Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene carpets From the middle of the 15th century onwards, a type of carpet was produced in Egypt which is characterized by a dominant central medallion, or three to five medallions in a row along the vertical axis. Numerous smaller ornaments are placed around the medallions, such as eight-pointed stars, or small ornaments composed of stylized floral elements. The innumerable small geometric and floral ornaments give a kaleidoscopic impression. Sixty of these carpets were given to the English cardinal
Thomas Wolsey in exchange for a license for Venetian merchants to import wine to England. The earliest known painting representing a
Mamluk carpet is Giovanni Bellinis
Portrait of the Doge of Venice Loredan and his four advisers from 1507. A French master depicted
The Three De Coligny brothers in 1555. Another representation can be found on Ambrosius Frankens
The Last Supper, about 1570. The large medallion is depicted in a way that it forms the nimbus of the head of Christ. The characteristic Mamluk carpet ornaments are clearly visible. Ydema has documented a total of sixteen dateable representations of Mamluk carpets. After the 1517 Ottoman conquest of the
Mamluk Sultanate in Egypt, two different cultures merged, as is seen on Mamluk carpets woven after this date. After the
conquest of Egypt, the Cairene weavers adopted an Ottoman Turkish design. The production of these carpets continued in Egypt into the early 17th century. A carpet of the Ottoman Cairene type is depicted in
Ludovicus Finsonius' painting
The Annunciation. Its border design and guard borders are the same as a carpet in the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam. A similar carpet has been depicted by
Adriaen van der Venne in
Geckie met de Kous, 1630.
Peter Paul Rubens and
Jan Brueghel the Elders
Christ in the House of Mary and Martha, 1628, shows the characteristic S-stems ending in double sickle-shaped lancet leaves. Various carpets of the Ottoman Cairene type are depicted in
Moretto da Brescias frescoes in the "Sala delle Dame" at the Palazzo Salvadego in Brescia, Italy. File:The Baillet-Latour Mamluk Carpet.jpg|The "Baillet-Latour" Mamluk carpet, Cairo, early 16th century File:Ambrosius Francken (I) - The Last Supper.jpg|
Ambrosius Francken,
The Last Supper, 16th century,
Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, with an Egyptian Mamluk carpet File:Square Ottoman-design carpet. Probably Cairo, Egypt. First half of the 17th century.jpg|Ottoman carpet. Probably Cairo, Egypt. First half of the 17th century File:Finsonius-anunciacion-prado.jpg|
Louis Finson,
The Annunciation. 17th century,
Museo del Prado, depicting an Ottoman Cairene carpet File:Knüpfteppich Ägypten makffm St136.jpg|Ottoman Cairene carpet, 16th century,
Museum für angewandte Kunst Frankfurt St. 136 File:Christ in the House of Martha and Mary 1628 Jan Bruegel2 and Rubens.jpg|
Christ in the House of Martha and Mary, 1628, Jan Bruegel and Peter Paul Rubens,
National Gallery of Ireland, depicting an Ottoman Cairene carpet.
"Chequerboard" or Compartment carpets from the 17th century An extremely rare group of carpets, "chequerboard" carpets were assumed to be a later and derivative continuum of the Mamluk and Ottoman Cairene group of carpets. Only about 30 of these carpets survived. They are distinguished by their design composed of rows of squares with triangles in each corner enclosing a star pattern. All "chequerboard" carpets have borders with cartouches and lobed medallions. Their attribution is still under debate. The colours and patterns resemble those seen in Mamluk carpets; however, they are "S-spun" and "Z-twisted" and thus similar to early Armenian carpets. Since the early days of carpet science they are attributed to
Damascus. Pinner and Franses champion this attribution because Syria was part first of the Mamluk, later of the Ottoman Empire at that time. This would explain the similarities with the colours and patterns of the Cairene carpets. The current dating of the "chequerboard" carpets is also consistent with European collection inventories from the early 17th century. Carpets of the "chequerboard" type are depicted on
Pietro Paolinis (1603−1681)
Self portrait, as well as on
Gabriël Metsus painting
The musical party.
Large Ushak (star and medallion) carpets In contrast to the relatively large number of surviving carpets of this type, relatively few of them are represented in Renaissance paintings.
Star Ushak carpets were often woven in large formats. As such, they represent a typical product of higher organized, town manufacture. They are characterized by large dark blue star shaped primary medallions in infinite repeat on a red ground field containing a secondary floral scroll. The design was likely influenced by northwest Persian book design, or by Persian carpet medallions. As compared to the medallion
Ushak carpets, the concept of the infinite repeat in star Ushak carpets is more accentuated and in keeping with the early Turkish design tradition. Because of their strong allusion to the infinite repeat, the star Ushak design can be used on carpets of various size and in many varying dimensions.
