| Although many people
think of 'Oriental' as Chinese,
Japanese, or another far-east
culture, Europeans refer to
most of Asia as 'The Orient'.
Similarly, when we refer to
carpets, Oriental means those
from anywhere on the continent
of Asia.
Any
study of Oriental carpets
must certainly take into consideration
the incredible history and
culture of a vast area stretching
from the Black and the Mediterranean
Seas eastward to the People's
Republic of China.
This
remarkable area, which many
call the cradle of civilization,
includes those southern regions
which are now part of Russia,
plus Mongolia, Uzbekistan,
Kirgizstan, Nepal, Tibet,
China, Turkey, Mesopotamia,
Persia (Iran), Afghanistan,
India, and Pakistan. Other
nations with established carpet
weaving histories include
Egypt and Morocco.
Many believe, however,
that no carpet comes close
to the utmost superiority
of Persian carpets.
And today, Iran produces more
handmade carpets than all
other carpet producing countries
combined.
In
Asia apart from China and
Tibet which produce a distinct
series of carpets the cultures
of all the other regions are
linked by ethnographic ties
and, most importantly, by
a common religion: Islam.
The
development of the art of
handmade carpets in these
countries may be seen basically
as an interaction between
religious and ethnic structures
dating back long before the
advent of Islam. Economic,
social, and significant political
movements caused by the development
of religious beliefs helped
shape this art into what it
is today.
It is safe to define
the cultures of the major
Islamic countries and regions
mainly in terms of a few major
ethnic groups: the Mongolians,
the Persians, the Turks, and
the Arabs; and their spread
through the empires of Asia.
The
most famous designs found
in carpets today include the
numerous Persian designs,
the Turkoman allover designs,
the geometric and plain tribal
designs, the modern Tibetan
designs, and the Indo-Persian
designs which are Persian
designs imitated in India.
Throughout
the continent, Persian designs
are often imitated.
However, the quality is different
and any carpet expert can
easily distinguish a genuine
Persian carpet. Of course,
in Iran, designs of other
countries are almost never
woven unless by special request
for a custom-made carpet.
In countries like Afghanistan
and Nepal, carpets are woven
mainly by nomadic tribes.
Countries like China, Pakistan,
and India have modern carpet
weaving industries combined
with tribal pockets.
In Iran the carpet industry
is modernized though a large
percentage of the carpets
are still produced by nomads.
Today,
almost all of the handmade
carpets of the world are made
in Asia. Other countries
either don't have the skill
to weave such carpets or higher
wages for workers make it
almost impossible to compete
with the prices of Oriental
carpets.
It's
important to note that any
handmade carpet is completely
superior in quality to a machine
made carpet because each knot
has been individually tightened
by the hand of a master weaver.
Besides Iran, other
countries such as Afghanistan,
India, and Pakistan also produce
handmade carpets for export.
Both Pakistan and India have
developed fairly modern carpet
and textile industries while
Afghanistan still remains
a nation whose carpet export
industry is rather limited.
Each
of these countries creates
a distinct quality and style
of carpet, and pieces made
in any of the countries, although
well made, can always be distinguished
from finer Persian carpets.
India,
located in South Central Asia,
is bordered by China, Nepal,
Bhutan, Bangladesh, Burma,
Pakistan, and the Indian Ocean.
Geographically, the country
covers about three million
square km and has a population
of about 980 million people
making it the second most
populated country in the world
after China.
India
gained its independence from
Britain in 1947 and has its
federal capital in New Delhi.
Carpet weaving isn't
as ancient a tradition to
India as it is to Iran.
In the sixteenth century the
art of carpet weaving was
introduced to India mainly
by the Persian Empire under
Mongolian rule, and then under
the Persian Safavian rule.
The
Moghul dynasty of India was,
as its name implies, ruled
by emperors proud of their
Mongol descent. Babur,
the first Moghul Shah (king)
(1526-30) was a fifth generation
descendant of Tamerlaine and
was thus related to Chengiz
Khan. Formerly ruler
of Afghanistan, he overthrew
the Hindu Delhi Sultanate
and conquered India.
During
this period, the Indian carpet
weaving industry began to
grow. By the end of
Mongol rule in Persia in the
end of the fifteenth century,
India had developed quite
a talent for weaving carpets.
After the Safavid Dynasty
came into full power in Iran
in 1501, the Persian government
set up professional workshops
in India to weave carpets
and often had expert Persian
weavers supervise the weavers
at work in front of the looms.
