GUIDE
TO NORTH EASTERN TURKISH PILE RUGS
The KARS-KAGIZMAN-ERZURUM district
north of Lake VAN
KARS
Not far from the Soviet and Iran frontiers lies Kars
the capital of the large Kars province north of Lake Van
in the farthest north east end of Turkey. This area is
inhabited by a mixed population of Kurds, Turkish
(Caucasian Terekeme and Azerbaijani Turks) and until
+/-1920 by Armenians
History:
Following Zipper & Fritzsche: Kars takes its
name from the Turkish-Bulgarian tribe of the Karzak. In
the 9th and 10th centuries AD Kars was the capital of an
Armenian principality. It belonged to Turkey until 1878,
then to Russia until 1917, in 1918 to Trans-Caucasia, in
the following two years to Armenia and in 1921 it became
again part of Turkey.
KAGIZMAN
Kagizman lies South of Kars
ERZURUM
Erzurum lies east of Kars. As only a few old kilims,
in prayer patterns with a yellow, brown and green
dominating palette, are now labeled Erzurum, it will not
be discuss here.
History:
Following Zipper & Fritzsche: In 1333 the Arab
traveler Ibn Batula gave the town the name Arz-er-Rum
(town of the East Romans). Until the beginning of this
century Erzurum was settled by Armenians.
KARS KAZAK (Kurdish Kazak)
Design:
The major production around Kars is of rough tribal type
assumed to be Kurdish. The proximity of the Caucasus
explains the often use of Caucasian design in this area
and the Kars Kazak label. This label would be used in
preference
to Kurdish Kazak because as says:
Eagleton .. This overlooks the fact
that many of them, particularly
those closest to Caucasian prototypes are woven by the
Caucasian Terekeme.
Experience is needed to differentiate
certain Terekeme Turkish rugs from the Kurdish ones. For
the interested reader Eagleton gives some clues to
differentiate them: The Terekeme's rugs have
lighter colors and less use of natural dark brown
wool. From the back, the knotting is usually clearer and
more regular
less use of plaited end finishes
The Kars Kazaks rugs can be separated from the
Caucasian Kazaks because of their subdued dyes and the
extensive use of rugged dark brown wool, and in the
typical Kurdish ones the plaited and braiding ends. Goat
hair is sometimes used in the foundation, in particular
for the weft.
Kars Kazaks
Characteristics:
Date: many rugs carry Western dates in large
block numerals
Dimension: many runners and long rugs,
sometimes crooked
Design: large medallions often in the form of
Memling güls or large Caucasian designs
Knots: symmetric
Density: 4-6 x 4-6
Foundation: rugged brown natural wool
sometimes goat hair or natural light brown or
gray wool.
Pile: often lacks luster (died brown wool)
Colours: subdued natural colors or
synthetic fading dyes often misapplied, which
contributes to the failure of colors.
Warps: Z2S, no depression, flat back
Wefts: Z2S 2-4 shoots
Handle: heavy and floppy
Selvedges: wrapped warp pairs spanned
Ends: plainweave skirts and sometimes braided
fringes
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Kagizman Characteristics:
Dimension: smaller then Kars, many dozars and
kellegis format
Knots: symmetric
Design : Most refine in appearance with small
geometric designs. The patterns are more Kurdish
and less Caucasian in character.
Type of design : small Holbein patterns,
lattice of small Memling güls, waving bands
Density: 4-6 x 4-6
Foundation: brown natural wool
sometimes goat hair or natural light brown or
gray wool.
Colours: bright and lustrous colors
Warps: Z2S, no depression, flat back
Wefts: Z2S 2-4 shoots
Handle: floppy
Selvedges: wrapped warp pairs spanned -
sometimes color bands
Ends: plaited ends braided warp fringes
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Source of information's: Kurdish Rugs William
Eagleton
Turkish Oriental rugs Volume 4 K. Zipper & C.
