a museum of masterpieces - iberian & east mediterranean carpets in the museum of islamic art,...
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To date, the National Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage of the Emirate of Qatar has acquired five historical Spanish carpets and eight from Egypt and Syria for the new Museum of Islamic Art in Doha. It is these that are the focus of the second in our series of in-depth surveys of the MIAQ collection. An abridged version of this article, without references or citations, appears in HALI 157, Autumn 2008.TRANSCRIPT
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 69
WITH THEIR EXTRAORDINARY BEAUTY, the product ofstriking juxtapositions of shimmering colour and complex butcarefully balanced designs, over the past century the classicalcarpets of Spain, Egypt and Syria have been studied in greatdepth and avidly sought after by museums and private collectorsalike.1
The Spanish and East Mediterranean carpets acquired by theNational Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage (now the QatarMuseums Authority) represent a substantial holding, given thatmany of the earliest examples still extant – the most beautifuland those in the finest condition – were already in Europeanand American museums by 1930. In the latter part of the 20thcentury the MIAQ has nevertheless been able to purchase ahandful of wonderful pre-1600 carpets and fragments in goodoriginal pile with glowing colours that had remained in privatehands, as well as other examples at auction. We should considerthis small group as a nucleus to be built upon.
The pan-Mediterranean textile trade, including carpets, datesback to antiquity, but a strong local style can be seen in the fewsurviving Spanish carpets from the 14th and early 15th centuries.Egyptian carpets from the second half of the 15th century andbefore also show relatively little outside inf luence.
The 15th century was a time of conquest and a period ofexpansion in trade in the Mediterranean region. By the early16th century, f loral Ottoman court designs, taken from textilesand ceramics made in western Anatolia, were beginning toinf luence carpet making in both Spain and Islamic NorthAfrica. In Spain such designs, in tandem with the stylisticinspiration of Spanish woven silk patterns, came to dominatecarpet making, and they were also inf luential in Egypt. Carpetdesign in Syria, however, then still part of the Mamluk Empire,took on a so-called ‘international’ style, drawing on inf luencesfrom Egypt, eastern Anatolia and Iran, that was to continue intothe 17th century.
As the Ottomans looked west, expanding into the Balkans,Egypt and North Africa, their inclusive attitude to all peoples –provided they paid their taxes – made their Empire a centre fortrade. The Spanish Inquisition and the expulsion of Spain’s Jewsand Muslims did much to facilitate Mediterranean commerce,with networks of trading families resettled in different ports.From the 13th to 15th century, Spanish carpets were beingexported to France and Italy, and during the 15th and 16th Italybecame the principal importer of carpets from Anatolia andEgypt. Many of the oldest surviving Syrian carpets can also be
To date, the National Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage of the Emirate of Qatarhas acquired five historical Spanish carpets and eight from Egypt and Syria for thenew Museum of Islamic Art in Doha. It is these that are the focus of the second inour series of in-depth surveys of the MIAQ collection. An unabridged version, withadditional images and extensive notes, appears on www.hali.com.
of
amuseum
2: IBERIAN & EAST MEDITERRANEAN CARPETSIN THE MUSEUM OF ISLAMIC ART, DOHA
masterpiecesMICHAEL FRANSES
1 The Convent of
Santa Ursula large
octagon carpet
(lower part), Spain,
15th century. 1.03 x
2.50m (3'5" x 8'2"),
Museum of Islamic
Art, Qatar, CA24.
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 69
WITH THEIR EXTRAORDINARY BEAUTY, the product ofstriking juxtapositions of shimmering colour and complex butcarefully balanced designs, over the past century the classicalcarpets of Spain, Egypt and Syria have been studied in greatdepth and avidly sought after by museums and private collectorsalike.1
The Spanish and East Mediterranean carpets acquired by theNational Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage (now the QatarMuseums Authority) represent a substantial holding, given thatmany of the earliest examples still extant – the most beautifuland those in the finest condition – were already in Europeanand American museums by 1930. In the latter part of the 20thcentury the MIAQ has nevertheless been able to purchase ahandful of wonderful pre-1600 carpets and fragments in goodoriginal pile with glowing colours that had remained in privatehands, as well as other examples at auction. We should considerthis small group as a nucleus to be built upon.
The pan-Mediterranean textile trade, including carpets, datesback to antiquity, but a strong local style can be seen in the fewsurviving Spanish carpets from the 14th and early 15th centuries.Egyptian carpets from the second half of the 15th century andbefore also show relatively little outside inf luence.
The 15th century was a time of conquest and a period ofexpansion in trade in the Mediterranean region. By the early16th century, f loral Ottoman court designs, taken from textilesand ceramics made in western Anatolia, were beginning toinf luence carpet making in both Spain and Islamic NorthAfrica. In Spain such designs, in tandem with the stylisticinspiration of Spanish woven silk patterns, came to dominatecarpet making, and they were also inf luential in Egypt. Carpetdesign in Syria, however, then still part of the Mamluk Empire,took on a so-called ‘international’ style, drawing on inf luencesfrom Egypt, eastern Anatolia and Iran, that was to continue intothe 17th century.
As the Ottomans looked west, expanding into the Balkans,Egypt and North Africa, their inclusive attitude to all peoples –provided they paid their taxes – made their Empire a centre fortrade. The Spanish Inquisition and the expulsion of Spain’s Jewsand Muslims did much to facilitate Mediterranean commerce,with networks of trading families resettled in different ports.From the 13th to 15th century, Spanish carpets were beingexported to France and Italy, and during the 15th and 16th Italybecame the principal importer of carpets from Anatolia andEgypt. Many of the oldest surviving Syrian carpets can also be
To date, the National Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage of the Emirate of Qatarhas acquired five historical Spanish carpets and eight from Egypt and Syria for thenew Museum of Islamic Art in Doha. It is these that are the focus of the second inour series of in-depth surveys of the MIAQ collection. An unabridged version, withadditional images and extensive notes, appears on www.hali.com.
of
amuseum
2: IBERIAN & EAST MEDITERRANEAN CARPETSIN THE MUSEUM OF ISLAMIC ART, DOHA
masterpiecesMICHAEL FRANSES
1 The Convent of
Santa Ursula large
octagon carpet
(lower part), Spain,
15th century. 1.03 x
2.50m (3'5" x 8'2"),
Museum of Islamic
Art, Qatar, CA24.
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 69
WITH THEIR EXTRAORDINARY BEAUTY, the product ofstriking juxtapositions of shimmering colour and complex butcarefully balanced designs, over the past century the classicalcarpets of Spain, Egypt and Syria have been studied in great depthand avidly sought after by museums and private collectors alike.1
The Spanish and East Mediterranean carpets acquired by theNational Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage (now the QatarMuseums Authority) represent a substantial holding, given thatmany of the earliest examples still extant – the most beautifuland those in the finest condition – were already in Europeanand American museums by 1930. In the latter part of the 20thcentury the MIAQ has nevertheless been able to purchase ahandful of wonderful pre-1600 carpets and fragments in goodoriginal pile with glowing colours that had remained in privatehands, as well as other examples at auction. We should considerthis small group as a nucleus to be built upon.
The pan-Mediterranean textile trade, including carpets, datesback to antiquity, but a strong local style can be seen in the fewsurviving Spanish carpets from the 14th and early 15th centuries.Egyptian carpets from the second half of the 15th century andbefore also show relatively little outside inf luence.
The 15th century was a time of conquest and a period of
expansion in trade in the Mediterranean region. By the early16th century, f loral Ottoman court designs, taken from textilesand ceramics made in western Anatolia, were beginning toinf luence carpet making in both Spain and Islamic North Africa.In Spain such designs, in tandem with the stylistic inspiration ofSpanish complex woven silk patterns, came to dominate carpetmaking, and they were also inf luential in Egypt. Carpet designin Syria, however, then still part of the Mamluk Empire, took ona so-called ‘international’ style, drawing on inf luences fromEgypt, eastern Anatolia and Iran, that was to continue in useinto the 17th century.
As the Ottomans looked west, expanding into the Balkans,Egypt and North Africa, their inclusive attitude to all peoples –provided they paid their taxes – made their Empire a centre fortrade. The Spanish Inquisition and the expulsion of Spain’s Jewsand Muslims did much to facilitate Mediterranean commerce,with networks of trading families resettled in different ports.From the 13th to 15th century, Spanish carpets were beingexported to France and Italy, and during the 15th and 16th Italybecame the principal importer of carpets from Anatolia andEgypt. Many of the oldest surviving Syrian carpets can also betraced back to Renaissance Italy.
To date, the National Council for Culture, Arts & Heritage of the Emirate of Qatar hasacquired five historical Spanish carpets and eight from Egypt and Syria for the newMuseum of Islamic Art in Doha. It is these that are the focus of the second in our seriesof in-depth surveys of the MIAQ collection. An abridged version of this article, withoutreferences or citations, appears in HALI 157, Autumn 2008.
of
amuseum
2: IBERIAN & EAST MEDITERRANEAN CARPETSIN THE MUSEUM OF ISLAMIC ART, DOHA
masterpiecesMICHAEL FRANSES
1 The Convent of
Santa Ursula large
octagon carpet
(detail), Spain, 15th
century. Museum of
Islamic Art, Qatar,
no.CA24.
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
SPANISH CARPETSSpanish carpets have been collected by some of the most sophis-ticated of connoisseurs,2 often acquired through specialist dealersin Spain, Italy, Germany, England and America.3 My research arch -ive contains images of at least 260 knotted-pile carpets made inSpain before 1750, including fragments. Most examples are nowin museum collections.4
The MIAQ has five knotted-pile Spanish carpets, one perhapsfrom the 15th century and four from the 16th. One is complete,two appear to be complete but are in fact part of larger carpets,and two are fragments. The museum has none of the later looped-pile carpets from Alpujarra, nor any of the rare knotted-pile ormore common embroidered Arrialos carpets from Portugal.5 Thistiny group obviously cannot properly represent the history ofcarpet-making in the Iberian Peninsula, but it does offer a glim -pse of the carpet art of the region. To appreciate its significanceand merit, and to comprehend the rarity and importance ofSpan ish carpet-making in general, we should brief ly considerthe surviving corpus.
Most early Spanish carpets are made using a single warp withoffset knotting, a technique that may have come to Spain fromEgypt between the 8th and 10th centuries. A few pile carpet frag -ments from this early period woven entirely in this so-called‘Spanish’ technique have been found in Fustat (old Cairo),6
although its origin is undoubtedly much earlier, as it occurs incombination with other techniques on some knotted-pile car petsfrom the 1st century AD found in Central Asia.7 R.B. Serjeanttells us of Arabic documents that mention carpet-making inSpain from the 10th century, although they do not say how rugswere constructed, and give little descriptive information.8 The‘Spanish’ technique was also being used in central Europe by the12th century, as can be seen from the large fragments of carpetsin Halberstadt and Quedlinburg.9
Single warp offset knotting is less robust than other methods,so the finer and older Spanish carpets with short-cut pile tendto be easily worn, often torn, and are now mostly fragmented.Cutting and patching occurred quite early on, as can be seen intwo 15th century rugs depicted in 16th century European paint -ings.10 Today different parts of one carpet may be found in anumber of different collections, and what seem to be completecarpets may have patches from one or more other examples.11
Spanish carpets were exported to many parts of Europe, andit is said that Eleanor of Castile introduced them to England in1255.12 A carpet, probably Spanish, is depicted in a fresco fromthe first half of the 14th century in the Palace of the Popes inAvignon.13 Its field of rows of conjoined small octagons separ atedby diamonds, each octagon containing a single six-pointed star,resembles a number of surviving Spanish ‘Admiral’ carpets attri -buted to the late 14th and 15th centuries. Monique King reportsthat: “The property of Pope Clement V (reigned 1305–14) atAvignon included 54 pile carpets, and Pope John XXII is said tohave had Spanish carpets with coats-of-arms in his apart ments atAvignon. The Bishop of Langres owned a pile carpet of Spanishmanufacture in 1395. The Duke of Berry had no fewer than 13Spanish carpets, mostly white grounds… mostly 2.40 metreswide and 8.50 metres long.”14 Ferrandis Torres also lists manySpanish inventories that mention carpets from the 14th to 18thcenturies in his important 1933 Madrid exhibition catalogue,Alfombras Antiguas Espanolas.15
The earliest almost complete Spanish carpet to survive, usuallyatt ributed to the 14th century, is in the Museum of Islamic Artin Berlin, acquired by Wilhelm Bode in Munich in 1884. Muchhas been written about it, and it has been convincingly sugges tedthat it was ordered for a synagogue.16
Historical records exist of carpet making from the 12th cen -tury onward in Chinchilla, Cuenca, and Murcia, and from the15th century in Letur, Liétor, Alcaraz, Salamanca and Granada.17
They tell us that Alcaraz was where Spanish rugs were sold, andthat they were made in a number of small villages on a cottage
industry basis in the province of Albacete in the Murcia region.These villages were probably inhabited by Mudejar Muslimweavers who stayed on after the Inquisition and into the secondhalf of the 16th century. Today the labels ‘Alcaraz’ and ‘Cuenca’are the most widely used, the former for finer 15th and 16thcentury examples, the latter for coarser late 16th to mid-18thcentury carpets. All the so-called ‘Alcaraz’ carpets seem to beremarkably similar in wool, handle, weave and dyes.
For classification purposes, I have divided Spanish carpets intogroups representing basic field compositions rather than work -shops or places of manufacture. The same can be done with borderpatterns, which can be seen associated with several differentfield designs.18
Among the oldest of surviving Spanish carpets, perhaps madefrom the late 14th or early 15th century until the early 16th, arethose with field patterns composed of a small polygonal lattice.19
At least 27 examples are known to survive.20 They are commonlyknown as the ‘Admiral’ carpets, because the fields of some exam - ples are overlaid with large escutcheons containing the coats-of-arms of the 15th century ‘Admirals’ of Spain.21 Inventories fromthe 14th century onward cite Spanish carpets bearing blazons.22
Several of these lattice-field carpets are up to nine metres inlength and no more than 2.5 metres wide. Their fields are sur -rounded by between three and seven borders, including onecom posed of highly stylised Kufic script. On some carpets thiskufesque border is filled with various creatures, trees and humanfigures, including women in low-cut European-style dresses, andat least two examples have a pictorial panel depicting trees andanimals at each end.23 Similar geometric lattice borders and pic -torial end panels are also seen on Spanish carpets with ‘Turkish’field designs.24
Armorial blazons also appear on Spanish carpets with a num -ber of different field designs throughout the 16th, 17th and 18thcenturies. Four examples, believed to be funeral carpets, have acentral medallion with blazon and small medallions with skullsset against a textile pattern. At least nine others have blazons,some on a plain field, some with a decorated back ground. Span -ish coats-of-arms often appear on carpets with imported fielddesigns: two have border and spandrel designs taken directly fromearly 17th century west Anatolian originals, another copies asmall Ushak rug with a cloudband border, and at least four havefield designs taken directly from Anatolian arab esque or ‘Lotto’design rugs.
‘TURKISH-STYLE’ SPANISH CARPETSTurkish carpet designs, in particular those from western Ana tolia,inf luenced Spanish carpets most of all. The oldest survivingSpanish carpets with Turkish designs are attributed to the secondor third quarters of the 15th century, but examples must havereached Spain by the 13th or 14th, as many Spanish ‘copies’present an earlier version of Turkish designs than any survivingAnatolian rug.25
A Spanish carpet in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, has a‘small-pattern Holbein’ field of rows of small interlaced medal -lions, commonly found on west Anatolian rugs from the 15thand 16th centuries. The primary medallions have perfect inter -laced surrounds, the internal octagon within each octagon hasan interlaced pattern, and the green-ground field is enclosed by a wide border of ‘Kufic’ motifs separated by large interlacedknots.26 A carpet with different small interlaced medallions is in the Textile Museum, Washington DC. Another example,surviv ing as four fragments, has a tile- or ceiling-like fieldcomposed of a rectangular interlaced grid, each compartment of which is filled with a large interlaced medallion; the coloursand border pattern suggests that this probably dates from thelate 15th or early 16th century.27
One of the most widely published of all 15th century Spanishcarpets is in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London. With threeper fec tly balanced columns of ten small octagons of the type
70 HALI ISSUE 157
2 The Convent of
Santa Ursula large
octagon carpet
(lower part) Spain,
15th century. 1.03 x
2.50m (3'5" x 8'2"),
Museum of Islamic
Art, Qatar, no.CA24.
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 71
found on 15th and 16th century Anatolian carpets, it has anintense red colour and is in perfect condition.28
Twenty Spanish carpets have a Turkish field compositioncon sis ting of of large octagons, usually known as the ‘large-pattern Holbein design’ that appears on Anatolian and Syrianrugs dep ic ted in a number of 15th and 16th century paintings byvarious artists, including Hans Holbein.29 Most of these carpetshave a single large octagon placed in the centre of a large squareor rectangular compartment or panel that is then repeatedvertic ally, and often horizontally as well.
Carpets with this pattern can be further sub-divided accord -ing to the octagon design. The first sub-group comprises six car - pets, all possibly from the second half of the 15th century, with acomplex star medallion like that seen on an Anatolian rug dep -icted in 1486 by the Venetian artist Carlo Crivelli.30 The second, ofwhich two carpets survive (one split between two collect ions),both prob ably early 16th century, has an interlaced medallion.The third sub-group of large-octagon rugs, in which we find thesecond ary field ornament from the ‘small-pattern Holbein’ inter - laced carpets at the centre of each octagon, is represented by asingle surviving example, divided between three collections. Thefourth sub-group, consist ing of one complete carpet and onesmall frag ment, has a field design of vertical and horizontalrows of octa gons in implied compartments with small second -ary motifs between.
There are at least nine carpets (one divided between twocol lections) in the fifth and final sub-group, which have ‘wheel’-like medal lions placed in the centre of each square shaped com -part ment. The type dates from the second half of the 15th cent uryand an example can be seen depicted in a painting from around1530.31
The MIAQ owns a most beautiful example of this last sub-groupof Span ish ‘Holbein’ carpets, with three large octagons 1, 2. Thissub stantial section is the lower part of the ori ginal long carpet;the upper part, with four octagons, is in the Textile Museum,Wash ington DC.32 There is no firm indication that the carpetwas ever wider, but it could have been up to three columns inwidth. Reportedly acquired from the Convent of Santa Ursula inGuadala jara, north east of Madrid, both sections were once inVenice with the famous antique dealer Adolf Loewi. This lowersection passed through Benadava in Paris and thence to the WherCollection before coming to Doha.
At both ends of the field we see an extra ivory-ground panelwith a procession of ‘lions’, each in a different colour, but per -haps most interesting feature of the Spanish version of this pat -tern is that the central eight-pointed star is interlaced, creatingthe ill usion that the wheel is rotating. Once part of the originaldesign concept, this refinement is seen in very few survivingAnatolian versions, yet it appears in all known Spanish ones.The ground of the square compartments surrounding each largeoctagon has a beautiful interlaced design, reminiscent of awoven textile, and the borders that divide the octagons and sur round the field are typically Spanish and have not beenfound in Anatolian examples.
Among the best known of all historical Anatolian carpet pat -terns is the so-called ‘arabesque’ or ‘Lotto’ design, which firstappears in a European painting in 1516 and continued in use inAna tolian weaving until the end of the 17th century.33 Almost all ofthe two hundred or so surviving Anatolian arabesque rugs havedeep red grounds with the pattern in bright yellow outlined inblack and det ails in blue and ivory, although a few have blue orbrown grounds, and the pattern is very occasionally worked inblue or ivory.