As
a result, almost all Indian
carpet designs of today are
imitations of famous Persian
designs, such as Kashan and
Kerman. The only thing
that sets them apart is the
difference in quality of the
wool and the weave.
In
the 15th to 17th centuries,
most carpets made in India were
almost as fine as Persian
weavings, but this art almost
came to an end in India in
the late 17th century.
The industry was reestablished
by the British in the 1800s
but later carpets weren't
nearly as fine.
The
wool used in Indian carpets
is coarser than that used
in Persian carpets.
It is also more difficult
to fold an Indian carpet because
of its stiffness.
However, they sit very nicely
on the floor and they tend
to last a very long time.
Most of what was said
about India's carpet industry
can also be said about Pakistan's.
Pakistan
is located west of India,
covers a geographic area of
about 800,000 square km, and
has a population of approximately
140 million people.
Like
India, Pakistan was also subject
to British rule for many years
and it, too, gained its independence
at the same time as India.
Pakistan is mainly an Islamic
country and has its capital
in Islamabad.
As is the case with
India, Pakistan's carpet industry
has been greatly influenced
by the Persian Empire.
The Iranian government set
up royal carpet manufacturing
facilities in Pakistan and
by the 16th and 17th centuries,
carpet weaving had developed
considerably in the region.
Today
the styles and patterns of
Pakistan's carpets follow
either famous Persian designs
or Turkoman and Caucasian
(Bokhara) designs.
Bokhara
carpets are high in quality
and have incredibly soft and
lustrous wool. In the finer
Bokharas, virgin lamb wool
is used to give the carpets
an extraordinarily soft feel.
In these designs, only about
two to four colors are used,
and they are usually different
shades of green, blue, or
red. The styles resembling
Persian designs are also high
in quality and often higher
in price.
Today, Pakistan is the fourth
largest carpet producer in
the world.
Afghanistan is a small
country located north west
of Pakistan and China, northeast
of Iran, and south of Uzbekistan
and Turkmenistan. Over
25 million people live in
this land that covers an area
of a little over 650,000 square
km.
Afghanistan's
carpet industry isn't as great
as it was before the country
began facing political problems.
Today, even though there are
many carpets produced in the
country, export is extremely
difficult, so Afghanistan
markets their carpets to the
rest of the world through
Pakistan and Iran.
Afghan
carpets usually resemble Caucasian
style carpets and are similar
to those made in Turkey, and
East Turkmenistan and the
Caucasus. The color
scheme used in Afghan carpets
consists of a few exciting
colors that are exclusive
to their style of carpet.
Afghan nomads such as the
Chechen tribes still produce
carpets but in very little
quantities making them rare
and hard to find.
One
would hope that in this political
chaos, the precious art of
Afghanistan's tribal carpets
is not lost forever.
Caucasian carpets come
from the region northwest
of Iran and south of Russia
between the Black Sea and
the Caspian Sea, an area of
approximately 160,000 square
miles. This is also
the area believed to be responsible
for the production of some
of the world's first pile
carpets.
Caucasian carpets mirror
the complex ethnography of
their creators. Until
the Russian conquests of the
late 18th and 19th centuries,
the area had been an ethnic,
cultural, and religious melting
pot and a ceaseless battleground
for over 800 hundred years.
Surrounding civilizations
were constantly seeking to
make the Caucasus their own,
either for political or religious
reasons.
Caucasian
carpets all bear a striking
similarity to one another
and resemble the Turkoman
carpets and those made by
the nomads living in southeast
Turkey.
The
main characteristics that
distinguish Caucasian carpets
from Persian carpets are their
color schemes of bright shades
of red, rust, or burgundy,
and their border and medallion
motifs. Caucasian carpets
tend to have a lot of octagonal
motifs with bold geometric
elements and narrow borders.
Today,
all the countries in this
area combined do not produce
even half as many carpets
as Iran does. But because
of their scarcity, carpets
from these countries are considered
to be quite valuable.
Some of the most distinct
carpets in the world are those
made in the Tarim Basin located
in the far eastern regions
of Asia. Countries in
this area include China, Mongolia,
Tibet, East Turkmenistan,
Nepal, and many countries
once part of the Soviet Union,
including Kirgizstan and Uzbekistan.
The
Tarim Basin is a very old
area, often times referred
to as Eurasia the precise
half-way point between the
Far East, and western Europe.
