The most expensive carpets you're
likely to see today are antique
Persian carpets. Very few
have remained in Iran as Europeans
have bought most of these
pieces. It's rare to
find one for sale but you
can still admire their beauty
in museums around the world.
One
of the most famous Persian
carpets was the 'Spring Carpet
of Chosroes', found in the
palace of Chosroes II at Ctesiphon
when his Persian army was
defeated by the Byzantine
Emperor Heraklius.
According
to legend, when the Persian
King Chosroes I defeated the
Romans in the conquest of
southern Arabia this carpet was
woven to commemorate the event.
The carpet was described as weighing
several tons and measuring
several hundred feet in length
and width.
It
had pure gold and silver threads
and was inlaid with precious
gems, rubies, diamonds, and
pearls.
The
design was interlaced with
paths along which, it is said,
the king used to stroll along
to admire the scenes.
When
the Arabs conquered Persia,
this carpet was so big that they
had to rip it into pieces
in order to get at the precious
jewels, some of which still
exist today in museums around
the world.
Except
for the 2500-year-old Pazyryk
carpet and a few other fragments
found in Asia, almost all
antique carpets that still exist
are from the Safavid dynasty.
In
1499, the Safavids began their
conquest of Iran which lasted
from 1501-1722..
This
period was the golden age
of Persian art, and carpet
weaving was perhaps the greatest
of the art forms. The
Safavid rulers established
several royal factories in
Persia for the manufacture
of various types of woven
materials. The major
ones in central Iran were
in Kashan, Kerman, Isfahan,
Josheghan, and Tabriz in the
Northwest, and Yazd, Shiraz,
Herat and Sabzewar in the
Northeast.
The
setting up of royal factories
meant that significant quantities
of beautiful carpets designed
by some of the leading artists
of the day were produced under
Imperial patronage.
The
government of Iran in this
era would seize and destroy
low quality carpets to keep
the integrity of the art.
By the 16th century, carpets
were being woven in Iran on
commission for the European
nobility.
The
carpets of Safavid Persia were
divided into several categories,
based on motifs, as well as
historical or technical reasons.
The principal categories are:
medallion, vase, garden, hunting,
figure, and compartment.
There are also prayer carpets,
but they did not form as important
a part of Persian weaving
as they do of Turkish.
In
1722 Afghanistan invaded Iran
and brought the precious carpet
industry to its knees.
The art was almost lost but
when the Persians regained
control of their country,
the art of weaving was born
again.
To
see some exceptional examples
of antique carpets, click on
the images below.
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