Home / Antique Rugs / Chinese & Samarkand Rugs / Samarkand & Khotan / A silk Samarkand rug BB4692
Samarkand & Khotan:
 
 
Style: Botanical
Predominant Color: red Predominant Color: red

The antique rugs of the oasis towns of East Turkestan are incomparable. These exotic oriental carpets from Kashgar, Yarkand and Khotan in the Chinese occupied Autonomous Region of Sikiang are collectively known as Samarkands. Typically, they are in a long and relatively narrow format with simplistic spacious designs rendered in a glossy wool, occasionally embellished with richly brocaded silk and metal-thread. The distinctive and prevailing colorations of lacquer reds, Chinese yellows, heavily influenced by the neighboring countries of China and Turkey, have been produced in this region since at least the seventeenth century. For thousands of years these lands of arid steppes, deserts and brutal mountain ranges were traversed by caravans of merchants and traders from China to Western Europe along the Silk Route. These unusual antique Samarkand carpets of Central Asia display themes from many oriental cultures including, China with fretwork borders, lotus blossoms and cloud-bands; India with the swastika denoting infinity; Turkey with bold reciprocal borders and carnations; and Persia with floral trellis work. Perhaps the most evocative of all the East Turkestan motifs is the pomegranate, signifying prosperity. Woven at the crossroads of many civilizations, it is fitting that these antique oriental rugs and carpets from Samarkand employ such rich and varied symbolism.

A silk Samarkand rug BB4692

Circa: 1800
 
A silk Samarkand rug having a red field with an allover polychrome trellis within a green border with smaller floral motifs.

Watch full size video of A silk Samarkand rug, Circa 1800, ID BB4692 - Video

 
Size:  11'10" × 5'1"
Item No:  BB4692