals and print tabloids. Vogue magazine crowned Sita Devi a "secular goddess" and named her one of the twelve most glamorous women in the world. Master photographers of the 20th century, like Cecil Beaton and Man Ray, clamored to capture their portraits for European newsprint. [1, 3, 4, 13]
For a banking veteran, there is a fascinating financial irony here: the very wealth that the British East India Company had extracted from the agrarian and textile economy of Bengal was now being spent by an elite class of Indian women to command the premium fashion houses, industrial mills, and luxury boardrooms of Paris and London. [1, 16, 17, 18]
If you would like to explore this fascinating era further, I can:
- Show you archival photos of Princess Sita Devi in 1930s Paris
- Detail how Maharani Gayatri Devi carried on this chiffon legacy
- Explain the custom orders Salvatore Ferragamo created for Indian Maharanis
- GoogleAI
You are completely correct! The queens and princesses of the Nawabs of Bengal lived under strict purdah (seclusion) and wore veils whenever they moved, which makes the contrast with the later 20th-century jet-setting Maharanis even more dramatic.
The lifestyle of the Nawabs' queens in Murshidabad shows how the definition of power and public visibility shifted completely between the 18th and 20th centuries:
π° 1. The World of the Andaliz (The Inner Palace)
In 18th-century Murshidabad, the queens and royal women lived inside a restricted, heavily guarded sector of the palace known as the Zenana or Andaliz.
- Zero Public Visibility: They were completely shielded from the eyes of any men outside their immediate family.
- Elite Layered Hijab: When they traveled, they did not just wear a personal face veil. They were placed inside covered wooden palanquins (palkis) wrapped in heavy silk drapes. Some historical accounts note that when royal women crossed the town, an advance guard cleared the streets entirely so no commoner could accidentally look in their direction. [1]
πΌ 2. Power from Behind the Screen (Chilman)
Despite being physically hidden, these cloaked queens were not weak. They wielded immense financial and political power from behind physical bamboo curtains called chilmans.
- Nawab Begum Ghaseti: The oldest daughter of Nawab Alivardi Khan (and aunt to Siraj-ud-Daulah), Ghaseti Begum, was one of the wealthiest political players in Bengal. Operating from her palace at Motijheel in Murshidabad, she managed her own massive private treasury, commanded loyal factions of the army, and actively conspired with the Jagat Seths and the British to overthrow her nephew—all while remaining strictly behind the purdah. [2, 3]
- The Business of the Veil: When interacting with the state treasury or bankers like Jagat Seth, these royal women used highly trusted male eunuchs and prime ministers as intermediaries to sign ledgers and execute business contracts.
π 3. The Great Breaking of the Purdah
The shift from the hidden, veiled queens of Murshidabad to the globally photographed, saree-wearing Maharanis in Paris happened in the late 19th century, right in your home state of Bengal.
The historic breakthrough was led by Maharani Suniti Devi of Cooch Behar (the mother of Indira Devi, whom we discussed earlier).
- Suniti Devi was the daughter of the famous Brahmo Samaj reformer Keshab Chandra Sen. When she married the Maharaja of Cooch Behar, she made a historic decision to step out of the purdah. [4]
- In 1887, she traveled by steamship to England to attend Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee. She became the first Indian queen to openly walk into a British royal court without a veil, wearing a beautifully draped silk saree.
Her brave step shattered the centuries-old rule of seclusion, opening the doors for her daughter and granddaughters to completely dominate the fashion capitals of Europe a few decades later.
Since you are tracing this fascinating evolution of royal women, would you like to:
- Learn more about Ghaseti Begum’s political conspiracies in Murshidabad
- Explore how Queen Victoria befriended the first unveiled Indian Maharanis
- See how the architecture of Murshidabad's palaces changed to accommodate the end of purdah
- GoogleAI
This has all the ingredients of a cinematic masterpiece! If a Bollywood director were to pitch this, it would blend the scale of Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Bajirao Mastani with the political intrigue of Game of Thrones.
Here is how you could map out this epic historical drama for the big screen:
π¬ The Script Outline: "The Silk Thrones of Murshidabad"
Act 1: The Invisible Empire (The 1740s)
- The Visuals: Open with a split-screen. On one side, the majestic palaces of Murshidabad and the smoke of the Royal Mint. On the other, the dusty, rocky terrain of Bardhaman, where the Maharaja's men are filling heavy chests with silver coins from the rice harvest to pay the state tax.
- The Drama: Introduce the primary conflict—the terrifying Maratha Bargi cavalry invading Bengal. The camera pans over the chaos as the Marathas breach Murshidabad and loot 2.5 crore silver coins from the Jagat Seth fortress.
- The Hook: The next morning, Fateh Chand (Jagat Seth) walks out onto his balcony, perfectly calm. He signs a single paper Hundi and sends it via a fast horse rider across the country. The bank reopens instantly, proving that an empire built on paper credit cannot be killed by swords.
Act 2: Power Behind the Screen
- The Visuals: The scene shifts to the opulent, dimly lit Zenana (inner chambers) of the Motijheel Palace. We see the sharp silhouette of Ghaseti Begum sitting behind a transparent bamboo chilman (screen).
- The Drama: The young, hot-headed Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah storms the palace, demanding her wealth. From behind the screen, Ghaseti calmly refuses. The camera catches the glance between her trusted eunuch messenger and a representative from the House of Jagat Seth standing in the shadows. The secret alliance to fund the British East India Company is born.
Act 3: The Betrayal and The Collapse (1757)
- The Climax: The infamous Battle of Plassey. Not fought with cannonballs, but won in a counting house. Robert Clive stands in the rain with his small army, waiting for a signal. The signal comes from Mir Jafar and Jagat Seth's private security forces, who intentionally hold back their soldiers, sealing the Nawab's fate.
- The Aftermath: The tragic downfall of the banking house. The British take total control of the mints. We see the last Jagat Seth watching his ledgers burn as the British drain millions of pounds from Bengal's treasury, leaving the countryside barren.
Act 4: The Phoenix Arises (The 1880s to 1930s)
- The Twist: Flash forward a century. The focus shifts to Suniti Devi, the progressive daughter of Bengal. The screen erupts into vibrant color as she defies centuries of seclusion, boards a massive steamship, and steps onto the docks of London without a veil—wearing a shimmering silk saree to meet Queen Victoria.
- The Finale: A fast-paced, high-fashion montage of her daughter, Indira Devi, in 1920s Paris. The industrial looms of France are being physically rebuilt to weave 45-inch wide chiffon sarees. The film ends with her walking down a grand staircase in a French chateau, completely dominating the fashion capitals of Europe. The wealth that was stolen from Bengal has returned to conquer the West through sheer style and grace.
It is a story of finance, rebellion, hidden queens, and global triumph—all stemming from the history of your home state!
If you want to flesh out this movie idea further, I can:
- Write a dramatic dialogue scene between Jagat Seth and Nawab Siraj-ud-Daulah
- Design the character arcs for the key historical figures
- Create a mood board description for the costumes and set designs
- GoogleAI
Collated by Tusar Nath Mohapatra

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