Over thirty Spanish carpets with the Turkish arabesque fielddesign are known to survive, four of which include coats-of-arms.Spanish arabesque carpets appear to have yellow backgrounds,although it is likely they were originally red and the red dye hasoxidized. The pattern is usually in blue and ivory. The mostcom mon border is a curled-leaf pattern.
Spanish lampas designs.36
The earliest of the carnation group is a fragmented carpet inMadrid, with a wide Kufic border, large interlaced knots, deepreds and strong colours. Other examples have softer tones (apartfrom the blue) and yellow grounds that were originally red. Ithas often been suggested that the oxidised red seen on manycarpets made from the early 16th century onwards marks thetime when Jews and Muslims left Spain; dyeing was traditionallya Jewish craft.
Some of the carnation carpets made from the early 16th cent -ury onwards include birds, and two have the elegant Renaissanceborder pattern seen on the Qatar arabesque carpet 3. Related tothe carnation rugs are a further 23 examples with single palm -ettes in a lattice. The f lowers and lattice are clearly European instyle, but the concept can be seen in earlier Turkish models.
During the 17th century Spanish carpet weavers continued to copy patterns from other regions. At least two carpets are knownwith medallion Ushak designs, and two with the so-called‘Smyrna’ or f loral Ushak design. At least one example copies aCairene Ottoman design, and three more have designs copiedfrom small Esfahan rugs, made in central Iran in the 16th andearly 17th cen turies. One of these has a cartouche border, pos -sibly derived from a ‘Damascus’ rug. Two early Spanish carpetssurvive that have a cloud pattern directly copied from a 14thcentury Mongol silk.37
CARPETS WITH SPANISH SILK DESIGNSMore than 150 Spanish carpets have designs derived from Span -ish woven silk textiles. The earliest of these have the strong redand Kufic borders with animals attributable to the 15th century.Four have a field pattern of lobed oval medallions either in alattice or in diagonal rows,38 and twelve have ascending palm -ettes within an interlaced lattice.39 The lattice types and f loralpatterns vary slightly and are used in different combinations.
Another lattice field design, which must have been popularfor some time, features compartments filled with a large ascen -ding side-view f lowers or palmettes. In 33 examples an ogivallattice is composed of two parallel stems. Six of these have thestrong colours dateable to the late 15th and early 16th century,but the majority are from the second and third quarters of the16th century. One of these, with a two-plane lattice with palm -ettes, probably from the mid- 16th century, is one of only twoknown Spanish classical carpets with silk pile.40
The other known Spanish silk carpet, a corner section withpart of the field and the major and minor borders, is in theMIAQ 4.41 It is one of seven examples known (the others arewoven in wool), with a design of palm ettes in a diamond-shaped lattice. Most of them have strong reds and Kufic borders,and are thought to date from the late 15th or early 16th century.The MIAQ fragment is extremely finely knotted and dates fromthe very beginning of the 16th century. The wide lattice is inyellow – possibly originally red but now oxidised – and thebackground is green. The palmettes are linked diagonally bystems that intersect the lattice; the primary border has ameandering stem with f lowers pointing alternately inward andoutward on a light blue ground.
Ten Spanish carpets have lattice designs that are unique sur vivors, including two with rampant lions, a pattern directlycopied from Spanish woven silk textiles from the 15th century,and three with different Spanish silk brocade designs.42 At leasttwenty-three unclassifiable fragments have other types oflattices, and are from the late 16th to the early 18th century; afew of the later examples are inscribed and some are dated.
‘WREATH’ CARPETSThe Anatolian design of rows of large octagons 2 must haveinspired the largest single surviving group of Spanish carpets,those with rows of wreaths. In three of the earliest examples, the individual wreaths are placed within square compartments,
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
72 HALI ISSUE 157
The MIAQ has one Spanish arabesque carpet, with the designin brown on an ivory ground, surrounded by an elegant Renais -sance border of large leaves 3.34 Originally from a European privatecollection, it was acquired at auction in London in 1999. One ofthe finest examples extant, it was prob ably made in the first half ofthe 16th century,
The Anatolian arabesque pattern also inspired a new Spanishdesign of serrated leaves that form an oval lattice and concavediamonds. Seven examples are known. A further seven carpetsare known with a textile pattern of diagonal rows of large car n -a tions directly copied from Ottoman silk velvets made in Bursa.35
This pattern was developed further in Spain: four rugs includeadditional f lowers, in a marriage between Ottoman velvet and
3 The Qatar arab -
esque carpet. Spain,
16th century. 2.83 x
5.49m (9'3" x 18'0").
MIAQ, no.TE26.
4 The Unger palm -
ettes in diamond-
shaped lattice silk
carpet fragment,
Spain, early 16th
century. 0.58 x
0.76m (1'10" x 2'6").
MIAQ, no. TE12.
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 73
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
74 HALI ISSUE 157
the corners of which have typical Anatolian patterns, while the wreaths are distinctively European in style.
One of these three carpets, with greatly worn pile and prob ablyreduced in size, is in the MIAQ 5. It was acquired at auction in Londonin 2007, having previously been on the art market in both Paris andNew York. The two others are in Berlin and Miami.43
On all other Spanish wreath carpets the columns and rows ofwreaths have no containing compartments; in some of the oldestexamples the secondary motif diagonally adjacent to the wreathsresembles the secondary motif on many Anatolian carpets. The MIAQhas one such fragment, with four wreaths and no borders 6. Once withYves Mikaeloff in Paris, it was acquired at auction in London in 1997.Another section of this car pet, also with four wreaths but with parts ofthe border attached, was on the New York market some twenty yearsago.44 A small number of examples have different variations of thewreath pattern.
The few publications to date on Spanish carpets have tended tofocus on specific collections. The most important and best of these is still Alfombras Antiguas Espanolas, the rare catalogue byFerrandis Torres for the 1933 Madrid exhibition, which brought togetherexamples from a number of sources. Substantial research has beenundertaken in European inventories for records of Spanish carpets, andsome work has been done to collate their depictions in Westernpaintings, but there has not, to date, been any attempt to compile acomplete catalogue of all surviving Spanish carpets, or to analysethem,45 carry out dye tests, and in some instances carbon-14 analyses.The time is ripe for a major exhibition of the greatest Mudejar carpets –perhaps the MIAQ will, in due course, accept the challenge?
EAST MEDITERRANEAN CARPETS: EGYPT & SYRIAThe MIAQ Collection includes eight knotted-pile carpets madein the East Mediterranean region in the 16th century. Six areattributable to Cairo and two to Damascus. Four of the Cairenerugs and one of the Damascus rugs (only a section of border ofthe other survives) are in the ‘Mamluk style’ with designs ofgeometric motifs and small f loral elements in a predominantlyred, green and blue palette. The other two carpets from Cairoare more colourful, in the more naturalistic Ottoman f loral style.
Knotted-pile carpets have probably been made in the Levantand Anatolia since the second millennium BC or before.46 Wool-pile f loor coverings were made in Egypt before 2000 BC,47
although in these earliest surviving Egyptian carpets the pile islooped around the warps, rather than being individually tiedand knotted. It is not known when the knotted-pile techniquewas first used in Egypt, but it may go back at to at least 500 BC.
The oldest, almost complete, knotted-pile carpet currentlyknown to have been found in Egypt has been carbon-14 dated to580–920 AD, although the materials suggest that it may havebeen made in Anatolia.48 Many tiny fragments of knotted-pilecarpets have also been found in the rubbish dumps of Fustat.The oldest of these are from the Abbasid period (758–1258):some may have been made in Egypt, others could be from Meso -potamia, Anatolia and Iberia.49 There are Arabic references to14th century carpets made in Cairo,50 but no actual examplessurvive that can be conclusively linked to this period.51 CarlJohann Lamm found two small fragments in Fustat that mayrepresent carpet weaving from the mid-15th century.52
5 The Paris
wreaths in com -
partments carpet.
Spain, 16th cent -
ury. Three comp -
lete com part -
ments with end
panels, reduced in
size from a larger
carpet.1.02 x
2.89m (3'4" x 9'6")
MIAQ, no.TE106.
6 The Mikaeloff
wreaths carpet
fragment, Spain,
early 16th century.
1.40 x 1.31m (4'7"
x 4'4"). MIAQ
7 The Milan
circu lar Mamluk
carpet (detail),
Cairo, Egypt, 16th
cent ury. MIAQ,
no.TE07
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 75
MAMLUK-STYLE CARPETSThe Mamluk Sultanate (1250-1517) was centred on Egypt, but alsoembraced parts of south and central Anatolia, including theMala taya region, all of present-day Syria west of the Euphrates,the entire eastern seaboard of the Mediterranean and the RedSea, as well as parts of present-day Jordan, Libya and Tunisia. Itsprincipal cities were Cairo and Damascus. The Mamluks are knownfor their beautiful glassware, extraordinary metalwork, intricatewood-carving and kaleidoscopic ‘silk-like’ carpets.
Carpets in the ‘Mamluk-style’ (I use this term because mostsur viving examples were probably made after the Ottomans over -threw the Mamluk Sultanate in 1517), stand very much on theirown among oriental rugs, with their unique blend of shimmer -ing wine-red, green and light blue tones, their silky wool and,above all, their exquisite variety of accurately drawn ornaments,large and small, in intricate arrangements.
These carpets are now generally thought to have been madein Cairo, having first been thus attributed by some of the earliestcarpet scholars.53 However, because their patterns do not stylis-tically sit comfortably with the other Mamluk court arts, formany years the traditional Cairo label was not accepted by allexperts, and some more recent writings have put forward alter -native, less convincing, places of origin.54
The survival of a small number of carpets bearing the blazonof the Mamluk Sultan Qait Bay strengthens the attribution of theseexamples (and many others) to Cairo,55 while the redis covery in1983 by Alberto Boralevi of a hitherto unknown Mamluk-stylecarpet in the Medici Pitti Palace in Florence helps to establishthe argument in favour of Cairo as the centre of production,56
as an inventory record from 1587 calls the Medici carpet ‘Cairino’.57
In pristine condition, its virtual pair is in San Rocco in Venice.58
Recently published research by Marco Spallanzani informs usthat “…in 1545 Iacopo Capponi went to Alexandria with instruc -tions to buy various things for Duke Cosimo I de Medici, inc lud -ing an unspecified number of rugs to be made to order”, whichwere shipped to Livorno in 1547. Inventory records from the late14th to the late 17th century report carpets coming from Cairo.59
These must represent only a fraction of the Mamluk-style carpetsthat arrived in Italy, for there is little doubt that the vast majoritywere imported via this route.
My archive contains images of 136 Mamluk-style carpets madein Egypt during the 15th and 16th centuries, divisible into groupsby approximate age and by design detail.60 Arguably the oldestsurviving example is the Salvadori fragment in the Victoria &Albert Museum, London.61 Four carpets from the same periodbearing the blazon of Sultan Qait Bay (r.1468-1496) were almostcertainly made in Cairo in the second half of the 15th century.62
These five, along with others in various collections that wereprobably originally from larger carpets with three central medal -lions, represent the so-called ‘first-period’ of Mamluk carpetweaving, prior to 1500.63
A second group of nearly thirty Mamluk-style carpets, rugs andfragments can attributed to the first quarter of the 16th century.Another hundred or so were probably made during the secondand third quarters of the 16th century. Thereafter the Caireneworkshops that made the Mamluk-style carpets were engaged inmaking carpets in the new Ottoman style, using identical dyesand materials. At least eight carpets are known that rep resent atransitional group with elements of both styles.64 From the mid-14th century a parallel development was probably occurring inthe northern Mamluk capital of Damascus in Syria, where carpetdesign was being inf luenced by or inf luencing designs in Anatoliaand Iran.
Assigning carpets to particular periods is fairly arbitrary anddepends on a number of features. Pre-1500 Mamluk-style piecestend to have longer pile, natural-coloured warps, a looser con -struction and more colours than those of later periods. Carpetsfrom the first and second periods tend to have between five andseven colours, some have red-dyed warps, and they often have
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76 HALI ISSUE 157
8. The Arhan Mamluk
carpet. Cairo, Egypt,
16th century. 2.51 x
3.08m (8'3" x 10'1").
MIAQ,no. A22
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the general composition of the Habsburg silk Mamluk carpet inVienna, a large central compartment surrounded by smaller,square ones, to the 15th-16th century mosaics on the f loor ofthe Mosque of Sultan Hassan in Cairo.73
The basic composition of the Mamluk carpets, based on acentralised motif surrounded by a symmetrical arrangement ofrectangular and square compartments, is probably derived frompavements and mosaic f loors of the Roman period. Similarcompositions can also be seen on Egyptian Coptic textiles fromthe 3rd to 9th centuries. The f loor is a ref lection of the heavensabove, and it is unsurprising that similar compositions appearon later Islamic ceiling patterns. Many Mamluk carpets have asingle central medallion, but there are more than thirty largeformat examples with either three or five medallions.74
Almost all Mamluk carpet patterns are designed to be viewedfrom all directions, perhaps because they were intended tomirror ceiling patterns. However, there are three Mamluk rugswith directional designs indicating that they were made to hangon a wall, in front of a cupboard, or as a doorway.75
The ornamentation of Mamluk carpets draws upon a widerange of artistic sources and has been of intense interest toscholars. Studying one of the Ballard Collection Mamluk rugs inSt Louis in 1925, Rudolf Riefstahl compared a motif composedof a palm tree f lanked by two cypresses, commonly found onlater Mamluk carpets, to Assyrian stone decoration from the 7thcentury BC.76
Some ornaments, such as the octagons, the interlace andvarious minor details, form part of an ‘international’ style seenon rugs from Spain to India. Other minor motifs are specific toCairene carpets and can be traced from medieval westernIslamic decoration back to Hellenistic art. Some, such as the‘umbrella’ and ‘lancet’ leaves, have been explained as aconscious return to Egyptian ornament. The designs on theearliest Mamluk carpets are extremely complex and well-proportioned, whereas later the patterns are simplified.
Although the patterns of Mamluk carpets are mostly com -posed of octagons, eight-pointed stars and compartments, otherdesigns were also used. Four surviving carpets have a two-leveldiamond lattice, each compartment containing a single f lower.77
Two of them have the traditional Mamluk border of a cartouchealternating with a lobed medallion, and two have a design oflarge tulips, which continued to be used on rugs with Ottomanfield designs. They were probably made in the second or thirdquarters of the 16th century, after the transition from Mamluk toOttoman styles had begun.
The MIAQ has four Mamluk-style carpets made in Cairo inthe 16th century. They are all from the third period, and two aremajor works of art, retaining much of their original pile andcolour. So many Mamluk carpets are extensively restored, so tofind two with original pile is a great bonus.
The Arhan Mamluk carpet 8, reportedly with the same Turk -ish family for over seventy years, was acquired by the MIAQ in1997.78 Probably made in the second quarter of the 16th century,it has just three colours, red, green and blue. The red (lac) hascorroded, while the blue (indigo) and green pile is quite high inplaces, giving a sculpted effect. The carpet had been folded formany years: along the fold lines are some tiny holes, probablycaused by moth and now skillfully restored.79 The drawing isremarkably good, and the serrated edge of the eight-pointed starmedallion is also found on some second period carpets. An extrapanel at each end of the field contains large circular medallionsalternating with groups of three trees: a palm f lanked by cypresses.A special feature, in the inner and outer minor borders, is thethree balls and wavy lines of the Ottoman çintamani symbol.
Four circular carpets from Cairo are known. Three of themhave Mamluk geometric designs: the Barbieri carpet in the Brus chettini Foundation, Genoa; the Olmutz carpet at KremsierCastle in the Czech Republic; and the Milan carpet in the MIAQ.80 The fourth, a later example in the Corcoran Gallery of
HALI ISSUE 157 77
bands of stylised Kufic script. Those from the third period gen -erally have just three colours, yellow-dyed warps and simplecartouche borders. A general simplification of pattern seems tohave occurred over time. Such differences probably representthe output of different Cairene workshops in at different times,rather than alternative places of origin.65
Other writers on the subject take a different view. JennyHousego has proposed a Maghrebi (northwest African) originfor all Mamluk car pets.66 Jon Thompson has tentatively sugges -ted that the ‘early’ examples were made in Cairo, as one wasfound there, but that the main corpus was made elsewhere,perhaps in Syria, close to the Mamluk Sultanate’s northernfrontier with Turkey, while also suggesting that the Maghrebipossibility should be explored further for the main group.67
Carlo Suriano has also divided Mamluk carpets into two groups,one made in the Huaran district or Shawbak in Syria, and theother in Cairo.68 His argument refers to Charles Grant Ellis,69 whowrote that several of the earlier Mamluk carpets have distinctivetechnical differences from later ones, including multiple wefts,unusually long pile and abnormal colouring, although both groupsshare the technical features of S-spun wool and asym metricknot ting. Ellis attributes this small group to the Maghreb andthe main group to Cairo. Suriano’s desire to return the bulk ofMamluk carpets to Syria may have been inspired by Thompson’s1980 article, or by the many earlier and contemporaneous refer -ences to Syrian carpet making, or by the fact that S-spun woolwas found in Iraq, but his discus sion omits any reference to theevidence that the Medici Mamluk came from Cairo.
At least fifteen European paintings are known that depictidentifiable Mamluk-style carpets from Cairo,70 the earliestbeing Paris Bordone’s Fisherman Presenting St Mark’s Ring to theDoge, painted about 1540. Thompson shows that Bordone’scarpet, with a medallion set against a plain field, is similar tothe Bardini blazon carpet in Florence, which is attributed to theend of the 15th century.71 Bordone’s carpet may thus have beenfifty or more years old when he painted it. However, the Mamlukcarpets depicted in the famous Moretto frescos in Brescia belongto a later generation with simpler patterns, and may thereforehave been less than twenty years old when they were painted in1543. Mamluk-style carpets from Cairo continue to appear inEurop ean paintings through the 16th and early 17th centuries.
All carpets made in Cairo from the 15th to 17th centuriesshare a distinctive woven structure: the wool is mostly S-spunand Z-plied, the opposite of almost all other ‘oriental’ rugs ofwhatever age or place of origin. The knots are asymmetric,similar to the technique used in Syria, central and eastern Iran,India and China. In the earliest examples the warps tend to beundyed, with red-dyed wefts, although occasionally both warpsand wefts are red. On the vast majority of examples in the thirdgroup, the warps and wefts are dyed yellow or yellow-green, afeature that continued in use for later 16th and early 17th centuryOttoman-style rugs. The long-staple wool used for the warpsand pile is very glossy, resembling silk. A unique example knot -ted in silk on a silk foundation survives in the ÖsterreichischesMuseum für angewandte Kunst in Vienna.72
Earlier Mamluk-style carpets tend to be knotted with five orseven colours (red, green, blue, yellow, ivory, purple and brown),while later ones use as few as three (red, green and blue). As onIndian and Iranian carpets, the red is created from the insect dyelac, and is often corroded, while the blue is dyed with indigo,which tends to preserve the wool. On a rug that has seen littlewear, the blue areas are often higher than the red, giving anembossed effect. Lac appears to have been used less often onexamples from the second half of the 16th century, whichachieve a similar colour from the related insect dye cochineal,although the latter rarely has the depth of colour given by lac.
