TIES THAT BINDThis social history of Iranian carpets traces their production, use, and exchange from the fifteenth century until World War II, highlighting in particular the carpet boom from 1873 to 1914. Over these five centuries, the Iranian hand-knotted, piled carpet shifted from an object made primarily for the Islamic Middle East to a commodity that by the twentieth century constituted Iran's largest nonpetroleum export to the West. The hand-knotted carpet, according to Helfgott, reveals an intricate record of Iranian society - its economic development, gender relations, and art history. Beginning with the rugs' early uses among settled peoples, nomadic pastoralists, and the Iranian court elites, Helfgott traces the changes in carpet manufacture and Iranian society that ensued when the West began importing carpets as luxury items in the nineteenth century. He follows the expansion of Mediter-ranean trade in carpets into a global market, linking it to the local patterns of production in nomadic, village, and urban settings. He also describes the debilitating conditions in which women and children knotted the carpets and discusses the European fascination with Iranian culture and, in a case study, the creation of the Iranian art collection at London's Victoria and Albert Museum. Ties That Bind draws on travelers' reports, British Foreign Office records, missionary diaries and records, and carpets and acquisition records in major museum collections. |
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Page 240
... weavers from male workers , the Western factory managers at Hamadan had difficulty finding weavers and experienced continual problems in convincing their employees to work six days per week . The work hours at the Hamadan . factories in ...
... weavers from male workers , the Western factory managers at Hamadan had difficulty finding weavers and experienced continual problems in convincing their employees to work six days per week . The work hours at the Hamadan . factories in ...
Page 241
... weavers believed that the factory owed them the extra wool , and on the day following its attempt to allot the exact amount of wool to each worker , only twenty of three hundred weavers reported for work . 18 Perhaps the resistance by ...
... weavers believed that the factory owed them the extra wool , and on the day following its attempt to allot the exact amount of wool to each worker , only twenty of three hundred weavers reported for work . 18 Perhaps the resistance by ...
Page 244
... weaver.32 If Hawath's reporting is accurate , the actions of these female carpet weavers may reflect an attempt to improve working conditions or to associate the well - being of carpet weavers with the success of the revolution . In ...
... weaver.32 If Hawath's reporting is accurate , the actions of these female carpet weavers may reflect an attempt to improve working conditions or to associate the well - being of carpet weavers with the success of the revolution . In ...
Contents
CLASSICAL SAFAVID CARPETS | 49 |
ROBERT MURDOCH SMITH AND THE BIRTH OF | 125 |
NOMADIC PASTORALISM AND CARPET PRODUCTION USE | 147 |
Copyright | |
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activities Afshar Albert Museum Anatolia areas Armenian artisans artistic arts and crafts Asia Azerbaijan Bakhtiyari bazaar British Church Missionary carpet boom carpet industry carpet production carpet workshops carpetmaking centers Church Missionary Society cities collecting commercial cottage industry cultural demand developed Dodson Dutch early economic elites Europe European export fifteenth century foreign Hamadan hand-knotted household Ibid Iran Iran's Iranian carpets Iranian rugs Isfahan Islamic Kashan khans Khorasan Kirman knotted labor London looms Mashhad merchants Middle East modern Murdoch Smith Correspondence nomadic pastoralism nomadic pastoralists objects opium Oriental Carpets Ottoman Ottoman Empire peasant Persian Carpet piled carpets political Qajar Qashqa'i regions Robert Murdoch rural Safavid carpets seventeenth century shawl Shiraz silk social South Kensington Museum Sultanabad Tabriz Tehran textiles Timurid tion trade Travels tribal Turkish Turkman Turks twentieth century University Press urban Victoria and Albert village weavers weaving West Western women wool workers workshops and factories