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Qatar Museums, Museum of Islamic Art. Photo: Marc Pelletreau Terms and Conditions

Prayer Rug

Museum of Islamic Art

Currently on view at Museum of Islamic Art
Title:
Prayer Rug
Production place:
Central Iran
Date:
1574 - 1595
Period:
Safavid
Material:
Silk, Wool, Cotton
Technique:
Weaving
Dimensions:
164.4 × 110.7 cm

This prayer rug with a silk pile on a ground brocaded with metal threads forms part of a prestigious set of Safavid Persian Niche rugs known as the Salting or Topkapi group. Calligraphic inscriptions are a common feature of the majority of these rugs, and while the others in this group are traditionally made of wool, this example is made of silk, suggesting its importance as a precious object.
The poetic inscriptions on the border are executed in nastal'liq script, in Persian verse and includes the name Sultan Murad in the upper left-hand corner cartouche. Its content indicates that it was given as a diplomatic gift from the Safavid Persian court to that of the Ottoman Turks. It is possible that the rug was presented in celebration of a peace treaty signed between the two powers in 1590 CE, in which case the name Sultan Murad would refer to the Ottoman Sultan Murad III (r. 1574-1596 CE). Shah Abbas would have been the Safavid ruler during this period.

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