The unique colour spectrum and spectacular kaleidoscopicornamentation of Mamluk carpets is drawn from some of thebest of Islamic art and design. In 1924, Friedrich Sarre related
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78 HALI ISSUE 157
Art in Washington has an Ottoman field design.81
There is good evidence that round carpets were made for royaland imperial tents in Iran, India and China, and there is everyreason to think that round Mamluk carpets were used the sameway in Egypt. When they arrived in Europe, such carpets wereused as table covers. The 1587 Medici archives in Florence mentiona circular ‘cairino’ carpet,82 and two ‘round Mamluks’ appear inthe 1596 Innsbruck inventory of Grand Duke Ferdinand II ofAustria,83 who received one as a gift from the Medici court.84
The round carpet in the MIAQ 7, 9 was probably made earlyin the second quarter of the 16th century. Its beauty lies in itsrich colours (red, blue, green and yellow) and its lustrous pile,having survived in pristine condition for almost five centuries.
The fact that all its original edges are still intact suggests thatthey were once bound with a tape or silk cloth.
The other two Mamluk-style carpets in the MIAQ collection, arather worn rug 10 and a small fragment from a large carpet 11, areboth study pieces, acquired at auction in London in 1996 and1998 respectively.85 The rug, with a medallion and bands of cyp -resses and palm trees, was formerly in the Bern heimer Collect -ion, Munich, while the fragment had appeared on the Londonmarket a number times since the early 1980s.
It is unlikely that the MIAQ will be able to acquire a firstperiod Mamluk carpet, but a few second period examples remainin private hands, and an early example would certainly be a strongaddition to the two outstanding carpets already in the collection.
9 The Milan circular
Mamluk carpet,
Cairo, Egypt, 16th
century. 2.78 x
2.26m (9'1" x 7'1").
MIAQ, no.TE07
CAIRENE OTTOMAN CARPETSAlmost a hundred rugs and carpets with f loral designs survivefrom Cairene workshops. Scholars generally agree that the firstOttoman design rugs were made there. Ernst Kühnel tells us that“the connection with Mamluk rugs [is] undeniable, because ofthe similarity of the material... More important and even con -clu sive is the frequent mention of ‘Cairene’ rugs expressly calledin French, German, Italian, and Spanish inventories of theXVIth-XVIIth centuries. Their beauty is repeatedly emphasisedby comparison with the famous Persian carpets, and in someinstances they are classified as ‘Turkish rugs from Cairo’.”86
Despite this, some authors, including Kühnel, have conjec t -ured that certain Ottoman court rugs, especially the finest nicherugs and related examples with similar structure may have beenmade somewhere closer to the court, in either Bursa or Istanbul.This suggestion was occasioned by a single document whichrefers to “...eleven rug masters of Cairo, mentioned by name,who had been ordered to the court of Constantinople in 1585,together with their load of wool…”.87
Citing Kurt Erdmann, Kühnel proposed that these rug masters“most certainly had to run a manufactory working for the TurkishSultan”, and that this factory was most probably located in Bursa.88
This attempt to establish that Bursa was a rug producing centrein the latter part of the 16th century is based on two further
documents, one of 1474, the second in 1525 (which mentions sixrug-makers and nine workmen).89 In fact, the confusion datesback to the early 20th century when F.R. Martin described theImperial Austrian Ottoman f loral field niche rug, without evid -ence, as being from unspecified “Ottoman Imperial manufac-tories in Asia Minor”.90 So when, in 1938, Erdmann publishedhis 1585 reference to the Egyptian weavers arriving in Turkey,the attribution was adopted – unquestioned – by almost everysubsequent carpet scholar.91
In 1981, after a number of Ottoman carpets had been phys ic -ally analysed and the ‘evidence’ reviewed, the proposed Turkishattribution was shown to be unsound. Examination of the twelveOttoman carpets in the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, as wellas a large number of other examples in European public and privatecollections led Robert Pinner and me to con clude that: “Thequestion, which of the known Ottoman f loral carpets wereproduced in Turkey seemed at one time to be ans wered by theidentification of two major groups: one, of relat ively coarsely-woven rugs with both the foundation and the pile in wool, andwith its structure and colour closely related to Mamluk carpets,and a second group of more finely woven carpets, with silk warpsand wefts, and with a pile consisting not only of wool but alsowhite, and sometimes blue, cotton. The attribution of the lattergroup to ‘Istanbul’ or ‘Bursa’ appeared to be sup por ted by the
10 The Bernheimer
Mamluk rug with
medallion and bands
of cypress and palm
trees. Cairo, Egypt,
16th century. 1.37 x
2.04m (4'6" x 6'8”).
MIAQ, no.CA04.
11 Mamluk carpet
fragment. Cairo,
Egypt, 16th century.
Field section, 0.49 x
1.91m (1'7" x 6'3").
MIAQ, no.CA06.
1980s, which establish that the red dye in Mamluk rugs wasmostly lac,96 while of the two Ottoman carpets he tested, thered of one was lac, the other cochineal, which “…allows thepossibility of using dye-analysis to separate the Ottoman carpetsinto an earlier and a later group, with, of course, the usualreservations about the length of the period during which bothdyes were used, and the uncertainty of the mid-point.”97
It is possible that some Cairene Ottoman design rugs pre-date afew Mamluk design rugs. The Medici carpet, con sidered on styl -istic grounds to be the latest known example of its type, frombetween 1557 and 1571, may suggest that Ottoman designs werebeing made in Cairo from at least the beginning of the thirdquarter of the 16th century, if not a little before. We may alsoassume that the earliest examples in the new Ottoman style werestill quite similar to Mamluk rugs.98 The very finely knottedsilk-foundation niche rugs with highly refined designs may wellhave begun to be made by the latter part of the 16th century.
There are two Cairene Ottoman carpets in the MIAQ collec tion.The finer of the two is a large carpet acquired at auction fromthe English country house Hackwood Park in 1998 11. It is veryfinely woven, with superb drawing and composition,99 but whilethe wefts and warps are almost all original, there is hardly anoriginal knot left on the carpet. The clarity of drawing and finearticulation of pattern strongly suggests that it pre-dates theMedici Ottoman carpet and can be ascribed to the beginning ofthe third quarter of the 16th century. Certainly the restorationfollowed the original pattern faithfully, so the Hackwood carpetremains a very good document of an Ottoman carpet pattern.
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fact that both the silk and the cotton were Z-spun in a non-Egyptian manner.92 The apparent contradic t ion, pres en ted bythe fact that the wool was mainly S-spun, i.e., as in Mamluk and‘Cairene’ Ottoman carpets, was exp lained by adherents of thistheory, by the suggestion that the pile wool was imported [intoTurkey] from Egypt.”93
Alberto Boralevi’s discovery of the two great Cairene carpetsof the Medici in the warehouses of the Pitti Palace is of inestim -able importance in this discussion. Of greater significance hereeven than the Medici Mamluk is the Ottoman carpet, also inexcel lent condition.94 Boralevi writes of it: “As stated in theinventory, the Ottoman carpet was brought as a gift to the GrandDuke Fernando II in the year 1623 by the Admiral Da Verrazzano,possibly a descendant of the great navigator”,95 and concludes:“The evidence of the Archives, which defines the Ottoman asCairene, supports the theory… according to which all thesecarpets were manufactured in the same Egyptian workshopsduring the Ottoman Empire.”
The 1623 inventory date of the Medici carpet provides the onlyreliable benchmark for dating Cairene Ottoman rugs. From itspresent-day appearance we may assume that it was new at thetime of acquisition, and we may further assume that the work -shops producing rugs of this type probably continued to do sothroughout the 17th century. However, stylistically the Medicicarpet marks the decline of the artistic tradition, and it is likelythat several of the finer Ottoman niche rugs pre-date it. There isalso some lim ited assistance to be drawn from tests of Mamlukand Ottoman carpet dyes performed by Mark Whiting in the
80 HALI ISSUE 157
12 The Hackwood
Park Cairene
Otto man medallion
carpet. Cairo, Egypt,
3rd quarter 16th
century. 2.81 x 5.17m
(9'3" x 17'0"). MIAQ,
no.CA05.
13 The Bernheimer
Ottoman medallion
rug. Cairo, Egypt,
16th century. 1.32 x
1.91m (4'4" x 6'3").
MIAQ, no.CA63
14 The Muse East
Med iterranean
car touche-border
car pet (detail),
Damascus, Syria,
15th or 16th century.
MIAQ, no.TE14
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HALI ISSUE 157 81
The second Cairene Ottoman rug in the MIAQ 12, acquired atauction in London in 2004, was for merly in the Bernheimerfamily collection, having been acquired by Otto Bernheimer in1919.100 It belongs to a group of small-format rugs, several ofwhich have exactly the same colours and dimensions as some ofthe small Mamluk-style rugs, and represent a continuum fromthe same workshops. While the pattern is reasonably clear, thedrawing is not quite as refined as on the more finely knottedexamples. The round green medallion and green quarteredmedallions in the corners are typical. At each end of the fieldare small circular half-medallions. The f loral pattern in thebackground appears as a section from an endless repeat thatdisappears beneath the borders and medallions. The medallionsalso create the illusion of an infinite repeat design, a section ofwhich is framed by the borders. Other workshops in Cairoproduced small rugs, some very finely knotted with muchcrisper renderings of Ottoman f loral designs, in particular agroup of prayer rugs, several of which are on a silk foundation.
Both Cairene Ottoman carpets in Doha should be viewedprimarily as study pieces. However, there is every possibilitythat this area of the collection can be raised to the level of theMamluk examples in the foreseeable future.
MAMLUK-STYLE CARPETS FROM SYRIACarpets must have been made in present-day Syria, the Levantand the upper reaches of the fertile valleys of the Tigris andEuphrates Rivers since antiquity. The majority of the peopleinhabiting this region were semi-nomadic pastoralists, andwool-pile carpets must have been part of their daily furnishings.
Three thousand years ago the great cities of ancient Meso pot -amia had stone ‘carpets’, which perhaps ref lect the patterns onpile carpets that no longer survive. Five centuries later, the landbetween the Tigris and Euphrates and much of present-day Syriawas ruled by the Persians. Their great empire was then conqueredby the Greeks and later by the Romans, whose villas had mosaicf loors that were probably covered with carpets in winter.
Two thousand years ago, Syria was an important section ofthe ancient Silk Road that linked China to Greece and Rome.Knotted-pile carpets with Greek mosaic designs have been foundin Central Asia, and Chinese woven silks have been discoveredin Syria, demonstrating that textiles travelled across the entirebreadth of Asia, enabling new designs and ornaments from distantlands to be copied along the way. It is against this backgroundthat we should consider the origin of carpet designs in this region,some of which may derive from or ref lect the patterns of f loortiles and woven silks.
In the 7th century Syria, Iran and much of Central Asia wasconquered by the Arabs, whose spiritual inf luence and knowledgeof geometry continues to inf luence design to this day. The Mongolinvasion in the 13th century carried with it Chinese and CentralAsian patterns that are occasionally seen in Syrian carpet design.
Our interest here lies in Syrian carpet design from the 15th to17th centuries, and in particular the early part of that period,under Egyptian rule. In 1250, the Mamluks defeated the AyyubidEmpire in Egypt, and in 1260 advanced along the East Mediter -ran ean coast to defeat the Mongol armies at Ayn Jalut, extendingthe Mamluk Sultanate to include Syria and southern Anatolia.They ruled this region for some 250 years until they were defeatedby the Ottoman Turks in 1516. It was the Mamluk style that mostpowerfully inf luenced carpet making in Syria, and their inf luence,in particular in colouration, continued through the 17th century.
So-called ‘Damascus’ carpets have a distinctive handle, weav -ing technique and colouration. The wool is generally Z-spun,while carpets made in Cairo tend to use S-spun wool. The pile isgenerally quite hairy, perhaps made of goat’s wool, and unlikeCairene carpets rarely has much sheen. The knot is for the mostpart asymmetric, in common with rugs from Cairo, central andeastern Iran, India and China. By contrast, Anatolian carpets tendto be symmetrically-knotted (this technique spreads beyond the
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borders of present-day Turkey into the Caucasus and northwestPersia). The warps are generally ivory wool and are often quitehairy, again perhaps from goats. The 2-ply wefts, of similar wool,are generally dyed red. There are two weft shoots between eachrow of knots, the second pulled very tight so that the upperwarp almost almost covers the one beneath, producing a heavilydepressed foundation weave and a firm handle.
Very few Damascus carpets survive in good condition – mostare damaged and many exist simply as fragments. Although theyappear to be quite thick and sturdy, the method of constructionmakes them quite fragile. Fragmentation may be due to the factthat with their stiff handle they break when folded. In mostexamples as much as 10cm, sometimes more, is missing fromthe ends. This may be due to the fact that the original narrowkilim at each end was not adequately secured, so that the rowsof knots simply fell away.
Their predominant red, blue and green palette is very muchin the taste of Mamluk carpets from Egypt, although on Syriancarpets the red dyes are almost always madder, in common withAnatolian rugs. Thus in their colours and knotting Syrian carpetsresemble those of Egyptian, in their spinning and dyeing theyresemble Anatolian carpets, and in their patterns, they showinf luences from Anatolian, Egyptian and Iranian carpets.
It is not known whether the sixty ‘Damascene’ carpets receivedin 1520 by Cardinal Wolsey in exchange for allowing wine to betraded in England were actually from Damascus, nor do we knowwhat they looked like.101 It is certain, however, that by the 16th
82 HALI ISSUE 157
15 The Wher East
Mediterranean
com part ment rug,
Damascus, 16th
century. 1.30 x 1.75m
(4'3" x 5'9"). MIAQ,
no.CA44
century, Syrian or ‘Damascus’ rugs had arrived in Europe.102 Atleast one is depicted in a European tapestry from that time.103
John Mills has shown that the Damascus ‘compart ment’ designis first seen in an Italian painting before 1581, and lists sevenfurther occurrences in Italian, English and Dutch paintings up tothe third quarter of the 17th century.104 Onno Ydema records 23‘compartment’ carpets in 17th century Netherlandish paintings.105
It may perhaps be assumed that not all such rugs were new whenthey were depicted.
A number of Syrian carpet patterns are represented by just oneor two surviving examples, and there are two larger designgroups. The so-called ‘para-Mamluk’ carpets and the ‘chessboard’or ‘compartment’ rugs.
The ‘para-Mamluk’ carpets are the oldest surviving examplesattributable to the northern part of the Mamluk Empire, datingfrom the 14th to the early 16th century. The term was coined byCharles Grant Ellis and groups together at least fourteen carpetsand fragments with a number of common features.106 Most havesimilar compositions, colouration and minor ornaments, butthere is some technical variation: some are asymmetricallyknotted, some symmetric, and others a combination).
The oldest is the so-called ‘Domes and Squinches’ rug in theVakıf lar Museum, Istanbul, which has been labelled as early asthe 13th century, although it is more likely to have been made inthe 14th.107 It was found in the Great Mosque in DivriÌi alongwith another para-Mamluk with a simpler design, possibly fromthe 15th century. Both were probably made in east or southeastAnatolia, then part of the Mamluk Empire. Twelve other para-Mamluk rugs survive: three complete, some small fragments,some larger carpets and a unique prayer rug. These can be datedto the late 15th and early 16th century, as examples with relatedpatterns are depicted in at least a dozen European paintings.108 Ithas been suggested that these rugs, together with others fromSpain, western Anatolia, Syria, Iran and India, form part of an‘international’ carpet style that continued through the 14th tothe 16th century.109
There is continuing debate concerning the source of the para-Mamluks: some writers have attributed them to eastern Anatolia,others to Tabriz in northwest Iran. However, the limited avail -able evidence suggests that at least some were made in present-day Syria or southeastern Anatolia, as they form a continuumwith the vast majority of later rugs attributed to that area. JonThompson has suggested that the ‘para-Mamluks’, and the later‘compartment’ carpets, might belong to the Turkmen tradition.110
However, while some of their border designs do relate to thosedepicted in Iranian paintings of the Turkmen period, neither thefield patterns nor the palette fit comfortably into Turkmen art,appearing closer to the Mamluk style, whether from Egypt orsoutheastern Anatolia.111
The most common design on Damascus carpets is the above-mentioned ‘compartment’ pattern, many elements of which canbe seen in ‘para-Mamluk’ rugs. The field is covered with a gridof compartments formed on a red ground by four corner triangles,leaving an octagon within centred on an interlaced star with eightradial pairs of ‘cypresses’, an ornament shared with Mamlukrugs from Cairo. Secondary banded compartments are formed byvertical and horizontal cypress pairs, with a quar tered diamondformed by the four adjacent triangles at the centre. In the fullversion of this complex interlocking design, two other substratepatterns emerge: the diagonal pairs of cypresses form a diagonallattice, while the ends of the cypresses are drawn so as to createan impression of rows of circles within the compartments.112
These ‘compartment’ rugs tend to come in three sizes: largecarpets, smaller and small rugs. It is mostly the small rugs thathave survived, and one was acquired by the MIAQ in 1998 15.The field depicts almost six complete hexagonal compartments.These abut vertically, but conjoining the hexagons diagonallyare large blue diamonds divided through the centre, so that inpart they can be seen as quartered triangles, and the compart -
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HALI ISSUE 157 83
ment or tile is in fact a large square where the triangles form thecorner pieces. In the centre of each compartment is the ‘Damas -cus’ star and radiating from this are cypress-like forms. All thesepatterns can be found on the earlier ‘para-Mamluk’ carpets.
A number of border patterns are known for these rugs, ofwhich the one seen in the MIAQ rug is the most common. Fourleaves extend from large lobed medallions, with small cartouchesbetween. In Mamluk carpets the cartouche is generally consid-erably larger than the lobed medallion. The rug has much of itsoriginal pile and remarkably fresh colours. As with so manyDamascus rugs, parts of the end borders have been lost and havebeen replaced.
Undoubtedly the most beautiful cartouche border known ona Damascus carpet can be seen on a spectacular fragment in theMIAQ 14, 16. Sadly, nothing of the field survives. Much of thepat terning is on two levels, with elegantly drawn leaves and tinyinterlaces. A complex design is used for the minor borders,demonstrating that it came from a very refined workshop. Thecorners are well resolved and a small part of the cartouche fromthe upper border remains. This tantalising fragment is from thevery best Damascus carpet known.
A deeper understanding of Syrian carpet design can be gainedfrom the patterns of the twelve known examples that have neither‘para-Mamluk’ nor ‘compartment’ designs, at least two of whichmight have been made in southeast Anatolia.113 The largest (some7.70m long) and most spectacular are two almost identi calmed allion carpets in the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Art(TIEM) in Istanbul. These have two onion-shaped medallionswith pen dants in dark blue with rumi split-leaves that form adiamond-shaped inner medallion. Second ary round medallionsalong the sides of the field are only partially visible, as they arecut off by the border. The medallion, reminiscent of Ushakcarpets, more likely draws its inspiration from Iranian patternsand Ottoman book covers. The field is surrounded by a cartoucheand medallion border, like so many Mamluk carpets, but with avery different pattern. Both carpets, although almost complete,are composed of many reassembled fragments.
A beautiful early Damascus carpet in the Museum of IslamicArt in Berlin, in outstanding condition, has a field entirely cov -ered with cloudbands, a pattern that originated in China andreached Syria via Iran. In Istanbul there is a very small single-niche fragment from a multiple-niche saf prayer carpet, anotherpart of which is in the Wher Collection. Two fragments in theKeir Collection, acquired from Salvadori in Florence, add to thepicture of Damascus carpet design. One has small palmettescov ering the field in the Iranian manner. The other has a fieldof lobed medallions altering with ‘Damascus’-style stars; in thecentre is a large eight-pointed star medallion. The field is sur -rounded by a border of cartouches with cloudbands and eight-lobed medallions.
