Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 11

Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Sultanabad Room Size Carpet

$18,375
£13,973.38
€16,117.61
CA$25,740.01
A$28,808.16
CHF 15,042.36
MX$351,461.23
NOK 190,942.97
SEK 181,193.12
DKK 120,358.71
Shipping
Retrieving quote...
The 1stDibs Promise:
Authenticity Guarantee,
Money-Back Guarantee,
24-Hour Cancellation

About the Item

An antique Persian Sultanabad room size carpet handmade during the early 20th century. Measures: 10' 7" x 13' 6" Persian Rugs & Carpets: Persia (Iran) is a moderately large country with a very long history and an enormous art/craft/industry built around the handmade carpet. Until the discovery of oil, carpets were the largest Persian export. The craft goes back to ancient times, although the history is more broken than one might expect or desire. The Pazyryk rug dates from the 3rd/4th century B.C.E., but really no carpets before 1500 or so survive in any sort of numbers. Persia is an upland plateau region, semi-arid in many places, verdantly fertile in others, and a perfect base for a pastoral economy. Sheep beget wool and wool begets rugs. Lots of rugs. Almost every province, city, town, village and tribe made or makes rugs with distinctive local characteristics. The rug literature identifies many of these, but thousands of more locales and tribal segments cannot be connected to known examples and vice versa. There are essentially three (or four) distinct rug genres: the urban workshop formal rug; the village informal type; and the tribal/nomadic really informal kind. A fourth type is the royal or imperial carpet, woven for the Shah in court ateliers. Workshop, village and tribal rugs will be considered in more depth in specialized essays. Persian rugs must be woven in Persia. Being “in the style of….” does not count. On the other hand, the universally high standards of Persian rug weaving have raised the levels of carpet craftsmanship all over the rug belt. Everyone wants to be Persian, at least where rugs are concerned. “Persian rug” and “Oriental rug” used to be synonymous. Persian rugs come in all grades. From ultra-coarse tribal rugs to incredibly fine silks from Tabriz and planned urban Isfahan pieces. Persian rugs also come in all sizes. From miniature throw rugs to pieces as large as a parking lot. In weaves from 20 knots per square inch to 2000; in wool, silk, combinations thereof, and more modern synthetic and natural fibers. With natural and synthetic dyes. Most Persian weavers are women, in all contexts, but everybody can weave rugs. The Great Persian Carpet Revival began in the 1870s and the industry mushroomed, with many cities, villages, and tribes taking up or radically expanding rug weaving, from an occasional domestic art to a full-time professional industry. For example, Tehran, the capital, developed an industry-oriented exclusively toward very fine, totally designed carpets for the nascent Persian upper classes. A few rugs were exported, but most went to the wealthy. But this industry did not last past the Interwar period. Other cities have been weaving rugs for centuries. Tabriz, an early capital, has been weaving fine rugs since the 16th century, and with an interruption, has a flourishing industry today. Other cities developed carpet industries as demand expanded around 1900. Before then, nothing much in Mashad, after that lots of activity. Towns like Nain and Qum started from nowhere in the ’30s and now have crafts wholly oriented toward high-quality pieces. Villages all around Persia have contributed their share to the middle market, but 20th century (and later) pressures have pushed them toward higher qualities, more in the urban manner. This quality upgrade has also affected the nomadic, tribal weavers. Once weaving a few rugs for themselves for domestic consumption, they are now almost exclusively weaving for the market and in competition with urban rugs. So, they have moved up in quality and style. The Persian carpet is not a static kind of thing, and neither is the craft supporting it. Forget the “timeless east”. Rugs are objects of fashion, with innovations beginning at or near the top, and working their way downward as styles become accepted. Because rugs are a worldwide export, foreign influences seep or crash in. Whole new genres are imported. The red “American Sarouk” detached floral spray style was imported around 1920 and quickly became popular all over Iran, in scatters, room sizes, and runners. Not Persian, but “Persian”. Now accepted everywhere. Rugs are viewed in Iran as art objects, and artists everywhere have always taken advantage of innovations in techniques and materials. In Persia, this has meant machine-spun threads and yarns, synthetic dyes, and chemical washing manipulation. Some experiments lead to real improvement, some are unfortunate dead ends. Some patterns are wildly successful, others are quickly discarded. The allover Herati, Mina Khani, Boteh (paisley or cone), and Gol Hennai patterns have proliferated, and the medallion and corners layout in its infinite variety is virtually synonymous with Persian rugs. Persian weavers seem to have invented all these and more. Today, very finely woven photographic pictorials are fashionable. Who knows if this innovation will last? A basically semi-desert land needs color, has to have color in its furnishings and household accouterments. Persian rugs are all about color. All types revel in true color: saturated reds, deep blues, salmon, sky blue, cerulean, yellows from mustard to lemon, near black, cream and ecru and ivory, greens from teal to turquoise. From the Orient comes light, and light means color. A real, genuine Persian rug is richly, complexly colored. Maybe too rich. The carpets of the Chahar Mahal (“Bakhtiari”) area are just too colorful, too saturated for the American market. But they go over just fine in Persia. No blah rugs there. Current American decorating trends have shied away from color, complexity, and boldness. Whether these are “coming back” is a question. They have never gone away in authentic Persian rugs. A tour of the country shows urban weaving centers around the border edge, with a central spine; village weavers in the countryside surrounding the cities; and tribal weavers filling the blank spots almost everywhere. Some towns have been continuously active for centuries, like Kerman; some with interruptions like Isfahan, Kashan, or Tabriz; and some are relative newcomers like Qum and Nain. The picture is incomplete and much of the 18th and 19th centuries have been long ignored. There are large gaps with no extant specimens. But also, discoveries of previously ignored tribal and village weaving keep coming. New types get explored and the picture fills in. Whatever story you believe, it is probably only a fraction of the rich history of the Persian carpet.
  • Dimensions:
    Width: 127 in (322.58 cm)Length: 162 in (411.48 cm)
  • Style:
    Edwardian (In the Style Of)
  • Materials and Techniques:
    Wool,Hand-Knotted
  • Place of Origin:
  • Period:
  • Date of Manufacture:
    Early 20th Century
  • Condition:
    Additions or alterations made to the original: This carpet has been professionally antique washed to soften its tonality.
  • Seller Location:
    New York, NY
  • Reference Number:
    Seller: 83831stDibs: LU882324546142