Some of the oldest carpet
fragments ever discovered
have been unearthed in the
Tarim Basin.
Many
believe that the first people
to ever weave pile carpets were
in fact those nomads living
in the area of present day
Mongolia.
The area described
as East Turkmenistan stretches
from the city of Samarkand
(Uzbekistan) in the west to
beyond the city of Khotan
(Sinkiang province - West
China) about one thousand
miles to the east.
This
westernmost area of China
wasn't a permanent part of
the Chinese Empire until the
18th century. It was,
however, in the direct line
of the great silk route west,
and was one of the first significant
areas outside China to rear
silkworms.
Until
its conquest by China, the
area had been subjected to
centuries of various political
and cultural influences.
In the early centuries of
Christianity, this area practiced
the Graeco-Roman style of
art. Evidence of this
can be seen through the numerous
fresco fragments and artifacts
that have been discovered
in the area.
The
forces of power that were
of great influence to this
area were Persia and Turkey
in the west, India in the
south, and China and Mongolia
in the north and east.
The major religions were Manicheeism,
Zoroastrianism, Nestorian
Christianity, Buddhism, and
Shamanism.
This
land is the pivot point of
the Eurasian landmass, with
the major city of Khotan being
precisely halfway between
Tokyo and London.
Studies
based on archeological artifacts
prove that by the 4th century
BC the main language spoken
in this area was Tokharian
which belonged to the Indo-Aryan
language group.
Evidence
proves that this language
was spoken as far as a thousand
miles east of Khotan, in Central
China; this was the place
that Sir Aurel Stein discovered
frescoes that could just as
well been painted in Italy
or Alexandria.
Until
the discovery of the Pazyryk
Carpet, it was here in the
Tarim Basin that the oldest
carpet fragments were found.
After being ruled by
the Hephtalites, Turks, Chinese
and Tibetans, this region
fell under Mongolian rule
in the 12th century.
This was the time that the
Mongolian power of Chengiz
Khan was at its peak, having
also conquered civilizations
as powerful as Persia.
In
the 17th century the Tarim
Basin was conquered by the
Chinese, aided in their second
conquest by the British who
wanted to preserve the borders
of India and prevent Russian
expansion.
The
fact that the Pazyryk carpet,
the earliest surviving example
of pile carpet weaving, was
found in this area of Central
Asia close to Mongolia, strongly
suggests that the art itself
may have originated there
by various tribes and dynasties
of Mongol descent.
Many
scholars believe that the
carpet was Mongolian, but others
believe it could have been
woven in Persia, because of
its Assyrian and Persian motifs.
What we know for sure is that
the weaving of pile carpets started
somewhere between Persia and
Mongolia.
Evidence suggests that
the Chinese did not start
weaving pile carpets until
the time of the Sung Dynasty
(960-1279). And it's
also believed that even those
carpets being made in China were
used by the Mongolians because
the Chinese looked down on
wool as a barbarian material.
Instead, the Chinese have
preferred silk, a material
they have specialized in for
over 4000 years.
China never had much
of a nomadic carpet weaving population.
And when the Chinese did start
weaving carpets, they used unique
designs usually containing
Imperial five-clawed dragons.
Today, China is the leader
in the Far East for producing
carpets. However, all of
China's carpets are made in urban
centers by weavers who made
them strictly for retail or
export.
From about 600 to 800
AD the entire area of northern
India, Nepal, Western China,
and of course the Tarim Basin
was under Tibetan control.
During this time the people
of Tibet moved down into the
fertile Yarlung Valley, which
is on the present border of
Nepal, Pakistan, and Bhutan,
and formed a strong civilization.
Their
great power is said to have
stemmed from the fact that
they were on diplomatic terms
with the great Sassanian Dynasty
of Persia. By the time
the Arabs expanded eastward
to spread Islam, the Tibetans
had adopted Buddhism.
Their empire collapsed
around 850 A.D. and the Tibetans
were scattered throughout
the area until the Mongol
invasion in the 13th century.
And until the Chinese Communist
invasion in 1959, Tibet was
ruled by religious Buddhist
leaders and Dalai Lamas.
Tibetans
are believed to have been
weaving pile carpets a little
over 900 years, definitely
not as long as the Mongolians,
Turks, or Persians. Mongolia,
Tibet, and East Turkmenistan
don't produce many carpets
any more and the few carpets
they make are mainly for export
by nomadic weavers. |