A fragment from a large carpet with a field of scrolling vinesand large palmettes in the Iranian manner and a border some -what resembling the wavy lines and balls of the çintamani designwas given in 1991 to the Metropolitan Museum of Art by theMarshall & Marilyn R. Wolf Foundation. Four other Damascuscarpets were found in the Great Mosque at DirviÌi, along withthe two ‘para-Mamluks’. Two of these are probably from Syriaand the other two are attributed to southeast Anatolia when itwas still part of the Mamluk Empire. One of the Syrian rugs hasdiagonal rows of diamond-shaped medallions separated by adiamond-shaped lattice composed of small leaves, with a smalltree-like form in each medallion. The other has rows of palm -ettes alternating with cloudbands. One of the southeast Anatolianrugs has an eight-pointed star medallion with four wheel-likeoctagons. The other has a large leaf pattern that forms adiagonal lattice with small rosettes in each compartment.
If we compare the few rugs from Egypt and the East Mediter -ranean region currently in collections in Berlin, London, NewYork and in particular The Textile Museum in Washington DC,
the MIAQ has some way to go to build a truly exciting and inter -esting collection in this area. An earlier Mamluk carpet, a CaireneOttoman rug woven on silk, a ‘para-Mamluk’, a large ‘compart -ment’ carpet or indeed a ‘Damascus’ with an unusual designwould all be significant additions. Some examples still survivein private collections, although great items rarely come ontothe market, and to find rugs with original pile, pristine coloursand excellent drawing is an even greater challenge. However, itis to be hoped that this small but very good group of rugs fromthis region will continue to be expanded to create somethingreally special in the Muslim world.
16 The Muse East
Med iterranean car -
touche-border car pet
(border section),
Damascus, Syria,
15th or 16th century.
0.15 x 0.46m (6" x
1'6"). MIAQ, no.TE14
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
84 HALI ISSUE 157
1 George Hewitt Myers, founder of the
Textile Museum, Washington DC, was
one of several collectors and connois -
seurs in the first half of the 20th century
who greatly admired Spanish and East
Medi ter ranean carpets. He acquired 22
Spanish carpets from the classical period
as well as 31 East Mediterranean carpets
(16 Mamluk-style Egyptian rugs, ten Otto -
man-style Egyptian rugs and five ‘Damas -
cus’ rugs), published in two separate mon o -
graphs (Textile Museum 1953, 1957).
2 Those with important large collections
have included: Count Johannes von Wel -
czeck, George Hewitt Meyers, Don José
de Weissberger, Charles Deering, Wendy
and Emery Reves. Other collectors have
had a number of examples, including:
Archer Milton Huntington, John D.
McIl henny, Joseph Lees Williams,
George Blumenthal, the Marquis de
Valverde, James F. Ballard, John Emery,
Baron & Baroness Thyssen-Bornemisza,
the Mar quesa de Bermejillo del Rey,
Sidney A. Charlat, Marino & Clara
Dall’Oglio and Frederick Pratt.
3 To name but a few: Vitall Benguiat and
Mayorcas in New York; Böhler, Munich;
Adolfo Loewi, Venice; Stefano Bardini,
Florence; Michel Campana and Elio Cittone
in Milan; Lionel Harris, Jekyll’s and C. John
in London; and Sammy Tarica, Yves Mikael -
off, Masson, Benadava and Catan in Paris.
Interestingly, most of the examples were
acquired by dealers of Spanish Sephardic
origins and few by Armenian dealers.
4 These illustrations of classical Spanish
knotted-pile carpets have been taken
from museum inventories and archives,
the carpet literature, sale catalogues and
examples that have come to the market.
I am sure that these records are by no
means complete and it is possible that as
many as 150 further items are not recor -
ded, but it is unlikely that any important
early example would not have been
pub lished and come to my attention. The
major museums with Spanish carpets
are in Madrid, Berlin, London, New York,
Miami, Dallas and Washington, with indi -
vidual notable examples in Paris, St Louis,
Cleveland and Detroit. Over the past
thirty years, 29 examples have passed
through my studio in London.
5The latter coming from Arraiolos, where
workshops were certainly started in the
16th century; many of the oldest exam -
ples copy Safavid Iranian carpets, others
copy Anatolian rugs and Arraiolos carpets.
6 Examples can be found in: Museum of
Islamic Art, Cairo; Textile Museum, Wash -
ington DC; Metropolitan Museum of Art,
New York; National Museum, Stockholm;
Röhss Museum, Gothenburg; Keir Col lec -
tion, Ham; Museum of Islamic Art, Doha
(MIAQ), Benaki Museum, Athens.
7 E.g., Crouching lion rug. Incomplete,
possibly originally 178 x 312cm. 1st to
3rd century AD. Xinjiang Institute of Arch -
ae ology, Urumqi, no.M15:1. Excavated at
Yingpan, tomb no.15. Published: König
1999, p.87; Li 2002, pp.7, 11 (detail and
reconstruction, with technical descrip tion);
Li 2006, pp.254–5, figs.198, 199 (with
dia gram of structure showing single warp
offset knotting).
8 Serjeant 1972, p.175 (referring to
Al-Himyari 1938, p.112, trans., p.138):
“They used to make fine and valuable
carpets (busut) at Murcia. The people of
Murcia have unequalled skill in manufac-
turing and decorating these carpets.”
9 (1) Sages and Virtues carpet. Mid-12th
century. 64 x 182cm, section. Halber stadt
Cathedral Treasury. Published: Wilckens
1992, pp.103, 105, figs.10, 12.
(2) Border fragment with palmettes. 12th
century. 20 x 400cm. Halberstadt Cath -
edral Treasury. Published: Wilckens 1992,
pp.103, 105, fig.13.
(3) Wedding of Mercury and Philologia
carpet. (a–e) Five fragments (originally
590 x 740cm). 1186–1203. Quedlinburg
Cathedral Treasury. Published: Kurth 1926,
I, pp.53–67, fig.26,II, pls.12–21, 22b;
Nickel 1976; Wilckens 1992. (f) One frag -
ment. Whereabouts unknown. Formerly:
Welczek Collection, Austria (to 1945).
Pub lished: Kurth 1926, II, pl.21a; Wilc k ens
1992, p.100 (cited).
10 Two paintings depicting early Spanish
carpets that have been cut and reduced
in size: (1) Presentation in the Temple.
Francisco Henriques, ca. 1508–1511. Oil
on wood, 88 x 15cm. Museu de Alpiarça,
Alpiarça. From the altarpiece of the main
chapel of the church in the Convento de
São Francisco, Évora. Published: Lisbon
2007, p.59. Carpet with octagons and
lozenge pattern. (2) Mass of Saint Greg -
ory. Francisco Henriques, c. 1508–1511.
Oil on wood, 88 x 121.5cm. Museu
Nacional de Arte Antiga, Lisbon. From the
altarpiece of the main chapel of the church
in the Convento de São Francisco, Évora.
Published: Lisbon 2007, p.60; Mills 2007,
p.134, fig.2. Carpet with design of stars
in octagons and lozenges, ‘Kufic’ border.
11 May Beattie (1986, p.273), in her study
of the ‘Admiral’ car pets, pointed out that
it is impossible to estimate the number
of surviving exam ples: “Without
considering border frag ments, two or
more pieces may be from a single rug,
and conversely, the skilful joining and
patching of carpets carried out in Spanish
convents points to the pos sibility of
several parts of different rugs being
combined into what, in a photograph,
appears to be a complete carpet.”
12 I have yet to find a document to
con fir m this. Eleanor of Castile was
mar ried in October 1254 at the age of ten
to King Edward I of England, then fifteen,
at Las Huelgas .
13 By Matteo di Giovanetti da Viterbo. It
is not certain that the Popes’ carpets are
Spanish – it is possible that they were
made in France in the Spanish style. For
more than 300 years from the early 13th
century in Paris, two separate guilds of
carpet-makers existed side by side, the
Tapiciers sarrazinois and the Tapiciers
nostres. As the name implies, the Sara -
cenic carpet weavers were engaged in
manufacturing carpets based upon East -
ern originals, while the other guild pro -
duced carpets in a local style. [Pinner]
1978, taken from Boileau 1897.
14 King 1986, pp.131–7.
15 Madrid 1933.
16 It is known from paintings and doc -
uments that both Spanish and oriental
carpets were used in European churches
and synagogues from the Middle Ages
onwards; some were made specifically
for altars or as ark curtains, probably
ordered by wealthy patrons. The Von
Bode synagogue rug. 14th century. 95 x
385cm. Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin,
no.I.27, acquired 1906. Formerly: Repor -
tedly from a church in the Tyrol district,
1880s; art market, Munich, 1884; Wilhelm
Bode. Published: Bode, 1892, p.49 (cited);
Bode 1901, p.115, fig.79 (drawing); Sarre
1907; Thomson 1910, pl.IIc; Kendrick and
Tattersall 1922, vol.II, pl.77A (drawing);
Neugebauer and Orendi 1923, p.8, fig.2
(drawing); Faraday 1927(1), p.9, fig.6
(detail); Faraday 1929, 1990, p.35, fig.5
(detail); Sarre, 1930 (detail); Erdmann
1970, p.143, fig.181 (detail); Sherrill 1974,
p.532, fig.1 (detail); Curatola 1981, no.141;
London 1983, pp.33, 50–51, no.3; Wear -
den 1985, p.205, fig.a; Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.290–1, pl.V (detail, with struc -
ture analysis); Day 1989, p.316, fig.313;
Berlin 1995, pp.23, 28, no.8; Sherrill
1996, p.31, pl.20; Felton 1997, pl.1;
Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection 1998,
p.239, fig.1.
17 Pinner 1986, p.295.
18 The field and border patterns on one
carpet were clealry changed as the rug
was being made. The Myers palmettes in
interlaced lattice carpet. Mid- to second
half 15th century. 184 x 219cm, incom p -
lete in length. Textile Museum, Wash ing -
ton DC, no.R44.4.2 (R84.10). Formerly:
George Hewitt Myers Collection, acquired
1927. Published: American Art Associa -
tion, New York, 30 April 1927, lot 1040,
p.335; Textile Museum 1953, p.11, pls.IX
–XI (with structure analysis); Weeks and
Tre ganowan 1969, p.13, top (detail); Wash -
ington DC 1972, no.35 (cited); Mackie
1977, p.25, fig.13; Sánchez Ferrer 1986,
pp.394–5, pl.LVII (with structure analysis);
Sherrill 1996, p 41, pl.36; Isaacson 1998,
p.79, fig.2; Bier 2003(1), p.42, fig.3; Wash -
ington DC 2003, pp.28, 284, fig.26 (with
structure analysis). Exhibited: Washing ton
DC 1972; Washington DC 2003, ‘Carpets
of Andalusia’. Blue ground; lower part has
a different design, similar to borders of
armorial carpets.
19 After the Popes’ fresco in Avignon,
dating from the first half of the 14th
cen tury, a number of other carpets with
small lattice field designs are depicted in
paint ings from the early 16th century
(see note 10 above, and Lisbon 2007).
20 Seven have identifiable coats-of-arms;
three of these may be complete, and
the others are shortened in length. Two
short ened carpets have unidentified
blazons. Five shortened carpets, mostly
still with their borders, are without
blazons. Frag ments survive from at
least thirteen other such carpets.
21 Beattie 1986.
22 May 1945; Beattie 1986.
23 One example depicts a wild boar, not
an appropriate subject for an Islamic rug.
It may well be that the Admiral carpets
were woven by Muslim weavers to
patterns supplied by their clients.
24 The so-called ‘Kufic’ border also res -
embles the elem on Salor Turkmen door
rugs or ensi. These unusual patterns were
surely part of a tradition that drew upon
both local textile designs and impor ted
carpets and textiles for inspiration.
25 Pinner 1986 lists some forty docu -
ments between 1527–1622 that refer to
Turkish carpets in Spanish inventories,
some with ‘Kufic’ borders with interlace.
26 Two Spanish carpets with the inter -
laced medallion ‘small-pattern’ Holbein
design: (1) The Boston interlaced medal -
lion carpet. 106 x 462cm. Museum of
Fine Arts, Boston, no.39.614. Published:
Erdmann 1960, fig.175 (detail); Schlosser
1963, p.174, fig.100 (detail); Erdmann
1970, p.210, fig.271; Washington DC 1972,
no.28 (cited); Sherrill 1974, p.541, pl.III;
Mackie 1979, p.92, fig.20; Denny 1978,
p.157, fig.1; Denny 1982, p.332, fig.5
(detail); London 1983, pp.36, 53, no.7;
Ellis 1986, p.172, fig.10; Day 1989, p.320,
fig.316; HALI 52, 1990, p.131 (detail);
Gantzhorn 1991, p.233, fig.344; Sherrill
1996, p.36, pl.26; HALI 99, 1998, p.84
(detail). Exhibited: Washington DC 1972;
London 1983; Boston, Museum
of Fine Arts, ‘Ten Great Carpets’, 1977;
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts, ‘Oriental
Carpets and Kilims’, 23 July 1990 to early
January 1991; Boston, Museum of Fine
Arts, ‘Ambassadors from the East: Oriental
Carpets in the Museum of Fine Arts, Bos -
ton’, 29 Sept ember 1998 to 24 January
1999. (2) The Loewi inter laced medallion
carpet. 155 x 290cm. Tex tile Museum,
Washington DC, no.R44.3.1 (R84.6),
acquired 1926. Formerly: Adolfo Loewi
Collection, Venice; George Hewitt Myers
Collection. Published: Textile Mus eum
1953, p.27, pls XXIV–XXV (with struc ture
analysis); Mackie 1979, p.93, fig.22;
Mackie and Thompson 1980, p.21, fig.8
(detail); Bier 2003(1), p.42, fig.2 (detail);
NOTES
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 85
Washington DC 2003, pp.22, 283 (with
structure analysis); Bier 2004, p.13.
27 The Welczeck endless knot design
carpet. Late 15th or early 16th century.
Formerly: Count Welczeck Collection.
(a) 75 x 250cm, section of field and bor der.
Wher Collection. Formerly: The Textile
Gallery, London. Published: Gantzhorn
1991, p.222, fig.334; Enderlein 1993,
p.91, fig.12; HALI 108, 2000, p.75 (detail);
Milan 1999, p.185, no.166 (with structure
analysis). Exhibited: Milan 1999. (b) 62 x
250cm, section of field and border. Chris
Alexander Collection, Berkeley. Formerly:
The Textile Gallery, London; Wher Collec t -
ion. Published: Lefevre, London, 18 June
1982, lot 24; HALI 4/3, 1982, p.52; Gantz -
horn 1991, p.222, fig.334; Alexander Col -
lection 1993, pp.114–15; Bennett 1994,
p.89, fig.7); Milan 1999, p.185, no.166
(cited). (c) 186 x 297cm, section of field
and border. Museum für angewandte
Kunst, Frankfurt, no.12975/3889. Pub -
lished: Museum für angewandte Kunst,
Frankfurt, Neuerwerbungen, 1956–1974,
pl.53; Hubel 1971, p.295, fig.154 (detail,
with structure analysis); Milan 1999, p.185,
no.166 (cited). (d) Incomplete, bot tom half,
reduced in width? Whereabouts unknown.
Published: Torres 1942, fig.20; Gamal 1963;
Alexander Collection 1993, pp.114–19
(“Although current dating has tended to
ascribe this carpet a 15th cen tury date, I
am certain in my own mind that this
dating is not correct…This car pet was
probably woven in the 10th or 11th
century and certainly no later than the
12th” [sic].) John Mills has mentioned in
conversation the relationship of the field
design of this carpet to certain ceiling
designs in southern Spain.
28 Two Spanish carpets with rows of
small octagons: (1) The Lionel Harris
thirty octagons carpet. 214 x 460cm.
Victoria & Albert Museum, London,
no.T.104-1912. Formerly: Reportedly from
a convent in Spain; Lionel Harris
& Co., London. Published: Victoria and
Albert Museum 1915, no.345, pl.XXXIX
(detail); Réal [1925], pl.XXI (detail); Ken d -
rick and Tattersall 1922, vol.II, pl.77B
(detail); Ferr andis Torres 1942, fig.19;
Gamal 1963; Sherrill 1974, p.540, fig.9;
Mackie 1979, p.93, fig.25; Pagnano 1983,
pl 235; Wea rden 1985, p.207, fig.b; Sán -
chez Ferrer 1986, pp.354–5, pl.XXXVII
(with structure analysis); Gantzhorn 1991,
p.232, fig.343; Bennett 2004, p.268.
(2) The Welczeck small octagons carpet.
38 x 70cm, frag ment. Whereabouts
unknown. Formely: Count Welczeck
Collection. Published: Madrid 1933,
p.108, no.13, pl.X (detail). Exhibited:
Madrid 1933.
29 E.g., Stories from the Life of St Ursula.
Vittore Carpaccio (Venice 1472 – Capodis -
tria 1526), (1490–96), tempera on canvas.
Gallerie dell’Accademia, Venice.
30 Annunciation with Saint Emidius. Carlo
Crivelli (Venice – about 1430/5 – about
1494), 1486. Egg tempera and oil on
canvas transferred from wood, 207 x
146.7cm. National Gallery, London,
no.NG739.
31 Pentecost. Anonymous [possibly
Garcia Fernandes, Portuguese Royal
painter, died 1565], ca. 1530. Oil on wood,
132.5 x 165cm. Ermida de Nossa Senhora
dos Remédios, Lisbon. Published: Lisbon
2007, p.62, no 6. The carpet has at least
two columns and four rows; at each end
is an extra panel with bird-like creatures
separated by ‘Kufic’-style uprights.
32 The Convent of Santa Ursula large
octagon carpet. (a) Lower part, 103 x
250cm, three octagons. MIAQ, no.CA24.
Formerly: Reportedly from the Convent of
Santa Ursula, Guadalajara; Adolfo Loewi
Collection, Venice, no.7.419b; Benedava,
Paris; Wher Collection. Published: Ferr -
andis Torres 1942, fig.15; Gamal 1963;
Milan, Palazzo Reale, 1974; Ellis 1986,
p.168, fig.6. (b) Upper part, 97 x 390cm,
four octagons. Textile Museum, Washing -
ton DC, no.R44.2.2 (R84.12), acquired
1931. Formerly: Reportedly from the
Convent of Santa Ursula, Guadalajara;
Adolfo Loewi Collection, Venice; George
Hewitt Myers Collection, Washington DC.
Published: Textile Museum 1953, p.17,
pls. XVI–XVII (with structure analy sis);
Bunt 1966, fig.46; Weeks and Tre gan -
owan 1969, p.19, right (detail); Wash -
ington DC 1972, no.30 (cited); Sherrill
1974, p.535, fig.5; Mackie 1977, p 26,
fig.15; Mackie 1979, p.91, fig.12; Collins
1988, p.42; Gantzhorn 1991, p.229,
fig.340; Sherrill 1996, p 37, pl.28; Wash -
ington DC 2003, pp.25, 283, fig 23 (with
structure analysis); Bier 2004, pp.12–13.
Exhibited: Washington DC 1972; Wash -
ington DC, 2003, ‘Carpets of Andalusia’.
33 Although the Venetian painter Lorenzo
Lotto depicted carpets of this type only
twice in approximately 250 known works
– both fairly late in his career, in 1542 and
1547 – his name has become irrevocably
linked with them: Sant’ Antonio Elemo -
sin ario Giving Alms, 1542, church of SS.
