Handmade carpets during the Ilkhanid period of the Timurid Turkmen in Iran
In the history of handmade carpets during the Ilkhanids, Timurids and Turkmens in Iran Coinciding with the seventh, eighth and ninth centuries AH, there are also signs of the prevalence of the art of carpet weaving. In some parts of Iran, such as Fars, it can be seen in the writings of historians.
References to the Ilkhanate period that dealt with the carpets of the court of the Mongol rulers As well as the carpets inside the holy shrine of Imam Reza (as) It is mentioned in Ibn Battuta’s travelogue (725 AH). There is a story about Timur Lang about the reign of the Timurids Although it can be very exaggerated, But he acknowledges the breadth of the art of carpet weaving in Iran at the time.
According to Timur Lang, the book “I am also Timur Jahangisha” reads: “I was told that in Sabzevar, 300,000 workers work in carpet weaving factories And that’s where the world’s largest carpet weaving center is located. I couldn’t believe that Sabzevar had 300,000 carpet weavers. But I knew that there was no place in the world where more carpets were woven than Sabzevar.
It seems that carpet weaving continued to flourish during the Turkmen rule of Iran. Cecil Edwards, the famous English carpet weaver He refers to the exquisite carpets of the court of Ozon Hassan, one of the most important rulers of the Turkmen era in Tabriz (c. 878-879 AH).
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