More From This Seller

View All
Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Mahal Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Mahal room size carpet handmade during the early 20th century. Measures: 9' 11" x 12' 0".
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Edwardian Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Early 20th Century Handmade Persian Mashad Large Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Mashad large room size carpet handmade during the early 20th century with an intricate all-over pattern in a soft color palette of light blues, greys, and purples....
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Victorian Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Mid-20th Century Handmade Persian Mashad Room Size Carpet, circa 1930
Located in New York, NY
A vintage Persian Mashad room size carpet handmade during the mid-20th century. Measures: 11' 6" x 15' 3".
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Victorian Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Early 20th Century Persian Bidjar Accent Carpet
Located in New York, NY
An antique Persian Bidjar accent carpet. The abrashed greyish ground supports an allover classically rendered Herati design with black accents, set within a rust border of stylized l...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Rustic Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Vintage Persian Kashan Room Size Carpet
Located in New York, NY
This exquisite mid-20th century Persian Kashan rug, measuring 8' 9" x 12' 5", embodies the refined elegance and masterful craftsmanship characteristic of Kashan weaving traditions. T...
Category

Mid-20th Century Persian Kashan Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Early 20th Century Persian Tabriz Accent Carpet
Located in New York, NY
A wool pile of symmetric knots on a cotton foundation. In a generally light-toned palette, this small city carpet features a sandy field with a close scatter of bracketed and other p...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Tabriz Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

You May Also Like

Early 20th Century Antique Persian Mahal Rug
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Antique Persian Mahal Rug 4257, Country of Origin: Persian Rugs, Circa Date: 1910– A delightfully complex design spreads across this antique Persian rug, rich with warmth due to the ...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Sultanabad Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Early 20th Century Antique Persian Mahal Rug
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Large Antique Persian Mahal Rug 20932, Country or Origin: Persian Rugs, Circa Date: 1910– A delightfully complex design spreads across this antique Persian rug, rich with warmth due ...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Sultanabad Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

Early 20th Century Antique Persian Mahal Rug
Located in Los Angeles, CA
Beautifully Vivid Rust Antique Persian Mahal / Sultanabad Carpet , Country of Origin / Rug Type: Persian Rugs, Circa Date: 1900 – This brilliant antique Persian Mahal rug glows with ...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Sultanabad Persian Rugs

Materials

Cotton, Wool

Early 20th Century Antique Sultanbad Rug
Located in Los Angeles, US
Antique Sultanabad Rugs The city of Sultanabad (which is now known as Arak) was founded, in the early 1800’s, as a center for commercial rug production in Iran. During the late 19th ...
Category

Antique Early 1900s Other Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool, Cotton

1900's Antique Persian Lilihan Carpet
Located in Dallas, TX
74902 Distressed Antique Persian Lilihan Rug, 07'07 x 09'08. Distressed Persian Lilihan rugs are a modern interpretation of traditional Lilihan rugs that undergo a specialized treatment process to create an aged and weathered appearance. This treatment typically involves distressing the rug and soften the colors, giving it a muted and worn-in aesthetic. Despite their distressed appearance, these authentic Persian rugs often retain the durable construction and timeless design elements characteristic of traditional Lilihan rugs, making them a popular choice for both classic and modern interior spaces seeking a vintage-inspired touch. This hand-knotted wool distressed antique Persian Lilihan rug epitomizes timeless elegance with its soft colors and naturalistic design elements, making it a versatile addition to various interior styles ranging from modern to rustic. The rust-colored field, characterized by an intricate botanical floral pattern of bursting floral sprays, extends seamlessly across the rug, infusing every corner with interest and detail. Enclosed within a botanical border, complemented by inner and outer floral Meander guard bands, this lovingly time-worn Persian rug...
Category

Early 20th Century Persian Sarouk Farahan Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool

Late 19th Century Antique Persian Sultanabad Rug
Located in Dallas, TX
60941 Distressed Antique Persian Sultanabad Rug with Rustic Modern Style 12'01 x 20'01. Effortlessly chic and emanating coastal v...
Category

Antique Late 19th Century Persian Sultanabad Persian Rugs

Materials

Wool