Giovanni e Paolo, Venice (Mills 1981,
p.283, no.11); Family Portrait Group, 1547,
National Gallery, London (Mills 1981,
pp.280–1, no.12). The earliest verifiable
depiction in a European painting of an
Anatolian arabesque rug is in fact in a
painting by the Venetian artist Sebastiano
del Piombo (ca. 1486, Venice – 1547,
Rome), dated 1516, in the National Gal -
lery, Washington DC: Cardinal Bandinello
Sauli, His Secretary and Two Geog raph -
ers (Mills 1981, p.281, no.1).
34 The Qatar arabesque carpet. 16th
century. 283 x 549cm. MIAQ, no.TE26.
Formerly: Private collection, Switzerland.
Published: Christie’s, London, 14 October
1999, lot 100; HALI 106, 1999, p.132;
HALI 108, 2000, p.131 (detail).
35 Some Spanish carnation carpets:
(1) The Madrid carnation carpet. (a) 128 x
199cm. Museo del Instituto Valencia de
Don Juan, Madrid. Published: Sánchez
Ferrer 1986, pp.356–7, pl.XXXVIII (with
structure analysis). (b) 50 x 65cm, section.
Whereabouts unknown. Formerly: Livinio
Stuyck Collection, Madrid. Published:
Madrid 1933, p.107, no.9, pl.VIII (detail).
Exhibited: Madrid 1933. (2) The Valverde
carnation carpet. 52 x 62cm, section.
Museo del Instituto Valencia de Don Juan,
Madrid. Formerly: Marquis de Valverde
Collection. Published: Faraday 1927(1),
p.12, fig.12 (detail); Faraday 1929/1990,
p.37, fig.11 (detail); Sánchez Ferrer 1986,
pp 360–1, pl.XL (detail, with structure
analysis). (3) The Ballard carna tion carpet.
140 x 275cm. Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York, no.22.100.124. Formerly:
James F. Ballard Collection. Pub lished:
New York 1923, no.127; Met ro politan
Museum of Art 1973, pp.259, 263, no.155,
fig.224 (with structure analy sis). Exhibited:
New York 1923. (4) The Krauth carnation
carpet. 94 x 132cm, section. Museum of
Islamic Art, Berlin, no.KGM 81.382. For -
merly: Consul Krauth, Krefeld, in 1888;
Kunstgewerbemuseum, Berlin. Published:
Museum of Islamic Art 1988, pp.122 and
283, no.144 (with struc ture analysis). (5)
The Toledo carnation car pet. Private col -
lection, New York. For merly: Said to be
from a convent chapel, Toledo; Lenygon &
Co., London; Vojtech Blau, New York; The
Textile Gallery, London. (a) 270 x 288cm,
bottom half. Published: Thomson 1910,
p.109 (detail); Sánchez Ferrer 1986,
pp.364–5, pl.XLII (detail, with structure ana -
lysis); Lefevre, London, 2 April 1976, lot 7
(with detail on front cover); Sotheby’s,
New York, 7 April 1992, lot 74 (with struc -
ture analysis). (b) 298 x 286cm, top half.
Published: Lefevre, Lon don, 2 April 1976,
lot 7 (with detail on front cover); Soth eby’s,
New York, 13 April 1995, lot 139 (with
structure analysis). (6) The Emery
carnation carpet. 287 x 620cm. Cincinnati
Museum of Art, no.1966.638. Formerly:
John Emery Collection. Pub lished: Adams
1971, p.273 (detail); Cin cin nati Art Museum
Bulletin, vol.9, nos.1–2, p.55, June 1971;
The Art Quarterly, vol.XXIX, nos 3–4,
p.298, 1966; Lefevre, London, 2 April
1976, lot 7 (cited); Master pieces from the
Cin cin nati Art Museum, 1984, p.42.
Almost the pair to the Toledo carpet. (7)
The Spier carnation carpet. 56 x 48cm,
section. Vic toria & Albert Museum,
London, no.T.335-1920, gift of J. Spier.
Published: Sánchez Ferrer 1986, pp.362–3,
pl.XLI (with struct ure analysis); Day 1989,
p.324, fig.320.
36 Some Spanish carpets with the ‘Eur -
op ean’ carnation pattern: (1) The Marquesa
de Bermejillo del Rey carnation carpet.
435 x 220cm. Museo Nacional de Artes
Decorativas, Madrid, no.19.222. Formerly:
Marquesa de Bermejillo del Rey. Published:
Madrid 1933, p.114, no.47, pl.XXXVIII (det -
ail); Museo Nacional de Artes Decora tivas
2002, pp.100–101, pl.27. Exhibited: Madrid
1933. (2) The Welczeck carnation carpet.
153 x 28cm. Whereabouts unknown.
For merly: Count de Welczeck Collection.
Pub lished: Madrid 1933, p.109, no.18,
pl.XIII (detail); Sánchez Ferrer 1986,
pp.366–7, pl.XLIII (detail, with structure
analysis). Exhibited: Madrid 1933. (3) The
Victoria & Albert Museum carnation carpet.
150 x 292cm. Victoria and Albert Museum,
London, no.T.604-1893. Published: Martin
1908, p.137, fig.350 (detail). (4) The
Wel c zeck medallion and carnation carpet.
105 x 182cm. Whereabouts unknown.
For merly: Count de Welczeck Collection.
Published: Madrid 1933, p.109, no.17,
pl.XII. Exhibited: Madrid 1933.
37 Two Spanish carpets with a cloud
design from Chinese Mongol silks:
(1) The Dum barton Oaks clouds carpet.
152 x 373cm. Textile Museum, Washing -
ton DC, no.1976.10.3. Formerly: Dum bar -
ton Oaks Collec t ion. Published: Wash ing -
ton DC 1972, no.37 (cited); Mackie 1977,
p.28, 31, fig.17 (with structure analysis);
HALI 1/2, 1978, p.166 (detail); Mackie
1979, p.94, fig.29; New York 1992,
pp.344–5, no.102; Sherrill 1996, p.34, pl.23
(detail); Bier 1996(1), p.69, fig.32; Bier
2003(1), p.43, fig.6 (detail); Wash ington
DC 2003, pp.27, 283, fig.25 (with structure
analysis). Exhibited: Wash ington DC 1972;
Washing ton DC 2003. (2) The Madrid
clouds carpet. Section. Museo Nacional
de Artes Decorativas, Mad rid, no.1.742.
Published: Museo Nac ional de Artes
Decorativas 2002, p.96, pl.24.
Two Turkish rugs with a cloud pattern
from Chinese Mongol silks: (1) The Ala -
eddin Mongol silk pattern rug. Central
Anatolia, 14th century. 121 x 240cm.
Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts,
Istanbul, no.688. Formerly: Alaeddin
Mosque, Konya. Published: Aslanapa
1961, pl.V (detail); Erdmann 1970, p.96,
fig.26; Aslanapa 1971, pl.XIV; Mackie
1977, fig.18; Yetkin 1981, pl.6 (detail);
[Anon] 1988, pattern code 0108; Aslan apa
1988, p.21, pl.7; Day 1989, p.45, top left;
Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts
1993, p.206, pl.115 (detail); Ölçer et al.
1996, p.7, pl.4. (2) The Bardini Mongol silk
pattern rug. Ushak, late 15th century.
Possibly origin ally 75 x 350cm. (a) 57.5 x
156cm, section. Museum of Islamic Art,
Berlin, no.1885. 985. Formerly: Wilhelm
Bode; Kunst ge wer bemuseum, Berlin.
Published: Ender lein 1979, fig.1; Florence
1999, p.74 (cited); Beselin 2005, p.66,
pl.50 (with structure analysis). (b) 61 x
165cm, section. Bardini Museum, Flor ence.
Pub lished: Florence 1999, pp.74–5, no.22.
Two Mongol cloud pattern silks, 13th–14th
cen t ury: (1) Metro politan Museum of Art,
NewYork, no.46. 156.20. Published: Mac -
kie 1977, p.1532, fig.19. Mackie refers to
others published by Agnes Geijer (1963,
p.83, figs.1, 2). (2) State Her mitage Mus -
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
86 HALI ISSUE 157
eum, St Peters burg, no.LT-449. Discov -
ered by V.G. Bock at Al-Azam, Egypt. Pub -
lished: Edinburgh 2006, pp.96–7, no.96.
38 Some Spanish carpets with rows of
lobed medallions: (1) The Costikyan-Pope
lobed-medallion carpet. 81 x 72cm, section
of central field and borders. Textile Mus -
eum, Washington DC, no.R84.3, acquired
1915. Formerly: Kent Costikyan and A.U.
Pope, New York; George Hewitt Myers
Col lection, Washington DC. Published:
Tex tile Museum 1953, p.23, pl.XXI (with
struc ture analysis); Weeks and Tregan owan
1969, p.14, top (detail); Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.380–1, pl.L (with structure ana -
ly sis); Bier 1992, p.62, fig.12; Washington
DC 2003, pp.21, 283, fig.19 (with structure
analysis). Exhibited: Washington DC 2003,
‘Carpets of Andalusia’. (2) The Loewi lobed-
medallion carpet. 86 x 190cm, section. Tex t -
ile Museum, Washington DC, no.R44.2.3
(R84.14), acquired 1931. Formerly: Adolfo
Loewi Collection, Venice; George Hewitt
Myers Collection, Washington DC. Pub -
lished: Textile Museum 1953, p.21, pl.XX
(with structure analysis); Mackie 1979,
p.90, fig.11; Bier 1992, p.63, fig.13; Bier
1996(1), p.69, fig.30; Bier 2003(1), p 42,
fig.1; Wash ington DC 2003, pp.20, 283,
fig.18 (with structure analysis). Exhibited:
Washington DC, 2003, ‘Carpets of Anda -
lusia’. (3) The Madrid lobed-medallion
carpet. (a) 28 x 70cm, section of field
and border. Insti tuto de Valencia de
Don Juan, Madrid. Published: Gamal
1963; Sánchez Ferrer 1986, pp.384–5,
pl.LII (detail, with struc ture analysis).
(b) 87 x 126cm, incom p lete. Whereabouts
unknown. Formerly: Count Welczeck
Collection. Published: Madrid 1933, p.107,
no.11, pl.IX. Exhibited: Madrid 1933.
A Spanish carpet with off set rows of
lobed medallions: The Madrid offset
lobed medallion carpet. (a) 22.5 x 80cm,
section of field and border. Instituto de
Valencia de Don Juan, Madrid. Pub lished:
Sánchez Ferrer 1986, pp.382–3, pl.LI
(detail, with structure analysis). (b) 30 x
60cm, section of bor der and field. Museo
Arquelógico Nacional, Madrid. Pub lished:
Madrid 1933, p.108, no.12, pl.IX. Exhib -
ited: Madrid 1933. (c) Section of field and
border. Where abouts unknown. Published:
Faraday 1929, p.43, fig.25, top; Faraday
1990, p.49, fig.25, 20 x 25cm, 19 x 15cm,
20 x 9cm. Private collection, Los Angeles.
Formerly: Alcala Subastas, Madrid; The
Textile Gallery, London.
39 Some Spanish carpets with palmettes
in an interlaced lattice: (1) The Charleston
interlaced lattice carpet. 75 x 142cm,
frag mentary, incomplete in length.
Wher Collection. Formerly: Charleston
Mus eum, Charleston; The Textile Gallery,
London. Published: Sotheby’s, New
York, 24 Sept ember 1991, lot 1 (with
structure analy sis); HALI 60, 1991, p.154.
(2) The Ben guiat interlaced lattice carpet.
165 x 234cm. Textile Museum, Washing -
ton DC, no.R44.2.1 (R84.8). Formerly:
Vital Ben guiat Collection, George Hewitt
Myers Collection, Washington DC, 1920.
Pub lished: Amercian Art Association 1920,
no.317; Textile Museum 1953, p.19,
pls.XVIII–XIX (with structure analysis);
Weeks and Treganowan 1969, p.17;
Washington DC 1972, no.31; Mackie
1979, p.90, fig.9; London 1983, pp.36,
52, no.5; Wearden 1985, p.208, fig.a;
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 15th edition;
Ellis 1985, p.63, fig.4; Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.388–9, pl.LIV (with structure
analysis); Collins 1988, p.44; Faraday
1990, p 42, pl.VI (detail); Sherrill 1996,
pp.28, 40, pl.34; Bier 1996(1), p.69, fig.31;
Bier 1996(2); HALI 92, 1997, p.102, fig.11;
Sherrill 1999, p.216, figs.1, 2 (detail);
Washington DC 2003, pp.29, 284, fig.27
(with structure analysis). Exhibited: Wash -
ington DC 1972; London 1983; Washing -
ton DC, 2003, ‘Carpets of Andalusia’.
(3) The Weissberger interlaced lattice
carpet. 125 x 215cm. Museo Nacional
de Artes Decorativas, Madrid, no.3.407.
For merly: Don José A. de Weissberger
Col lection, Madrid, no.3. Published: Mad -
rid 1933, p.108, no.14, pl.XI; Cam pana
1969, p.30, fig.12 (detail); Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.386–7, pl.LIII (with structure
analysis); Museo Nacional de Artes
Dec orativas 1996, pp.36–7, no.1 (with
struc ture analy sis); Museo Nacional
de Artes Decora tivas 2002, pp.82–3.
Exhibited: Madrid 1933. (4) The Charlat
interlaced lattice carpet. 239 x 521cm.
Metroplitan Museum of Art, New York,
Cloisters Collection, no.61.49. Formerly:
Sidney A. Charlat Collection. Published:
Faraday 1927(2), p.88, fig 3 (detail); Fara -
day 1929, p.38, fig.13 (detail); Metropoli -
tan Museum of Art 1958, fig.13; Dimand
1964, fig.13; Weeks and Treganowan 1969,
p.13, bottom (detail); Metropolitan Mus -
eum of Art 1973, pp.160–1, 262–3, no.153,
fig.222 (with structure analysis); Sherrill
1974, p.539, pl.II (detail); Pagnano 1983,
pl.233; Sánchez Ferrer 1986, pp.392–3,
pl.LVI (with structure analysis); Faraday
1990, p.40, fig.13 (detail). (5) The Pratt
interlaced lattice carpet. 150 x 241cm.
Brooklyn Museum, New York, no.43.24.6.
Formerly: Mr & Mrs Frederick Pratt. Pub -
lished: Bennett 1987, p.34, left; HALI 92,
1997, p.98, fig.1. (6) The Victoria & Albert
Museum interlaced lattice carpet. 162 x
228cm, reduced in length. Victoria & Albert
Museum, London, no.T.131-1905. Pub -
lished: Réal, [1925], pl.VII (detail); Kendrick
and Tattersall 1922, vol.II, pl.79; Victoria
and Albert Museum 1924, p.25, pl.XIX
(with structure analysis); Thomson 1925,
p.232; Faraday 1929, p.38, fig.15; Schlos -
ser 1963, p.175, fig.101; Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.390–1, pl.LV (with struct ure ana -
lysis); Faraday 1990, p.40, fig.15. (7) The
Kalebdjian interlaced lattice carpet. 152 x
254cm, reconstituted from pieces of the
original. Musée Historique des Tissus,
Lyons, no.27.658, acquired 1905. Form -
erly: Kalebdjian, Paris. Published: Bennett
1987, p.32, fig.XIX (with struct ure analy -
sis); Day 1989, p.325, fig.322; Faraday
1990, p.39, pl.V. (8) The Myers-Bernheimer
interlaced lattice carpet. (a) 184 x 219cm,
incomplete in length. Textile Museum,
Washington DC, no.R44.4.2 (R84.10).
Formerly: George Hewitt Myers Collect -
ion, acquired 1927. Published: American
Art Association, New York, 30 April 1927,
lot 1040, p.335; Textile Museum 1953,
p.11, pls.IX–XI (with structure analysis);
Weeks and Tre ganowan 1969, p.13, top
(detail); Wash ington DC 1972, no.35 (cited);
Mackie 1977, p.25, fig.13; Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.394–5, pl.LVII (with structure
ana lysis); Sherrill 1996, p.41, pl.36; Isaac -
son 1998, p.79, fig.2; Bier 2003(1), p.42,
fig.3; Wash ington DC 2003, pp.28, 284,
fig.26 (with structure analysis). Exhibited:
Washing ton DC 1972; Washington DC,
2003, ‘Car pets of Andalusia’. Blue ground.
Lower part has a different design, similar
to bor ders of armorial carpets. (b) 104 x
108cm, section. Wher Collection. Form -
erly: Bern heimer Collection, Munich,
acq uired 1951; The Textile Gallery, London.
Published: Bernheimer 1959, pl.121;
Chris tie’s, Lon don, 14 February 1996, lot
75 (with struc t ure analysis); HALI 86,
1996, p.133; Milan 1999, p.192, no.165.
Exhibited: Milan 1999. (9) The Perez inter -
laced lattice carpet. Where abouts
unknown. Formerly: Perez, Amster dam.
Published: Faraday 1927(2), p.89, fig.4;
Bunt 1966, fig 47. (10) The Welczeck
interlaced lattice carpet 1. 157 x 90cm,
section of field and border. Where abouts
unknown. Formerly: Count Welc zeck
Collection. Published: Madrid 1933,
pp.108–9, no.16, pl.VII. Exhibited: Madrid
1933. (11) The McMullan interlaced lattice
carpet. Section. Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York, no.57.150.90. Formerly:
Joseph V. McMullan Collection. Published:
Metropolitan Museum of Art 1973, p.258
(cited); Bennett 1987, p.33 (cited). (12) The
Welczeck interlaced lattice carpet 2. 115 x
218cm. Whereabouts unknown. For merly:
Count Welczeck Collection. Pub lished:
Madrid 1933, p.108, no.15 (cited). Exhib -
ited: Madrid 1933.
40 The Reves palmettes in ogival lattice
silk carpet. 197 x 118cm. Wendy & Emery
Reves Collection, Dallas Museum of Art,
no.1985.R.87. Published: Philadelphia
Mus eum of Art 1988, p.256 (cited). The
Dallas museum has ten Spanish carpets
acquired by the Reves from Tarica in Paris.
41 The Unger palmettes in diamond-
shaped lattice silk carpet. 58 x 76cm,
fragment. MIAQ, no.TE12. Formerly:
Unger Collection, Mexico; The Textile
Gallery, London; Wher Collection.
Pub lished: Sotheby’s, London, 10
December 1992, lot 4.
42 The Sasson confronting lions brocade
design carpet. 15th to 16th century. 226 x
442cm, incomplete in length. Victoria &
Albert Museum, London, no.T.39-1896.
Formerly: J. Sasson & Co., London.
Published: Martin 1908, p.135, fig.345
(detail); Thomson 1910, p.IIA (detail);
Victoria and Albert Museum 1915/1920,
no.336, pl.XXXVIII (detail); Réal [1925],
pl.IX (detail); Kendrick and Tattersall 1922,
vol.I, p.70 (cited); Faraday 1927(2), p.89,
fig.5 (detail); Faraday 1929, p.39, fig.16
(detail); Victoria and Albert Museum 1931,
no.336, pl.XLIV (detail); Sánchez Ferrer
1986, pp.418–9, pl.LXIX (detail, with
structure analysis); Faraday 1990, p.41,
fig.16 (detail); Woolley 1995, p.72, fig.7
(detail); Sherrill 1996, p.45, pl.41 (detail).
