This is a Burmese lacquerware paan or betel (kun-it) box - a traditional item of hospitality in Burmese homes used to offer to visitors. Boxes like this were used to contain the ingredients to make paan, which in its basic form consists of slices of betel nut mixed with lime paste wrapped in betel leaf. The trays in the box would contain these ingredients, or even coconut, saffron, fragrant spices or rose preserves for more special paan preparations. “A maze of sumptuary laws decreed the size, the extent of decoration, and the material permitted for the betel boxes of the various grades of courtiers” says Sylvia Fraser-Lu. Similar Burmese paan boxes can be found in the Victoria and Albert Museum, London. (Ref: Pages 68, 69, and 92 of the book ‘Burmese Lacquerware’ by Sylvia Fraser-Lu.)
This betel box is in a lovely black and red combination, with a pàn-bwà floral design that is interspersed with parrot motifs. The lid is painted with a Ram (Aries) representing Meik-tha, which is the sign for Tagu or April. Zoomorphic creatures were used to represent days and their corresponding constellations in Burmese Art.