Medallion Ushak carpets usually have a red or blue field decorated with a floral trellis or leaf tendrils, ovoid primary medallions alternating with smaller eight-lobed stars, or lobed medallions, intertwined with floral tracery. Their border frequently contains palmettes on a floral and leaf scroll, and pseudo-kufic characters. The best known representation of a Medallion Ushak was painted in 1656 by
Vermeer in his painting
The Procuress. It is placed horizontally; the upper or lower end with the star-shaped corner medallion can be seen. Under the woman's hand which holds the glass, a part of a characteristic Ushak medallion can be seen. The carpet seen on Vermeer's
The Music Lesson,
Girl Reading a Letter at an Open Window, and
The Concert hardly show any differences in the details of the design or the weaving structure indicate that all three pictures might trace back to one single carpet Vermeer might have had at his studio. The paintings by Vermeer, Steen, and Verkolje depict a special type of Ushak carpet of which no surviving counterpart is known. It is characterized by its rather sombre colours, coarse weaving, and patterns with a more degenerated curvilinear design. Accademia - Presentazione dell'anello al doge di Paris Bordone.jpg|
Paris Bordone,
Presentation of the ring to the Doge of Venice, 1534. The only depiction of a large Star
Ushak carpet with eight-pointed star medallions. File:Johannes Vermeer - A Lady at the Virginals with a Gentleman (detail) - WGA24652.jpg|
Johannes Vermeer,
The Music Lesson (detail), 1662–5,
Buckingham Palace File:Vermeer The Concert.jpg|
Johannes Vermeer,
The Concert, 1663–6, stolen from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, in 1990 File:Portrait of Willem de Vlamingh, Johannes en Nicholaas Verkolje (1690 - 1700).jpg|
Jan and
Nikolaas Verkolje,
Portrait of Willem de Vlamingh, 1690–1700
Persian and Anatolian carpets in the 17th century Carpets remained an important way of enlivening the background of full-length portraits throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, for example in the English portraits of
William Larkin. The finely-knotted silk carpets woven in the time of
Shah Abbas I at
Kashan and
Isfahan are rarely represented in paintings, as they were doubtless very unusual in European homes; however,
A Lady playing the Theorbo by
Gerard Terborch (
Metropolitan Museum of Art, 14.40.617) shows such a carpet laid upon the table on which the lady's cavalier is sitting. Floral "Isfahan" carpets of the
Herat type, on the other hand, were exported in great numbers to Portugal, Spain, and the Netherlands, and are often represented in interiors painted by Velásquez, Rubens, Van Dyck, Vermeer, Terborch, de Hooch, Bol and Metsu, where the dates established for the paintings provide a yardstick for establishing the chronology of the designs.
Anthony van Dyck's royal and aristocratic subjects had mostly progressed to Persian carpets, but less wealthy sitters are still shown with the Turkish types. The 1620
Portrait of Abraham Graphaeus by
Cornelis de Vos, and
Thomas de Keyser's
Portrait of an unknown man (1626) and
Portrait of Constantijn Huyghens and his clerk (1627) are amongst the earliest paintings depicting a new type of Ottoman Turkish manufactory carpet, which was exported to Europe in large quantities, probably in order to meet the increasing demand. A large number of similar carpets were preserved in
Transylvania, which was an important center of Armenian carpet trade during the 15th–19th century. Many Armenians left their homes in Western Armenia ruled by Ottoman Turkey and founded craft centers of carpet weaving in Gherla, Transylvania. Hence, carpets of this type are known by a term of convenience as "Transylvanian carpets".
Pieter de Hoochs 1663 painting
Portrait of a family making music depicts an Ottoman
prayer rug of the "Transylvanian" type. In the American colonies, Isaac Royall and his family were painted by
Robert Feke in 1741, posed round a table spread with a
Bergama rug. From the mid-century European direct trade with India brought
Mughal versions of Persian patterns to Europe. Painters of the
Dutch Golden Age showed their skill by depiction of light effects on table-carpets, like
Vermeer in his
Music Lesson (
Royal Collection). By this date they have become common in the homes of the reasonably well-to-do, as is shown by historical documentation of inventories. Carpets are sometimes depicted in scenes of debauchery from the prosperous Netherlands. By the end of the century, Oriental carpets had lost much of their status as prestige objects, and the grandest sitters for portraits were more likely to be shown on the high-quality Western carpets, like
Savonneries, now being produced, whose less intricate patterns were also easier to depict in a
painterly manner. A number of
Orientalist European painters continued to accurately depict Oriental carpets, now usually in Oriental settings. File:Larkin cary.jpg|
William Larkin's
Dorothy Cary, later Viscountess Rochford, 1614–8,
Kenwood House. Anatolian "animal-stype" carpet with a more developed design. File:Abraham Grapheus, Cornelis de Vos, 1620, Koninklijk Museum voor Schone Kunsten Antwerpen, 104.jpg|
Portrait of Abraham Grapheus by
Cornelis de Vos, 1620,
Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp File:Thomas de Keyser - Portret van Constantijn Huygens en zijn secretaris.jpg|
Thomas de Keyser:
Portrait of Constantijn Huygens and his clerk, 1627,
National Gallery File:Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke, with his Family.jpg|
Philip Herbert, 4th Earl of Pembroke with his Family, by
Anthony van Dyck, whose sitters had mostly moved on to Persian carpets == Perception of Oriental carpets during the Renaissance ==