43 Three early Spanish carpets with
wreaths: (1) The Paris wreaths in com -
partments carpet. (a) 102 x 289cm, three
complete compartments with end panels,
reduced in size from a larger carpet. MIAQ,
no.TE106. Formerly: Paris art market; New
York art market. Published: Christie’s, Lon -
don, 16 April 2007, lot 46; Ghereh, 42,
2007, p.79. (b) Approx. 100 x 300cm, three
wreaths. Whereabouts unknown. Form -
erly: Paris art market. (2) The Böhler
wreaths in compartments carpet. 212
x 100cm, section with two complete
wreaths. Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin,
no.KGM 94.413. Formerly: Böhler, Munich;
Kunstgewerbemuseum, Berlin. Published:
Museum of Islamic Art 1988, pp.121,
280, no.140 (with structure anlaysis);
Taylor 1990, p.105, fig.11. (3) The Deering
wreaths in compartments carpet. 198 x
457cm, ten complete and two partial
wreaths. Villa Vizcaya, Dade County Art
Museum, Miami, no.DC2014/ DR33. For -
merly: James Deering Collect ion, Miami,
bought at auction in New York, 7 January
1914. Published: Taylor 1990, p.104, fig.8.
44 The Mikaeloff wreaths carpet. 16th
century. (a) Central section, 140 x 131cm,
four complete wreaths. MIAQ. Formerly:
Galerie Yves Mikaeloff, Paris. Published:
Christie’s, London, 16 October 1997, lot
101. (b) Central section with borders, 173
x 208cm, four wreaths. Whereabouts
unknown. Published: Sotheby’s, New York,
5 December 1987, lot 55 (with structure
analysis); HALI 38, 1988, p.92; Christie’s,
London, 10 April 2008, lot 94. Formerly:
New England art dealer, 1987; private
collection, Texas.
45 Louisa Bellinger analysed the Textile
Museum collection in 1953. Structure
analysis can now be much more detailed.
46Wall paintings are said to show that
weaving with coloured wools to make
covers and tapestries may well have
been practised in one of the oldest urban
settlements at Çatal Hüyük in Anatolia,
almost 9,000 years ago (Mellaart 1967;
Maréchal 1985; Mellaart et al. 1989).
47 Looped pile fragments discovered at
Deir el-Bahri. See Petzel 1987.
48 The Fustat lion rug. 165 x 91cm. Fine
Arts Museums of San Francisco. For merly:
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 87
reportedly excavated at Fustat (old Cairo)
in the 1920s; private collection, Paris;
Soustiel, Paris; The Textile Gallery and
Bashir Mohammed, London. Published:
HALI 32, 1986, p.6; Norris 1987, p.54;
Wilkinson 1987, p.63. C-14 dated bet -
ween the second half of the 7th and
the end of the 9th century AD.
49 Examples survive in several major
museum collections. The largest single
group is in Sweden (Lamm 1937; Stock -
holm 1985). The Benaki Museum in Athens
has thirty fragments, many with knotted-
pile but some in looped-pile tech nique
(Theologou 2008). Other fragments: Mus -
eum of Islamic Art, Cairo; Textile Museum,
Washington DC; Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York; Keir Collection, Ham; Lloyd
Cotsen Collection, Los Angeles.
50 Thompson (2006, p.123), citing Robert
Irwin and Donald Little’s research on Arabic
references during this period (Irwin 1986;
Little 1984; Little 1986; Little 1998).
51 Thompson (2006, pp.126–7, fig.108
and note 107) illustrates a small border
fragment from Fustat with a Kufic-style
border and asymmetrical knotting and
attributes it to the Mamluk period, prob -
ably 14th century Egypt. The attribution
appears to be based on its structure,
even though Thompson expresses doubts
about certain aspects of the analysis by
Hoskins (2002) on which he relies. From
the illustration the warps look like Z2S
wool, not S-spun linen as recor ded. It is
hard to see the spin of the pile yarn, and
the spin of the wefts is not discernable in
the illustration. The carpet should be re-
examined before attempting to make a
serious attribution as to its origin.
52 Two mid-15th century fragments
found at Fustat: (1) 22 x 17.5cm. National
Museum, Stockholm, no.231/1939. Exca -
v ated in Fustat, Old Cairo. Published:
Lamm 1937, pp.110–11, no.19; Stock holm
1985, p 49, no.19 (with structure
analysis); Suriano 1998, p.81, fig.22;
Suriano 2004, p.104, fig.16. (2) 18.5 x
21.5cm. National Museum, Stockholm,
no.232/1939. Excavated in Fustat, Old
Cairo. Published: Lamm 1937, pp.110–11,
no.18; Ellis 1967, p.15, fig.22; Stockholm
1985, p.48, no.18 (with structure analy -
sis); Suriano 2004, p.104, fig.16.
53 Sarre (1921) and Erdmann (1930, 1931)
attributed them with confidence to Egypt.
54 E.g. Housego 1986; Suriano 2004.
55 See note 62 below.
56 The Medici Mamluk carpet with three
medallions. 409 x 1088cm. Argenti Mus -
eum, Pitti Palace, Florence, no.5279. For -
merly: Grand Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici;
Medici Grand Dukes, Florence. Published:
Boralevi 1983, p.282, fig.1 (with structure
analysis); London 1983, pp.41, 61–2, no.21;
Black 1985, p.62, fig.b; Housego 1986,
p.231 (cited, with structure analysis);
Boralevi 1986, pp 206–7, fig.1; Bösch 1991,
p.348, no.3 (cited, with structure analysis);
Venice 1993, pp.326–7, no.191; HALI 108,
2000, p.4 and front cover (detail); Museum
für Angewandte Kunst 2001, p.42 (cited);
Florence 2002, p.142, no.115; HALI 146,
2006, p.51 (detail); Prato 2006, p.51;
Okumura 2007, pp.254–7, no.74 (with det -
ails and structure analysis); Spallan zani
2007, p.55 (cited); Spallanzani [i.p.], fig.2.
Exhibited: Venice 1993; Florence 2002;
Prato 2006. One of the largest antique
oriental carpets known; entered the Medici
archives between 1561 and 1571.
57 Boralevi 1986: “Un tappeto Cairino
lungo b.19 et largo b.7 mandato o Firenze
a quella Guardaroba a di 29 di Dicembre
1587.” The carpet is identified not only by
its dimensions but also by the invent ory
number painted on the back. Spallan zani
2007, p.55: The Medici carpet was taken
from Florence to Rome in the 16th
century and then returned to Florence. It
“is not mentioned in the inventories of
1553–4 or of 1560, but can be identified
in some documents dated 1571–2”. This
does not prove that it was made in Cairo,
but it shows that in the latter part of the
16th century it was thought to have come
from there. Thompson (2006, p.165, note
150) expands on this and rightly questions
the supposition it was without doubt made
in Cairo: two other carpets listed in the
inventory are almost certainly mislabel led,
one as ‘Cairene’, the other as ‘Turkish’.
Both would appear to be Iranian. Perhaps
one was described as Cairene because it
reached Italy via Alexandria, and the other
had passed through Istan bul (many
carpets described as ‘Iranian’ passed
through Istanbul at that time).
58 The San Rocco Mamluk carpet with
three medallions. 375 x 970cm. Arcicon -
fraternita di San Rocco, Venice. Published:
Curatola 1986, p.124 (detail); Bösch 1991,
p.354, no 21 (cited); Okumura 2007,
pp.236–7, no.66; Paris 2006, p.178, no.81;
Venice 2007, p.190, no.64; Denny 2007,
pp.178, 323, cat.81. Probably purchased
after 1541.
59 Pinner 1986, pp.293–4.
60 I have examined 92 of the 136 Mamluk-
style carpets for which I have images
(another 17 are recorded in the lit erature
but not illustrated). I have sorted them in
the first instance by period and then by
pattern schemes. They comprise: two
Fustat fragments (excluding the symmet-
rically knotted example in Alexandria pro -
posed by W.G. Thomson); nine ‘First
period’, probably before 1500; 28 ‘Second
period’, probably first quarter of the 16th
century; 98 ‘Third period’, probably second
and third quarter of the 16th century; eight
‘Transitional’, with Mamluk and Ottoman
designs, probably second half of the 16th
century. Kurt Erdmann, whose work on
these carpets remains the most detailed
to date, sorted Mamluk carpets into groups
by their compositions in order to identify
them more easily. His classification has
been followed and adapted by other
authors. Following Erdmann and Bösch, I
have arranged the Mamluk car pets in my
archive as follows. A, Multiple medallions:
A1 Five medallions (1); A2 Three medal -
lions (24). B, Single central medallion: B1
Bands with two sections (1); B2 Bands
with three or more sections (21); B3 Bands
with three or more sections and palms/
cypresses (18); B4 Undivided bands with
palms/cypresses (7); B5 Undivided bands
other (21). C, Single central medallion (no
bands): C1 Corner motifs (10); C2 No cor -
ner motifs (4). D, Plain field: D1 Plain field
with blazon (3); D2 Related examples with -
out blazon (2). E, Directional designs (3).
F, Circular (3). G, Unclassifiable fragments
(8). H, Unsor ted, no images on file (17).
I, Mamluk-Ottoman transitional (7). J, Frag -
ments from 15th century carpets (2).
61 The Salvadori three-medallion Mamluk
carpet. 153 x 218cm, about half the original
width of an end section. Victoria & Albert
Museum, London, no.T.150-1908. Form -
erly: Giuseppe Salvadori, Florence (acq -
uired in Italy). Published: Ellis 1967, p.8,
fig.12 (with structure analysis); Thom p son
1980, p.14, fig.2; King 1981, p.36 (cited);
Pinner and Franses 1981, p.38, fig.1
(detail), p.42, fig.1 (with struc ture
analysis); London 1983, p.59, no.17;
Housego 1986, p.232, fig.19 (with struc -
ture analysis); Gantz horn 1991, pp.203–4,
figs.311–13; Suriano 2004, p.103, fig.14.
Exhibited: London 1983.
62 Three Mamluk carpets with blazons:
(1) The Bardini Mamluk carpet with
blazons. (a) 209–23 x 221–6cm, part of
field and border from left hand side of a
very large carpet. Textile Museum, Wash -
ing ton DC, no.1965.49.1. Formerly: Stefano
Bardini, Florence; Heidi Vollmöller, Switz -
erland, 1965. Published: Ellis 1967, p.2,
fig.1, p.5, and front cover and fig.10 (detail,
with structure analysis; Ellis suggests the
carpet was once about 450 x 1100cm);
Camman 1972, p.48 (cited); Washington
DC 1980, pp.84–5, no.6 (with structure
analysis); Washington DC 1981, p.228
(cited); Pinner and Franses 1981, p.42
(cited); Ellis 1981, p.67, fig.3; London
1983, p.60, no.18; Ellis 1985, p.62, fig.1;
Housego 1986, p.232, fig.17 (with struc t -
ure analysis); Boralevi 1986, p.209 (cited);
Curatola 1989, p.253; Bösch 1991, pp.378
–9, no.88; Isaacson 1991, p.44; Gantz horn
1991, p.369, fig.504; Bösch 1996, p.92,
fig.10; Suriano 1996, no.13; Suriano 1998,
pp.74, 76, figs.3, 5; Museum für Ange -
wan dte Kunst 2001, p 38 (cited); Farn ham
2001, p.84, fig.23; HALI 129, 2003, p.65,
fig.2 (detail); Bier 2003(2), pp.3, 282, fig.2
(with structure analysis); Istanbul 2007(2),
p.83, fig.1 (detail). Exhibited: Washington
DC, Textile Museum, ‘Mamluk and Otto -
man Carpets’, 1970; Washington DC 1980;
Washington DC 1981; London 1983; Wash -
ington DC 1991–92; Washington DC, Tex -
tile Museum, ‘Oriental Carpet Classics: A
Tribute to Charles Grant Ellis’, 1997; Wash -
ington DC, Textile Museum, ‘Mamluk Rugs
from Egypt’, March to September 2003.
(b-r) 17 fragments, approximately two-
thirds of the original carpet, 456 x 945cm.
Bardini Museum, Florence, nos.526–542.
Published: Florence 1996, pp.9, 11, 19
and front cover (fragment); Suriano 1996;
Suriano 1998, p.74, fig.3 (all 17 fragments
with TM fragment, reconstruc t ion), p.76,
fig.5 (one fragment, no.12/526, 228 x
219cm, with TM fragment), p.78, fig.13
(two fragments, nos.3/528, 215 x 269cm,
and 2/527, 228 x 267cm), p.79, fig.14
(detail); Florence 1999, front cover (detail),
pp.24–7, no.1 (with structure analysis);
Boralevi 1999, p.79 (details of one frag -
ment); Grube, 2000, p.82, figs.1, 2 (detail);
Museum für Angewandte Kunst 2001,
p.38 (cited); Florence, 2002, p.139, no.112;
Istanbul 2003, pp.86–7, no.10 (with struc -
ture analysis); Suriano 2004, p.103, fig.15
(one fragment, no.3/358, 215 x 269cm);
Thompson 2006, pp.128, 130 (details);
Spallanzani 2007, p.231, pl.94. Exhibited:
Florence 1996; Florence 1999; Florence
2002; Istanbul 2003. (2) The Barbieri Mam -
luk carpet with blazons. 341 x 415cm,
probably reduced in length. Metropolitan
Museum of Art, New York, no.1970.135.
Formerly: Piero Barbieri Col lection, Genoa;
Joseph Pulitzer Col lection, 1970. Pub lished:
Mayer 1933, pl.LXII, pp.29ff., nos.1, 4, 9,
14; Ellis 1967, p.6, no.9, fig.11 (with struc -
ture analy sis); Housego 1986, p.236 (cited,
with struct ure analysis); Bösch 1991,
p.380, no.90; Suriano 1998, p.75, figs.4
and 16 (detail); Suriano 2004, p.96, fig.4;
Thompson 2006, p.127 (cited); Okumura
2007, pp.214–7, no.59 (with details and
structure analysis). (3) The Bruschettini
Mamluk carpet with blazons. Three frag -
ments, 130 x 190cm, 195 x 358cm, 252 x
358cm. Bruschettini Foundation, Genoa,
no.T9. Formerly: Garry Muse, Tucson, and
The Textile Gallery, London. Published:
Suriano 1998, p.75 and note 9 (cited).
Some related Mamluk carpets without
blazons:( 1) The Kelekian six-colour
Mamluk carpet with large star medallion.
36 x 160cm, section of field and small
piece of border. Textile Museum, Washing -
ton DC, no.R16.2.9 (R7.18), acq uired 1952.
Formerly: Kelekian Collec tion; K. Beshir.
Published: Erdmann 1940, p.67 (cited);
Textile Museum 1957, p.29, and pl.XVI
(with structure analysis); Housego 1986,
p.239 (cited, with structure analy sis); Bösch
1991, p.377, no.84 (cited, with structure
analysis); Bier 1991, p.123, fig.2; Bier
2003(2), pp.13, 282, fig.12 (with struc ture
analysis). Exhibited: Washington DC 1991
–92; Washington DC, Textile Mus eum,
‘Mamluk Rugs from Egypt’, March to
September 2003. (2) The London Mamluk
carpet with plain field and star. D. Katz,
USA. Formerly: The Textile Gallery, London.
63Two other first-period Mamluk carpets:
(1) The Vienna Mamluk carpet with three
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
88 HALI ISSUE 157
medallions. Twelve fragments, represent -
ing over three-quarters of the carpet (app -
roximately 223 x 550cm). Österreich isches
Museum für angewandte Kunst, Vienna,
no.T8348, acquired in 1922. Formerly:
Habs burg Imperial Collection, Vienna. Pub -
lished: Sarre and Trenkwald 1926, vol.I,
pls.49, 51 (two sections, shown as two
separate carpets); Museum für Kunst und
Industrie 1929, p.110, no.33; Schuette
1935, fig.12; Troll 1937(1), pp.221ff.
(design reconstituted); Troll 1937(2), fig.2
(with structure analysis); Bode and Kühnel
1955, p.65, fig.45; Erdmann 1961, pp.85,
103 (cited); Ellis 1967, p.10, fig.15 (with
structure ana lysis); Völker 1979, p.13, fig.1;
Housego 1986, p.236 (cited, with
structure analy sis); Bösch 1991, p.349,
no.5 (cited, with struc t ure analysis); Gan -
tz horn 1991, pp.198–201, figs.298–304;
Museum für Angewandte Kunst 2001,
pp.36–41, no.1 (with details and structure
analysis); HALI 125, 2002, p.43 (detail,
with structure analysis); Suriano 2004,
p.102, fig.11; Okumura 2007, pp.246–7,
no.70 (with structure analysis). Exhibited:
Vienna, Museum für angewandte Kunst,
‘Sym metric and Asymmetric Knots:
Oriental Knotted Carpets from the MAK
Collect ion’, 11 December 2002 to 23
March 2003. (2) The Salvadori three-
medallion Mamluk carpet. 153 x 218cm,
about half the original width of an end
section. Victoria & Albert Museum, Lon -
don, no.150-1908. Formerly: Giuseppe
Salva dori, Florence (acquired in Italy). Pub -
lished: Ellis 1967, p.8, fig.12 (with struct -
ure analysis); Thompson 1980, p.14, fig.2;
King 1981, p 36 (cited); Pinner and
Franses 1981, p.38, fig.1 (detail), p.42,
fig.1 (with structure analysis); Lon don
1983, p.59, no.17; Housego 1986, p.232,
fig.19 (with structure analysis); Bösch
1991, p.349, no.6 (cited, with structure
analysis); Gantzhorn 1991, p.203–4,
figs.311–13; Murray 2000, p.91, fig.11;
Museum für Angewandte Kunst 2001,
p.38 (cited); Suriano 2004, p.103, fig.14;
Paris 2004, pp.106–7, no.12 (with struc -
ture analysis); Gilles and Franses 2005,
p.93, fig.7; Okumura 2007, pp.222–3,
no.61 (with structure analysis). Exhibited:
London 1983; Paris 2004.
64 Transitional Mamluk-Ottoman carpets:
(1) The Berlin lattice carpet. 128 x 185cm.
Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin, no.KGM
1884.899. Published: Erdmann 1940,
fig.18; Textile Museum 1957, p.39 (cited);
Essen 1961, no.393; Berlin 1967, no.85;
Museum of Islamic Art 1988, pp.65, 213,
no.70 (with structure analysis); Sotheby’s,
New York, 27 September 2000, p.26
(cited). Exhibited: Essen 1961; Berlin 1967.
(2) The Munich lattice carpet. 194 x 230cm.
Bayerisches Nationalmuseum, Munich.
Published: Erdmann 1940, fig.19; Textile
Museum 1957, p.39 (cited); Hubel 1971,
p.287, fig.150 (with structure analysis).
(3) The Mercer lattice carpet. 239 x 338cm.
Franz Bausback, Mannheim. Formerly:
Mercer Trust. Published: HALI 111, 2000,
p.124; Sotheby’s, New York, 27 Septem -
ber 2000, lot 48 (with structure analysis);
Maastricht 2002, pp.178–9; HALI 120,
2002, p 69; HALI 151, 2007, p.48. Exhib -
ited: Maastricht 2002. (4) The Edirne floral
lattice carpet. 384 x 317cm. Museum of
Turkish and Islamic Arts, Istanbul, no.172.
Formerly: Hazinedar Sinan Bey Mosque,
Edirne. Published: Museum of Turkish and
Islamic Arts 1999, vol.1, p.30, pl.47 (with
structure analysis). (5) The Benguiat floral
medallion on lattice carpet. 138 x 188cm.