Fritzsche
Antike Anatolische Teppiche from Austrian Collections
published by the society Vienna 1983
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KARS KAZAK RUG Age: turn of the 20th
century
Dimensions: 192 cm X 100 cm (6'4''
x 3'3)
Knots: thick wool Symmetric
Density: coarsely woven H 20/10 cm V
26/10cm 520/dm²
(H5/V6 33/p.s.i
Warps: thick loosely twisted natural gray and
tan wool, Z2S
Wefts: thick loosely twisted dark brown wool,
Z2S, 2 shoots
Handle: floppy
Selvedges: flat selvedges of five cords (thick
1-1-1-1-2 warps) wrapped
with dark brown wool
Ends: most damages, 2,5 cm (1) plain
weave of dark brown wool with small decorating
bands of medium brown and 2,5 cm (1)
cross braided fringes. Colours: natural,
white, gold yellow, light medium and dark brown,
black, madder red, navy blue, medium bluish
green.
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Comments: This rug show a Caucasian design
with a row of five large medallions in the form
of Memling Guls (containing eight point stars) on
a madder red fields and wide borders.
One main border with cross motifs, two minor
borders with the medachyl design on a white
ground and three small minor borders of bars.
The Caucasian design, the gray and tan warps,
the dark brown wefts, the plaited and braiding
ends point to a Kurdish rug from the Kars area.
Picture and information
courtesy of Belgium Collector Daniel DSD.
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KAGIZMAN? Eastern Anatolia rug - KURDISH
Age: last quarter 20th century.
Dimensions: 275 cm X 92 cm; 9'
X 3'
Pile: soft wool, height 8 mm (where not worn)
Knots: symmetric, H 27/10cm V 26/10cm
702/dm²; V 10' H 10' 100/psi.
Warps: wool, dark and medium natural brown, 2
yarns, loosely Z twisted, S spun, Z2S
Wefts: wool, medium natural brown, Z2S, 2 or 3
shoots ; 10 last cm. mauve colored wool (look at
the close up of the back).
Selvages: 2 cords of two warps, wrapped with
selvage weft and overcast with wool in bands of
color. At some place the bands are of two colors
to give a tooth edging or a barber pole effect.
Ends: bottom: missing; top: 1 cm plain weave
end + 3 cm braided fringes. (look at the close up
of the front and the back of the top end)
Color: except for the, perhaps chemical, mauve
colored wefts at the bottom of the rug all the
colors are natural and lustrous. Cochineal red,
apricot, aubergine, pink, marine blue, azure,
different shade of green from very light to
medium bluish green, light yellow, white, heavily
corroded brown.
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Comments: The pictures
haven't the quality I would want so the colors
can better appreciate on the close up.
This rug is without doubts a Kurdish Eastern
Anatolian rug. The structure points to the Kars -
Kagizman area. To take notice the use of
cochineal red, apricot and pink that was common
in this area and the nice aubergine shade in some
boteh (look at the close up of the rug).
I tentatively label this rug a Kagizman on the
basis of the structure, the
design (small crowded boteh with a Kurdish look)
and the use of lustrous and bright colors in
place of subdued colors more often found in Kars
rugs.
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Picture and information courtesy of
Belgium Collector Daniel DSD.
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For Further Reading:
Thanks and best wishes,
J. Barry O'Connell Jr.
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Persian
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Tabriz
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Kashmar
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Isfahan
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Hamadan
Rugs
Mashad
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Gabbeh
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Heriz
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Ardabil
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Lylyan
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Turkmen
Rugs
Persian Rugs
Turkish Rugs
Suzani
Oriental
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Persian
Carpets
Baluch Rugs,
The Qashqai
and Qashqai Rugs
Veramin Rugs
Tribal Rugs
Khotan-Rugs
Khotan-Carpets
Kirman-Rugs
Kirman-Carpets
Antique-Rugs
Antique-Carpets
Shahsevan-Rugs
Oushak-Rugs
Mashad-Rugs
Gabbeh-Rugs
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