Rug Persian
Persian Hand-knotted Rug (9\'6 x 12\'5)-Persian Kirman Hand-knotted Rug 9\'6 x 12\'5 (Iran)
Add a touch of classic style to your home decor with this Persian rug Area rug boasts distinctive look with floral medallion designs Versatile rug features highlights of red, navy, ivory, light blue and gold
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
The Persian rug is an essential part of Persian art and culture. Carpet-weaving is undoubtedly one of the most distinguished manifestations of Persian culture and art, and dates back to the Bronze Age.
The earliest surviving corpus of Persian carpets come from the Safavid dynasty (1501-1736) in the 16th century. However, painted depictions prove a longer history of production. There is much variety among classical Persian carpets of the 16th and 17th century. Common motifs include scrolling vine networks, arabesques, palmettes, cloud bands, medallions, and overlapping geometric compartments rather than animals and humans. Persian Art being based in Shia Islam does not take the hard line against human representation that we see in Sunni influenced Turkish rug weaving. Figural designs are particularly popular in the Iranian market and are not nearly as common in rugs exported to the west.
Persian Rug
Persian Gabbeh Hand-knotted Navy/ Red Rug (7\'3 x 9\'2)-Persian Gabbeh Hand-knotted Navy/Red 7\'3 x 9\'2
Gabbeh rugs, like many other Persian rugs, are made with local hand-spun wool and vegetable dye Although tribal and rural, the abstract and cubist design of Persian Gabbeh rugs look modern Rug features color of navy, red, tangerine and black
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
Persian Kashan Navy/ Ivory Rug (9\'7 x 13\'5)-Persian Kashan Navy/Ivory Rug 9\'7 x 13\'5 (Iran)
Enchant your home with the ancient, unique beauty of this Persian Kashan rugKashans are among the most prized Persian rugsRug features rich accents in navy, ivory, gold and red
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
Rare Antique Meshkabad Persian Rug (26\'9 x 37\')-Antique Persian Meshkabad Rug 26\'9 x 37\'
One-of-a-kind Meshkabad rug is unrivaled in size and materials Hand-woven Persian rug is crafted from 100-percent fine lamb\'s wool Currently believed to be the largest floor rug of its kind in the United States
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
Hand-tufted Beige Persian Wool Rug (8\'9 x 13\')
Instantly update your home decor with this Persian rug Hand-tufted area rug features 100-percent wool construction Traditional rug features a classic Persian design
Merchant: Overstock Home & Garden Decor
Persian Cognac Rectangular: 4 Ft. 9 In. x 7 Ft. 4 In. Rug
-Machine made silk area rugs look like the silky Persian rugs of old. -Rug is made of Rayon.
Merchant: Bellacor
Persian Red Rectangular: 4 Ft. 9 In. x 7 Ft. 4 In. Rug
-Machine made silk area rugs look like the silky Persian rugs of old. -Rug is made of Rayon.
Merchant: Bellacor
History
Persian Tabriz Navy/ Red Rug (6\'4 x 9\'5)-Persian Tabriz Navy/Red Rug 6\'4 x 9\'5 (Iran)
Bring the magic of an Tabriz wool rug to your home Rug follows the incredible artistry of the very collectible Persian rugs This intricate rug features rich tones of navy, red, and ivory
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
Persian Hamadan Red/ Ivory Rug (2\'6 x 9\'5)-Persian Hamadan Red/Ivory Rug 2\'6 x 9\'5 (Iran)
Bring a touch of elegance to your home decor with this chic runner rug Persian rug crafted by talented artisans in Hamadan Handmade area rug is highlighted with rich shades of red, ivory, green and blue
Merchant: Overstock Worldstock
With the passage of time, the materials used in carpets, including wool and cotton, decay. Therefore archaeologists are not able to make any particularly useful discoveries during archaeological excavations, save for special circumstances.
What has remained from early times as evidence of carpet-weaving is nothing more than a few pieces of worn-out rugs. Such fragments do not help very much in recognizing the carpet-weaving characteristics of pre-Seljuk period (13th and 14th centuries AD) in Persia.
Among the oldest pieces discovered are those found in Eastern Turkestan, dating back to the third to fifth centuries AD, and also some of the hand-weavings of the Seljuks of Asia Minor on exhibit in Ala’edin Mosque in Konya and Ashrafoghlu Mosque in Beyshehir, Turkey. These pieces attracted the attention of researchers earlier this century, and now they are kept in the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Art in Istanbul and the Mowlana Museum in Konya.
In a unique archaeological excavation in 1949 however, the exceptional Pazyryk carpet was discovered among the ices of Pazyryk Valley, in Altai Mountains in Siberia. It was discovered in the grave of a Scythian prince by a group of Russian archaeologists under the supervision of Sergei Ivanovich Rudenko. Radiocarbon testing initially indicated that the Pazyryk carpet was woven in the 5th century BC but correction of a calibration error later gave a date 200 years later circa 300 AD. This carpet is 1.83×2 meters and has 36 symmetrical knots per cm². The advanced weaving technique used in the Pazyryk carpet indicates a long history of evolution and experience in this art. Most experts believe that the Pazyryk carpet is a late achievement of at least one thousand years of technique evolution and history.
According to this theory the art of carpet-weaving is at least 3500 years old.