Textile Museum, Washington DC,
no.R16.3.2 (R.7.6), acquired 1932. For m -
erly: Vitall & Leopold Benguiat Collection.
Published: American Art Association 1932,
lot 7(?); Textile Museum 1957, p.39, and
pls.I, bottom right, and XXII (with struct -
ure analysis); Erdmann 1961, pl.3, ill.7;
Thom pson 1980, p.12 (cited); Ellis 1981,
p.68, fig.4; Yetkin 1981, p.106, ill.65; Soth -
ebys, New York, 27 September 2000, p.26
(cited); Bier 2003(2), pp.9, 282, fig.8 (with
structure analysis); Okumura 2007, pp.218 -
–21, no 60 (with details and struct ure
analysis). Exhibited: Washington DC, Tex -
tile Museum, ‘Mamluk and Ottoman Car -
pets’, May to September 1970; Wash ing -
ton DC 1991–92; Washington DC, Tex tile
Museum, ‘Mamluk Rugs from Egypt’,
March to September 2003. (6) The Munich
Ottoman carpet in Mamluk format. 131 x
192cm. Private collection, Munich. For m -
erly: Ostler, Munich. Published: Denny
1979, p.6. (7) The Bernheimer medallion
ringed by palmettes carpet. 150 x 266cm.
Whereabouts unknown. Formerly: Bern -
heimer Collection, Munich, acquired 1921.
Published: Christie’s, London, 14 February
1996, p.103, lot 99 (with structure analy -
sis). (8) The Bernheimer rows of flowers
carpet. 171 x 109cm, section. Private col -
lection, Germany. Formerly: Otto Bern -
heimer Collection, Munich (until 1961).
Published: Munich 1985, pp.20–21, no.3.
65 Thompson 2006, p.164, note 148.
Some authors have erroneously reversed
the order of the groups (Mackie 1983,
p.259; Thompson 2006, p.164, note 149),
suggesting that the more simplified ver -
sions are the earliest. This does not make
sense, because several of the rugs with
simpler designs and only three colours
relate through their border patterns and
colours to the rugs with Ottoman designs
that continued to be made in the same
work shops as the Mamluk-style rugs in
the second half of the 16th century.
66 Housego 1986.
67 Thompson 1980.
68 Suriano 2004, p.96.
69 Ellis 1967, pp.2–20.
70 The oldest illustration of what may be
a Mamluk rug is in Vittore Carpaccio’s
Betrothal of the Virgin, ca. 1504–1507, but
firm identification is not possible.
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, no.169.
Published: Erdmann 1930, p.14 (cited).
The field design appears somewhat
Mamluk in style, but the borders are
unlike those on any surviving carpet.
Mamluk-style carpets from Cairo depic -
ted in European paintings: (1) The Fish -
erman Presenting St Mark’s Ring to the
Doge. Paris Bordone (1495–1570), pain -
ted circa 1540 (not 1534, as stated con -
tinuously in the carpet literature and else -
where). Galleria dell’Accademia, Venice.
Published: Thompson 2006, p.130, fig.110
(detail). (2a-e) Portraits of Five Young Ladies
of the House of Martinegro. Moretto da
Brescia (or school of), before 1543.
Frescos, Palazzo Martinegro-Salva dego,
Brescia. Published: Erdmann 1940, fig.9;
Erdmann 1962, p.18, fig.3; Cavallo 1962,
p.66, fig.3; Mills 1981, p.53, fig.A2; London
1983, back endpaper; Thompson 2006,
pp.132–3, figs.112a–e; Denny 2007, p.178,
fig.4. (3) Portrait of a Lady. Titian (Tiziano
Vecelli, ca. 1485–1576). Kunst histor isches
Museum, Vienna, no.33. Published: Erd -
mann 1957, p.582 (cited). (4) Portrait of a
Man. Attributed to G.B. Moroni, mid-16th
century. Whereabouts unknown. Published:
Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 18 December 1920;
Mills 1981, p.53–4, fig.A3. (5) Family Por t -
rait. Sofonisba Anguis sola (1532–1625),
1560. Formerly: Galerie Raczynski, Berlin.
Published: Les sing 1877, pl.21 (detail).
(6) The Last Sup per. Ambrosius Franken
the Elder (Flanders, 1544–1618). Koninklijk
Museum voor Schone Kunsten, Antwerp,
no.136. Published: Philadelphia Museum
of Art 1988, p.123 (cited).(7) The Doge
Pietro Loredan Praying for the End of
Fam ine. Jacopo and/or Domenico Tintor -
etto, probably 1581–84. Palazzo Ducale,
Venice. Published: Erdmann 1930, p.14
(cited); Mills 1981, pp.53–4, fig.A4.(8) The
Doge Mocenigo Praying (Giving Thanks to
the Redeemer/Adoring the Saviour).
Jacopo and/or Domenico Tintoretto, prob -
ably 1581–84. Palazzo Ducale, Venice.
Pub lished: Erdmann 1930, p.14 (cited).
(9) Painting by Tintoretto at the Palazzo
Ducale, Venice [information from Dr A.
Bruschettini, January 2008]. (10) Painting
by Palma Il Giovane. [infor m a tion from Dr
A. Bruschettini, January 2008]. (11) Portrait
of a Lady. Leandro Bassano (Leandro
da Ponte, 1557–1622). Whereabouts
unknown. Published: Soth eby’s, London,
13 December 1978, lot 37; Mills 1981,
pp.53–4, fig.A5. (12) Portrait of Daniel
Hopfer II. Leandro Bassano, ca. 1595.
Whereabouts unknown. For m erly: Fairfax
Murray collection. Pub lished: Murray auc -
tion, Berlin, November 1929; Erdmann
1930, p.14 (cited); Mills 1981, pp.53–4,
no.A6 (cited). (13) Portrait of Alvisi Cor -
radini. Leandro Bassano.Museo Civico,
Padua. Published: Mills 1981, pp.53–4,
no.A7 (cited).(14) The Duff Family. 16th/
17th century? Duke of Fife. Pub lished:
Beattie 1964, p.7, fig.3; Philadel phia Mus -
eum of Art 1988, p.123 (cited). (15) Portrait
of the Family of Grand Duke Leopold I of
Tuscany. Johann Zoffany, dated 1777.
Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna,
no.3771. Published: Sarre 1924, p.25.
71 Thompson 2006, p.130, figs.110, 111.
72 The Vienna three-medallion silk Mamluk
carpet. 290 x 540cm. Österreichisches
Museum für angewandte Kunst, Vienna,
no.T8332. Formerly: Habsburg Imperial
collection, Vienna. Published: Riegl 1891,
no.360; Vienna 1892, p.12 (cited); Riegl
1892, p.324, pl.XXIX; Sarre 1910, p.479,
fig.16; Munich 1910, no.166, pl.77; Munich
1912, no.166, pl.77; Sarre 1921, p.77, fig.5;
Kühnel 1913/14, p.452; Bode and Kühnel
1914, p.142, fig.82; Sarre 1920, p.445,
fig.3; Vienna 1920, p.14, no.14; Sarre 1921,
p 77, fig.5; Bode and Kühnel 1922, p 48
(cited) and fig 88 (detail); Sarre 1924, p.19,
fig.1; Glück and Diez 1925, p.385; Rief -
stahl 1925, p.159; Sarre and Trenkwald
1926, vol.I, pl.44, and pls.45, 46 (details);
Migeon 1927, p.398 (cited); Museum für
Kunst und Industrie 1929, p.109, no.29;
Troll 1930, p.253 (cited); Neugebauer and
Troll 1930, pl.25 (detail); Erdmann 1930,
figs.2, 3; Troll 1937(2), fig.6 (detail, with
structure analysis); Erdmann 1940, p.66
(cited); Museum für Angewandte Kunst
1951, pls.40–41; Mazzini 1952, p.333
(detail); Bode and Kühnel 1955, 1958, 1970,
1984, fig.48 (detail); Erdmann 1955, fig.11
(detail); Heinz 1956, fig.7; Textile Museum
1957, pp.31, 33, 35, 37 (cited); Erdmann
1960, pl.II (detail); Heinz 1962, p.42, fig.4;
Schlosser 1963, pp.170–1, pl.96; Reichel
1969, pp.218–9, no.61 (detail); Metropolitan
Museum of Art 1973, p.194 (cited); Ellis
1974, p.36 (cited); Erdmann 1975, pl.II;
Hein 1977, fig.2; Keir Collection 1978, p.66
(cited); Tolomeo 1979, pl.XIV (detail); Cur a -
tola 1981, no.32 (detail); Denny 1982,
p.334, figs.15, 18; Zipper 1982, p.43; Field
1983, pp.40ff. (cited); Pagnano 1983, pl.26;
Black 1985, p.62, fig.a; ICOC 1986, p.26;
Housego 1986, p.239 (cited, with struct -
ure analy sis); De Unger 1986 (with struct -
ure ana lysis); Gantzhorn 1991, pp.155,
fig.224; Bösch 1991, p.348, no.2 (cited,
with struc ture analysis); Venice 1991, p.35
(cited); Milanese 1992, p.68; Scott 1993,
p.124–5; Denny and Black 1994, p.62, fig.a;
Noever 1995, p.122, fig.123; Cura tola 1996,
p.472 (cited); Stone 1997, p.140 (cited);
Franses 1997, p.86, note 4 (cited); Little
1998, p.69; Milanese 1999, p.50; Museum
für Angewandte Kunst 2001, pp.42–5,
figs.43, 45 (with structure ana ly sis); Mallary
2003, p.105, fig.2 (detail); Suriano 2004,
p.95, fig.2; Okumura 2007, pp.228–9 (with
structure analysis). Exhib ited: Munich 1910;
Vienna, Museum für angewandte Kunst,
‘Symmetric and Asymmetric Knots: Ori en -
tal Knotted Carpets from the MAK Collec t -
ion’, 11 December 2002 to 23 March 2003.
73 Sarre 1924, pl.12, fig.2.
74 Seven first-period, ten-second period
and 14 third-period. The exact number is
difficult to determine because several are
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 89
incomplete. To date only one sur viv ing
Mamluk with five large medallions is
known, the Faenza-Simonetti carpet in
the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
York. It is possible that some of the sur -
viving fragments, including many of the
first-period examples, may have come
from carpets with three or even five large
medallions. Almost half of the three- and
five-medallion carpets can be traced back
to Italian collections.
75 Three Mamluk-style rugs with direc t -
ional designs: (1) The Bernheimer trees
carpet. 163 x 226cm. Bruschettini Foun d -
ation, Genoa, no.T36. Formerly: Bern -
heimer Collection, Munich, no.56180 158/
225; Elio Cittone, Milan. Published: Bern -
heimer 1959, pl 4; Schürmann [1960],
pl.20; Ellis 1967, p.11, fig.16 (with struct -
ure analysis); Suriano 2004, p.97, figs.5, 5a.
(2) The Bode keyhole niche rug with
cloudbands. 120 x 162cm, wool pile on a
wool foundation. Museum of Islamic Art,
Berlin, inv. no.KGM 1888.30. Formerly:
Wilhelm Bode; Kunstgewerbemuseum,
Berlin. Published: Erdmann 1940, p.75,
fig.21; Zick 1961(1), pp.7–8, fig.1 and
note 7 (with structure analysis); Ellis
1969, p.8, fig.5 and p. 20, note 6 (with
structure analysis); Washington DC 1974,
p.130, fig.19; Thompson 1980, p.9, fig.2;
Enderlein 1971 (cited); Milan 1981, p.24,
fig.7; London 1983, p.60, no.19 (detail);
Boralevi 1986, p.216, fig.12; Philadelphia
Museum of Art 1988, p.78 (cited);
Enderlein 1988, p.34, fig.22; Mills 1991,
p.88, fig.3; Enderlein 1993, p.92, fig.15;
Berlin 1995, pp.25, 36. no.16; Ölçer et al.
1996, p.181, pl.128; Suriano 2004, p.94;
Istanbul 2007(1), p.119, fig.70, p.161,
no.E1. Exhibited: London 1983; Berlin
1995; Istanbul 2007(1). (3) The Padua Ark
curtain. 109 x 138cm, wool pile on a
wool foundation. Padua Synagogue,
Padua. Published: Mitteilungen 1900,
p.24, fig.15; Landsberger 1945–6, p.368,
fig.4; Kendrick and Barnett 1951, p.53,
note 66 (cited); Gutmann 1970, p.144
(cited); Goodenough 1960, vol.4, p.138,
fig.103; Boralevi 1984, figs.1, 2; Boralevi
1986, pp.211–3, fig.5; Yaniv 1989; Ferrara
1990, no.119, pp.208–9; Venice 1993,
pp.327–9, no.192; Papotti 1993, p.69;
HALI 73, 1994, p.101 (cited); Felton 1997,
p.19; Washington DC 2002, p.54, fig.20;
Prato 2006, p.44 (detail), pp.94–5, no.21;
Paris 2006, pp.182, 323–4, cat.82; Venice
2007, p.194, no.65; Denny 2007, pp.182,
323–4, cat. 82; Pordenone 2007, p.71.
Inscribed with Verse 20 of Psalm 118:
“This is the Gate of the Lord through
which the righteous shall enter”.
76 Riefstahl 1925, pp.159–62.
77 See note 64, nos.1–4.
78 The Arhan Mamluk carpet. 251 x
308cm. MIAQ, no.CA22. Formerly: Yaya
Arhan, Istanbul; Arhan family collection,
Stockholm; Wher Collection; The Textile
Gallery, London. Published: Whiting 1981,
p.55.
79Whiting 1981, p.55.
80 Three circular Mamluk carpets:
(1) The Barbieri circular Mamluk carpet.
284 x 292cm. Bruschettini Foundation,
Genoa, no.T48. Formerly: Piero Barbieri
Collection, Genoa. Published: Erdmann
1966, p.220, fig.271; Erdmann 1970,
p.198, fig.252; Sotheby’s, London, 12
October 1982, lot 38; HALI 5/2, 1982,
p.203, fig.37; London 1983, p.63, no.24;
HALI 42, 1988, p.99; Bösch 1991, p.382,
no.94; Okumura 2007, pp.166–7, no.40;
Spallanzani [i.p.], fig.3. Exhibited: London
1983. (2) The Olmutz circular Mamluk
carpet. Diameter 270cm. Kremsier Castle,
Czech Republic. Formerly: Collection of
the Archbishops of Olmutz. Published:
Erdmann 1970, p.199 (cited); Stulc 2006,
pp.413–15, figs.1–4. (3) The Milan circular
Mamluk carpet. 278 x 226cm. MIAQ,
no.TE07. Formerly: Louise Michael,
Milan; The Textile Gallery, London.
81 The Clark circular Cairene Ottoman
carpet. 262 x 224cm. Corcoran Gallery of
Art, Washington DC, W.A Clark Collect -
ion, no.26.294. Published: Troll 1937(2);
Erdmann 1970, p.198 (cited); Bennett
1978, p.117; Yetkin 1981, p.105, ill. 63;
HALI 127, 2003, p.41, fig.3; Thompson
2006, p.172, fig.157 (detail). Exhibited:
Washington DC, Arthur M. Sackler Gallery,
‘The World at Our Feet. A Selection of
Carpets from the Corcoran Gallery of
Art’, 4 April to 6 July 2003.
82 Diameter 291cm. Boralevi’s lecture at
the HALI Fair 2006 and private communi-
cation. The inventory is to be published
in Spallanzani [i.p.].
83 Erdmann 1938, vol.V, pt.2, p.189.
Erdmann took the reference from
‘Urkunden und Regesten aus der K.K.
Hofbibliothek’, in Jahrbuch der Kunst -
histonschen Sammlungen des Aller -
hochsten, Kaiserhauses 7 (1888), p.264,
entry no.288: “Two beautiful Algerian
carpets, that [an important military man,
equivalent to a general] from Genova
‘handed over’, with several colours and
yellow woollen fringe, for a round table.”
84 There is a slight chance that the
Barbieri carpet is the one mentioned in
the 1587 Medici archive, and that the
carpet in Kremsier may be one of Ferdi -
nand’s, also originally from the Medici.
Marco Spallanzani’s article ‘Carpets at
the Medici Court in the second half of
the sixteenth century’, to be published in
the forthcoming Islamic Art (Bruschettini
Foundation, Genoa). Spallanzani notes
that: “Francesco I …inventory of 1587…
passed to the Grand Duke Ferdinand,
refers to ‘Un tappeto tondo, cairino, di
diametro di br.5’ [290cm].”
85 Two ‘study piece’ Mamluk carpets in
the MIAQ: (1) The Bernheimer Mamluk
car pet with medallion and bands of cyp -
ress and palm trees. 137 x 204cm.
MIAQ, no.CA04. Formerly: Bernheimer
Collection, Munich, acquired 1911. Pub -
lished: Christie’s, London, 14 February
1996, p.109, lot 103 (with structure
analysis). (2) Mamluk carpet fragment.
49 x 191cm, field section. MIAQ, no.CA06.
Published: Lefevre, London, 31 October
1980, lot 1 (cited); Sotheby’s, London, 29
April 1981, lot 100; Christie’s, London, 30
April 1998, lot 24a.
86 Textile Museum 1957, p.41. The inv en -
tories Kühnel refers to are quoted by
Erdmann 1938. For the information on
the 1688 Commercial Register, Kühnel
refers to Erdmann 1938, p.198. The
statements relating to the mosques are
from 1573 and about 1650 – Kühnel here
refers to Erdmann 1938, p.193.
87 Kühnel (Textile Museum 1957, p.57,
note 1), quoting Erdmann 1938, p.187,
no.5.
88 Kühnel (Textile Museum 1957, p.57,
note 2), quoting Erdmann 1938, p.194,
no.17.
89 By 1585, Cairo had been part of the
Ottoman Empire for more than sixty
years. The Sultan in Istanbul controlled
the activities of the crafts guilds of his
Empire wher ever they were based, and
would have had no need to bring weav -
ers to Istanbul. However, in 1582, on the
occasion of the circumcision of his son,
a grand festival was organised for Sultan
Murad III at the Hippodrome in Istanbul.
The festival included musicians, dancers,
tight rope walkers and all the guilds of
the Empire. Floats pas sed before the
Sultan, while the guilds demon strated
their skills before dignitaries from all over
the world and many thousands of
spectators. There is no specific record of
car pet weavers at this festival, but I refer
to it to demonstrate that the Sultan was
inter ested in the work of the craftsmen
of his Empire. It is quite possible that
the finest carpet weavers in the Empire,
those in Cairo, were brought to the cap -
ital to present their work to the Sultan at
a later date, and that the document citing
the eleven rug masters refers to such a
visit – there seems to be no evidence
that they stayed in Istanbul or anywhere
else in the region for any length of time.
90 Martin 1908. Yet, when discussing the
very fine blue-ground Cairene Otto man
carpet in the Musée des Arts Déco r atifs,
Paris, he states that: ‘not only large
carpets were made, but also prayer car -
pets, of which some fine examples are
in different collections...some have simple
uncoloured prayer niches, others are richly
decorated. As these carpets form of them -
selves a separate group in design and
technique widely different from all other
carpets made at the same time in Asia
Minor...’ (p.333). He goes on to write that
Sarre believed that these carpets were
made in Damascus. This only adds to the
confusion in the first writings on the
early history of carpets.
