The sitar is a common instrument in the south of Asia. It is used by rural itinerant players (in Rajasthan, a state of India), in modern radio and film orchestras, in chamber music, in Muslim and Hindu music, on public concert stages, as well as conveyed by urban medias. Along its history, the sitar has become an instrument imbricated to Indian culture, although its origin refers to Turkish and Persian immigrants – the name sitar comes from the Persian word sihtãr, meaning “of three strings”. These immigrants have brought to India their music and their instruments during the Muslim Delhi Sultanate (1192-1526). Amongst these instruments of Turkish-Persian origin, the tambur, was the ancestor of the sitar. It was a sort of long neck lute, with a wooden oval or pear shaped resonance box, tuning pegs on the right side and/or on the front part, inserted directly on the neck, wooden soundboard, strings made of tripe or fiber, with or without frets. In the 17th century, during the Mongol Empire, the long neck lute started to be called a tanburah, and was spread amongst Hindu musicians.
It was in India, in the 18th century, still during the ruling of the Mongol Empire, that the sitar took its modern shape as a solo instrument in classic Indian music, and the use of the five strings sitar was already frequent. The name sitar established itself in the beginning of this period, although there are records that still mention “tamburas with or without frets”, up until about 1800. The changes include the increase in the length, the decrease in the width of the neck – which became straight and no longer sharp like before – the use of the bulky shape for the resonance box, no longer a flat back, the adoption of a heavy metal for the frets, as well as for the nut, more rigid string guides, made of bone, and the use of strings made of heavier metals. At present, there are many types of sitars, however the most common type in concert music in India is the concert sitar, with seven strings, more or less twelve sympathetic strings, with twenty mobile frets that allow for various modal tunings. The Museum’s specimen has features that indicate that it is a sitar with some tambura characteristics – only five strings (no sympathetic strings), tuning pegs with edges sculpted in the shape of two cloverleaves (the modern sitars have thick round tuning pegs, with a bulky upper part sculpted without ornaments or in a spiral shape, roses, etc., for a better adherence) – but also with sitar features, that is, steel strings played with a mizrab.