Persian rug - definition. What is Persian rug
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

HANDMADE CARPET FROM IRAN
Hamadan Rugs; Persian rugs; Persian Rug; Middle East rug; Middle Eastern rug; Bidjar rug; Bijar rug; Bidjar carpet; Kashan rug; Persian Carpet; Bijar Carpet; Persian rug; Persian Carpets; Kashan carpet; Kashan Carpet; Persian Rugs; Iranian carpet; Antique Rugs; Persian carpets; Farsh; Qāli; Iranian carpets; Mashhad rug; Mashhad carpet; Carpet trade in Iran
  • One of the "Salting" group. Wool, silk and metal thread. Safavid period, about 1600.
  • Central medallion of a Qashqai rug, 19th century, with fragmented Herati pattern
  • An Iranian/Persian carpet exhibition in city of [[Hamadan]] in 2015.
  • V&A]]. Inscription at the top of the field close to the border.
  • Naturally dyed wool in a Turkish carpet manufacture
  • Some traditional tools of the craft.
  • [[Persian carpet#Knots]]}}.
  • A Mongol prince studying the Koran. Illustration of Rashid-ad-Din's Gami' at-tawarih. Tabriz (?), 1st quarter of 14th century
  • Shah 'Abbas I. embassy to Venice, by [[Carlo Caliari]], 1595. Doge's palace, Venice
  • Bidjar rug
  • Weaving a carpet from a cartoon, Esfahan, Iran
  • Qashqai rug
  • Hunting Carpet made by Ghiyâth-ud-Din Jâmi, wool, cotton and silk, 1542–1543, [[Museo Poldi Pezzoli]], Milan
  • Detail of the above carpet
  • haf}}. It separates the warps.
  • Safavid [[Kerman]] ‘vase’ carpet fragment, southeast Persia, early 17th century
  • Detail of the Mantes Carpet, [[Safavid]], [[Louvre]]
  • upright
  • Pazyryk Carpet]]. Circa 400 BC. [[Hermitage Museum]]
  • [[Kermanshah]] 'Tree of Life' carpet, 3rd quarter 19th century
  • Persian Safavid period Animal carpet 16th century, [[Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe Hamburg]]
  • Qashqai]] nomad sisters, weaving a carpet on a floor loom. Near Firuzabad, Iran
  • Qashqai bag front
  • Tiled arch with hunting scenes. Late 17th century, Isfahan/Iran. [[Museum für Kunst und Gewerbe]], Hamburg
  • "Sanguszko carpet", Kirmān, 16/17th century. [[Miho Museum]]
  • Senneh rug
  • Modern Iranian Carpet "Tabriz Lilac", 2010, by Hossein Rezvani
  • A modern gabbeh carpet
  • The Clark 'Sickle-Leaf', vine scroll and palmette carpet, probably Kirman, 17th century
  • Toranj (medallion) – special circular design of Iranian carpets
  • 16th century, the "Schwarzenberg Carpet"
  • The Rothschild Small Silk Medallion Carpet, mid-16th century, [[Museum of Islamic Art, Doha]]
  • S-twist and Z-twist yarns

Persian carpet         
A Persian carpet ( ) or Persian rug ( ),Savory, R., Carpets,(Encyclopaedia Iranica); accessed January 30, 2007.
Persian carpet         
¦ noun a carpet or rug woven in Iran in a traditional design incorporating stylized symbolic imagery, or made elsewhere in such a style.
Armenian Orphan Rug         
  • John H. Finley]] as a gift from the Armenian orphans
Ghazir rug; Armenian Orphan rug
The Armenian Orphan Rug, also known as the Ghazir Orphans' Rug, is an Armenian styled carpet woven by orphans of the Armenian genocide in Ghazir, Lebanon. The carpet took eighteen months to make and was eventually shipped to the United States where it was given to President Calvin Coolidge as a gift in 1925.

ويكيبيديا

Persian carpet

A Persian carpet (Persian: فرش ایرانی, romanized: farš-e irâni [ˈfærʃe ʔfarˈsi]) or Persian rug (Persian: قالی ایرانی, romanized: qâli-ye irâni [ɢɒːˈliːje ʔfarˈsiː]), also known as Iranian carpet, is a heavy textile made for a wide variety of utilitarian and symbolic purposes and produced in Iran (historically known as Persia), for home use, local sale, and export. Carpet weaving is an essential part of Persian culture and Iranian art. Within the group of Oriental rugs produced by the countries of the "rug belt", the Persian carpet stands out by the variety and elaborateness of its manifold designs.

Persian rugs and carpets of various types were woven in parallel by nomadic tribes in village and town workshops, and by royal court manufactories alike. As such, they represent miscellaneous, simultaneous lines of tradition, and reflect the history of Iran, Persian culture, and its various peoples. The carpets woven in the Safavid court manufactories of Isfahan during the sixteenth century are famous for their elaborate colors and artistical design, and are treasured in museums and private collections all over the world today. Their patterns and designs have set an artistic tradition for court manufactories which was kept alive during the entire duration of the Persian Empire up to the last royal dynasty of Iran.

Carpets woven in towns and regional centers like Tabriz, Kerman, Ravar, Neyshabour, Mashhad, Kashan, Isfahan, Nain and Qom are characterized by their specific weaving techniques and use of high-quality materials, colours and patterns. Town manufactories like those of Tabriz have played an important historical role in reviving the tradition of carpet weaving after periods of decline. Rugs woven by the villages and various tribes of Iran are distinguished by their fine wool, bright and elaborate colours, and specific, traditional patterns. Nomadic and small village weavers often produce rugs with bolder and sometimes more coarse designs, which are considered as the most authentic and traditional rugs of Persia, as opposed to the artistic, pre-planned designs of the larger workplaces. Gabbeh rugs are the best-known type of carpet from this line of tradition.

As a result of political unrest or commercial pressure, carpet weaving has gone through periods of decline throughout the decades. It particularly suffered from the introduction of synthetic dyes during the second half of the nineteenth century. Carpet weaving still plays a critical role in the economy of modern Iran. Modern production is characterized by the revival of traditional dyeing with natural dyes, the reintroduction of traditional tribal patterns, but also by the invention of modern and innovative designs, woven in the centuries-old technique. Hand-woven Persian rugs and carpets have been regarded as objects of high artistic and utilitarian value and prestige since the first time they were mentioned by ancient Greek writers.

Although the term "Persian carpet" most often refers to pile-woven textiles, flat-woven carpets and rugs like Kilim, Soumak, and embroidered tissues like Suzani are part of the rich and manifold tradition of Persian carpet weaving.

In 2010, the "traditional skills of carpet weaving" in Fars Province and Kashan were inscribed to the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists.

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. So it was the real Persian rug that came to describe her Vienna – not the cabbage smell.
2. Matisse is great if you want beauty all the time; but, like a Persian rug, he won‘t give you crucifixions.
3. Republican presidential candidate John McCain, a senator from Arizona, received a statue, antique sword and a Persian rug, among other gifts.
4. After all, her Persian rug was her pride and joy and not even this monster was going to devour her prized possession.
5. A car had been hurled into a grove, a brown Persian rug hanging out of what used to be its roof.