91 Erdmann 1960/1962, figs.138, 139
and pl.VII; Bennett 1978, pp.117–20;
Denny 1986, pp.245–9; Spuhler, in Mus -
eum of Islamic Art 1988, p.112. Adher -
ents of the Bursa/Istanbul theory also
seem to have overlooked other pertinent
evidence. For example, although Kühnel
points out Erdmann’s interesting discov -
ery that “an inventory of the Saray in
Istanbul, dated 1680, mentions twenty
silk prayer carpets from Egypt” (Textile
Museum 1957, p.42, quoting from Erd -
mann 1938, p.197, no.24), he does not
examine it more closely. The shininess of
Egyptian wool is deceptive: it looks very
different to Turkish wool and is often
mistaken for silk. Furthermore, rugs with
silk fringes were often called ‘silk rugs’. It
is possible, therefore, that the Otto man
niche rugs in the Topkapı Saray Museum
and the Museum of Turkish and Islamic
Arts, Istanbul, are the last two survivors
of the twenty.
92 As far as I know, both silk and cotton
can be spun in either direction. S-spun
silk tends to pre-date Z-spun in European
silks; the cotton used on Egyptian carpets
was presumably produced locally, and
the reels of spun silk were imported,
gen erally from Iran.
93 Pinner and Franses 1981. The fact that
some Cairene Ottoman rugs have silk
warps, wool wefts and some cotton pile
was not addressed.
94 The Medici Ottoman carpet. 330 x
995cm. Pitti Palace, Florence, no.5278.
Published: Boralevi 1983, pp.282–3 (with
structure analysis); London 1983, p.41
and pp.83–5, no.56; Boralevi 1986,
pp.205–11, figs.2, 4. The carpet is in an
unused condition and appears as new,
with bright and gaudy colours.
95 Boralevi 1983, p.282: ‘Tappeto grande
Cairno buono lungo b17 et largo b.5 e
2/3, avuto dal Gen. Cav Da Verrazzano
Commissario delle Galere addi 31 luglio’.
The cited size exactly matches that of
the actual carpet.
96Whiting 1981, p.55, found that the
red of all five Mamluks in the Victoria
and Albert Museum, London, had been
dyed with lac. The red of a Mamluk
carpet in the Wher Collection had been
dyed with cochineal. The Wher carpet
has a minor guard border with the
çintamani design normally associated
with the Ottoman period. Whiting (p.56)
tells us that: “all three of the main
species of insect dye were theoretically
available for use in these carpets:
kermes from Spain, lac from India and
genuine ‘cochineal’ from Mexico’. ...
Cochineal, even when it had become
familiar in Europe, was a very valuable
commodity, and the earliest ship ments
beginning in 1530, would have aroused
extreme interest in Spain... Böh mer has
reported that little or no use of cochineal
or other insect dyes occurred in Turkish
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
90 HALI ISSUE 157
villages before 1850 when cul ti va tion
began in the Mediterranean region.”
97 Whiting 1981, pp.55–6.
98 See note 64, no.6.
99 The Hackwood Park Cairene Ottoman
medallion carpet. 281 x 517cm. MIAQ,
no.CA05. Formerly: Lord Camrose Col -
lec t ion, Hackwood House, Hampshire.
Published: Christie’s, Hackwood House,
21 April 1998, lot 1118; HALI 99, 1998,
p.123.
100 The Bernheimer Cairene Ottoman
medallion rug. 132 x 191cm. MIAQ,
no.CA63. Formerly: Consul Otto Bern -
heimer, Munich, acquired 1919; Bern -
heimer family collection, Munich; private
collection. Published: Hamburg 1950,
no.9, pp.22–3, pl.8; Erdmann 1955,
no.130; Bernheimer 1959, pl.5; Yetkin
1981, p.116, no.73; Christie’s, London, 14
February 1996, lot 83; Christie’s, London,
29 April 2004, lot 101.
101 King 1985, pp.49–52.
102 See Pinner 1986, pp.302–3. At least
fourteen compartment design carpets can
be identified in the inventories of Car dinal
Wolsey, Margaret of Austria, Archduchess
Margarethe of Mechelen, King Henry VIII
of England, Anna von Ungarn and Arch -
duke Ferdinand II, as well as in Haram
and Florentine documents.
103 Milan 1981, p.25, fig.8.
104 See: Mills 1981, pp.53–5; Thompson
2006, p.152, fig.146.
105 Twelve of these appear in paintings
by just two artists and may represent
only two examples: (1) Simon Kick, Self
Portait, 1645–1650. National Gallery of
Ireland, Dublin, no.164550. (2) Pietro Pao -
lini (1603–1681), Self Portrait. Publis hed:
Thompson 2006, pp.152–3, figs.146, 147,
see also p.155, note 138.
106 Para-Mamluk carpets: (1) The Divrigi
domes and squinches carpet. 185 x
195cm, incomplete. Vakıflar Museum,
Istanbul, no.A-217. Formerly: Ulu Mosque,
Divrigi. Published: Ellis 1967; Vakıflar
Mus eum 1988, pp.40–45, 9, 180–1, pl.2
(with structure analysis); Philadelphia
Museum of Art 1988, p.9, fig.2a; Esken azi
1986; Franses and Bennett 1988, p.37;
Thompson 2006, p.39, fig.2, pp.146–7,
figs.137–9. (2) The Divrigi multiple lattice
carpet. 230 x 380cm, incomplete. Vakıflar
Museum, Istanbul, no.A-344. Formerly:
Ulu Mosque, Divrigi. Published: Ellis 1967,
p.19, note 33 (cited); Vakıflar Museum
1988, pp.34–9, 178–9, pl.1 (with struct -
ure analysis); Thompson 2006, p.146,
fig.133.(3) The Williams four-and-one
octagons rug. 125 x 178cm. Philadelphia
Museum of Art, no.55-65-2. Joseph Lees
Williams Memorial Collection, Philadelphia.
Published: New York 1910, p.11, no.8;
Erdmann 1930, fig.8; Erdmann 1961,
fig.33; Ellis 1963, fig.2; Ellis 1967, p.19,
note 33 (cited); Metropolitan Museum of
Art 1973, fig.15; Ellis 1978, p.32, fig.7;
Atil 1980, p.312, ill. 178; Pinner and Fran -
ses 1981, p.41 (cited); London 1983, p.66,
no.28; Black 1985, p.52, fig.6b; Pin ner
1986, p.6, fig.9; Philadelphia Museum of
Art 1988, pp.4–7, pl.1 (with structure
analysis); Thompson 2006, p.138, fig.117.
Exhibited: New York 1910; London 1983.
(4) The Paris four-and-one medallions rug.
141 x 207cm. Tabibnia Collection, Milan.
Formerly: Private collection, Paris; Vigo
Art Galleries, London; Charles Grant Ellis
Collection, Kingston, NY; Wher Col lec t ion.
Published: Washington DC 1973, fig.24;
Foster 1979, pl.V; Pinner and Fran ses
1981, p.41, fig.g; Pinner 1986, p.6, fig.8;
Philadelphia Museum of Art 1988, p.6,
fig.1c; Paris 1989, pp.40–41 (with struct -
ure analysis); Thompson 2006, pp.124–5,
pl.12 (with structure analysis). Exhibited:
Washington DC 1973; Paris, Institut du
Monde Arabe, 1989–1994; Milan 2006.
Carbon-14 dated 1460–1640 (95% con fi -
dence). (5) The Bernheimer four-and-one
octagons carpet. 112 x 116cm, incomp -
lete. Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin,
no.I.33/60. Formerly: Bernheimer Collec -
tion, Munich. Published: Bernheimer
1959, fig.2; Ellis 1963, figs.1, 3, 5; Ellis
1967, p.19, note 33 (cited); Erdmann
1970, p.154, fig.198; Museum of Islamic
Art 1988, pp.67 and 217, pl.74 (with
structure analysis); Pinner and Franses
1980, fig.209, p.110; HALI 71, 1993,
p.119; Thompson 2006, p.136, fig.115.
(6) The Blum medallions and lattice carpet.
255 x 285cm. Bruschettini Foundation,
Genoa. Formerly: Mrs Harry Blum, USA;
The Textile Gallery, London. Published:
Sotheby’s, New York, 1 May 1982, lot
295; HALI 4/4, 1982, p.400; Thompson
2006, p.157, fig.153. (7) The Myers med -
allions carpet. 98 x 45cm, fragment. Tex -
tile Museum, Washington DC, no.R7.21
(R34.32.1). Formerly: Rhode Island School
of Design (1953, by exch ange); George
Hewitt Myers, Washing ton DC. Published:
Textile Museum 1957, p.77, pl.XLV; Ellis
1967, p.12 (cited); Pinner and Franses
1981, p.41 (cited); HALI 94, 1997,
p.61; Thompson 2006, p.139, fig.118.
(8) The Campana twelve-and-one medal -
lions carpet. 232 x 302cm, incom plete.
Brus ch ettini Foundation, Genoa, no.T38.
For m erly: Michele Campana, Milan. Pub -
lished: Erdmann 1961, fig.31; Ellis 1967,
p.12 (cited); Viale and Viale 1969, fig.147;
Pinner and Franses 1981, p.52, fig.n; HALI
93, 1997, p.75, fig.7 (detail); HALI 94,
1997, p.61 (cited); Thompson 2006, p.140,
fig.121. (9) The Dresden octagons rug.
44.5 x 40.5cm, oval fragment. Kunst -
gewerbe Museum, Dresden, no.343.
Pub lished: Lessing, 1887; HALI 71, 1993,
p.106, fig.1; Thompson 2006, p.139,
fig.120. Exhibited: Hamburg, 7th ICOC,
1993. (10) The Konya rug. Small frag ment,
framed with a Beyshehir fragment and
several others. Ethnographic Museum,
Konya. Published: Ellis 1967, p.19, note
33 (cited); Thompson 2006, p.139, fig.119
(‘symmetrically knotted’).(11) The Dus sel -
dorf medallion lattice rug.Whereabouts
unknown. Formerly: City art collection,
Dusseldorf. Published: Thompson 2006,
p.156, fig.151. (12) The Cairo two-octagon
carpet. Museum of Islamic Art, Cairo.
Published: Moustapha 1949; Thompson
2006, pp.146, 148, figs.136, 142.
(13) The Cairo compartment design car pet.
Museum of Islamic Art, Cairo. Published:
Bode and Kühnel 1955, p.76, fig.55.
(14) The Chihil Sultun niche rug with Kufic
inscription. 105 x 141cm. Carpet Museum,
Tehran. Formerly: Chihil Sutun Kiosk,
Esfahan. Published: Erdmann 1966,
pp.87–93 (‘Turkey, late 19th century’);
Ellis 1967, pp.2–20 (‘Turkey, late 19th
century’); Gans-Ruedin 1978, pp.144–5;
Mills 1997, p.72, fig.1; Franses 1999,
p.50, fig.31; Thompson 2006, p.137,
fig.116. Inscription reads “Hasten to
repent before death”.
107 Eskenazi 1986 wrote that the Domes
and Squinches rug could have been made
for the opening of the Divrigi Mosque
(1228–9) or that it could be a 15th century
carpet copying earlier architect ural orna -
ment. I find it unlikely that a rug with such
a pattern would have been made for the
mosque. We know of the Safavid Shah
Tahmasp’s gift to the congregation of the
Süleyman Mosque in Istanbul of a multi-
niche prayer carpet (saf), and of the saf
carpets made in Ushak by order of Sultan
Selim II in the early 1570s for the Edirne
Mosque. But a two-octagon rug is a less
likely gift or commission. Most of the rugs
preserved in mosques were given by the
congregation, occasionally from the estate
and in memory of a deceased parent. This
suggests that many of the rugs found in
mosques may have been at least a gen -
eration old at the time of their bequest.
108 Para-Mamluk carpets depicted in
European paintings (in date order):
(1) Mark Enthroned with Saints. Giovanni
Martini da Udine, 1501. The Cathedral,
Udine. Published: Mills 1997, p.73 (detail).
(2) Altarpiece. Lorenzo Lotto, 1505. Church
of Santa Christina al Tivarone, Treviso.
(3) The Doge Loredan and Four Advisors.
Giovanni Bellini (ca. 1430–1516), dated
1507. Gemäldegalerie, Berlin. Published:
Nemes, Munich, 16 June 1931; Mills
1981, p.53, fig.A1; HALI 56, 1991, p.133
(detail); Thompson 2006, p.141, fig.122;
Arcangeli 2006, p.124. (4) The Story of
the Amazons. Vittore Carpaccio, 1517.
Musée Jacquemart André, Paris. Pub -
lished: Mills 1981, p.54, no.B2 (cited).
(5) The Prothonotary Apostolic, Giovanni
Giuliano. Lorenzo Lotto, 1519–20 or after
1530(?). National Gallery, London, no.1105.
Published: Erdmann 1940, fig.8; Mills
1981, p.54, no.B3 (detail). (6) The Rich
Man’s Feast, or Dives Feasting. Boni fazio
Veronese (Bonifazio di Pitati, 1487– 1553),
first half 16th century. Galleria dell’Acc ad -
emia, Venice, cat. 326, no.291. Pub lished:
Mills 1981, p.54, no.B6; Mills 1997, p.73,
fig.2. (7) The Presentation in the Temple.
Bonifazio Veronese, first half 16th century.
National Museum, Stock holm. Published:
Mills 1981, p.55, fig.B6 (cited). (8) Portrait
of a Man. Francesco Beccar uzzi, first
half 16th century. Gal leria degli Uffizi,
Florence, no.908. Pub lished: Mills 1981,
p.54, no.B5 (detail); Thompson 2006,
p.135, fig.114. (9) Saint Antoninus Giving
Alms. Lotto Lorenzo, 1542. Church of
Santi Giovanni e Paolo, Venice. Pub lished:
Mills 1981, p.54, no.B4 (cited); Thomp -
son 2006, p.142, fig.125.(10) Venetian
Senator. Sofonisba Anguissola (ca. 1535
–1626). Burghley House Collection, Stam -
ford. Published: HALI 94, 1997, p.61;
Thompson 2006, p.134, fig.113. (11)
Lucia, Minerva and Europa Anguis sola
Playing Chess. Sofonisba Anguissola,
1555. Muzeum Narodowe, Poznan.
Published: Ellis 1997, p.77, fig.9.
(12) The Virgin with Angelic Musicians.
Unknown Flemish artist, probably mid-
16th century. Museo Arqueológico
Nacional, Madrid, no.51967. Published:
Thompson 2006, p.143, fig.127.
109 Thompson (2006, p.149) mentions
the ‘Munich’ and ‘Wind’ car pets as
examples of the ‘international’ style.
They have some simil arities in design to
the para-Mamluks, but their technique
and colours seem to place them with
rugs attributed to west Anatolia.
110 Thompson has spent many years
studying Turkmen rugs from west
Turkestan and has written possibly the
finest book on this subject (Mackie and
Thompson 1980).
111 I am very uncomfortable with the
idea that these rugs were ever part of
the Turkmen design tradition from Iran.
However, it is easy to see a connection
between the ivory-ground ‘Seljuk’ car -
pets possibly from Konya and the Turk -
men tradition, and there is a clear link
between Iranian paintings of the 15th
century and the so-called ‘small-pattern
Holbein’ carpets of western Anatolia. To
connect para-Mamluk rugs to Iran through
the use of an open ‘Kufesque’ and inter -
lace border is problematic when the pat -
tern was part of an international style
that stretched from west Anatolia to India
in the late 14th and early 15th centuries.
112 The term ‘compartment’ (and the
earlier ‘che querboard’) was coined by
Ernst Kühnel.
113 Some carpets with other Syrian
designs: (1) The Istanbul three-medallion
carpet 1. 293 x 770cm. Museum of Turk -
ish and Islamic Arts, Istanbul, nos 844-
846-850-869 (four pieces). Published:
Ölçer et al. 1996, pp.118–21, pl.86;
Thom pson 2006, p.155, fig.149; Istanbul
2007(2), p.53, no.31. (2) The Istanbul
three-medallion carpet 2. 292 x 765cm.
Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts,
Istanbul, nos 845-847-848-849-851-868
MUSEUM COLLECTIONS
HALI ISSUE 157 91
(six pieces). Published: Museum of
Turk ish and Islamic Arts 1999, pl.1;
Thompson 2006, p.155, fig.150; Istanbul
2007(2), p.54, no.32. (3) The Berlin
cloudband carpet. 163 x 411cm.
Museum of Islamic Art, Berlin,
no.86.601. Published: Zick-Nissen 1966,
p.111, fig.9; Museum für Islamische
Kunst 1971/1979, no.583; Museum of
Islamic Art 1988, pp.66 and 216, pl.73.
(4) Single-niche fragments from a saf.
(a) 69 x 60cm. Wher Collec tion.
Formerly: Garry Muse, Tucson; The
Textile Gallery, London. Published: HALI
4/1, 1981, p.56. (b) Museum of Turkish
and Islamic Arts, Istanbul. (5) The Salva -
dore palmettes carpet. 82 x 74cm and 83
x 54cm, two fragments. Keir Collect ion,
Ham. Formerly: Salvadore, Florence.
Published: Keir Collection 1978, pp.77–8,
pl.39 (‘Z-spun, asymmetrically knotted’).
(6) The Salvadore eight-pointed star med -
al lion carpet. 180 x 150cm, incomplete.
Keir Collection, Ham. Formerly: Salvadore,
Florence. Published: Keir Collection 1978,
pp.78–9, pl.40 (‘Z-spun, symmetrically
knotted’). (7) The Wolf palmette and blos -
som carpet. 126 x 343cm. Metro politan
Museum of Art, New York, no.1990.169.
Formerly: Marshall & Marilyn R. Wolf,
New York. Published: Bulletin of the
Metropolitan Museum, New York, Fall
1991, p.12. (8) The Divrigi palmettes in
lattice carpet. 228 x 383cm. Vakıflar
Museum, Istanbul, no.A-172. For merly:
Ulu Mosque, Divrigi. Published: Vak ıflar
Museum 1998, pp.124–31, 292–3, pl.58
(with structure analysis).(9) The Div rigi
palmettes and cloudbands rug. 200 x
293cm. Vakıflar Museum, Istan bul,
no.A-216. Formerly: Ulu Mosque, Divrigi.
Published: Vakıflar Museum 1998,
pp.124–31, 294–5, pl.59 (with structure
analysis). (10) The Muse cartouche border
carpet. 15 x 46cm, border section. MIAQ,
no TE14. Form erly: Garry Muse, Tuscson;
The Textile Gallery, London; Wher Col -
lection. Pub lished: HALI 4/1, 1981, p.56;
Thompson 2006, p.156, fig.152.
(11) The New York palmette and blossom
carpet. 198 x 310cm. Eberhart Herrmann,
Emmet ten. Published: HALI 69, 1993,
p.68; Soth eby’s, New York, 15 December
1994, lot 92; Munich 1997, pl.28 (with
structure analysis).
Two Anatolian rugs in a Damascus style:
(1) The Divrigi eight-pointed star medal -
lion and four octagons carpet. 236 x
362cm. Vakıflar Museum, Istanbul,
no.A-107. Formerly: Ulu Mosque, Divrigi.
Published: Vakıflar Museum 1998,
pp.124–31, 296–7, pl.60 (with structure
analysis). (2) The Divrigi leaf lattice rug.
150 x 290cm. Vakıflar Museum, Istanbul,
no.A-134. Formerly: Ulu Mosque, Divrigi.
Published: Vakıflar Museum 1998,
pp.124–31, 298–9, pl.61 (with structure
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