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TURKISH
CARPETS
Volume IX Number 1
January 1991
Sharp-eyed
travellers and diligent bureaucrats are two prime sources concerning
the carpets of the past. While Americans are occasionally in the
former category, they are absent in the latter, with one apparent
exception, presented here. A State Department circular of June 10,
1889, asked the U.S. Consular Service to report on the subject of
carpet manufacture. The various consuls in Turkey responded with
specific information:
"Report by Consul Emmet, of Smyrna. There are no factories,
mills, or distinct establishments properly so-called in the districts
of Asia Minor where carpets are woven.. .Nearly every house at Ushak,
Ghiordes, and Conia has a loom; some have even two or three. These
belong to the owners of the houses themselves. The weavers are all
women and girls. The mistress of the house superintends the work
of her daughters, or hired journeywomen and apprentices. The looms
are of wood, roughly fashioned. A vertical or slightly inclined
frame supports two horizontal rollers about five feet apart...There
are now from 800 to 900 looms at Ushak, all worked by private owners
in the courtyards or main rooms of their houses. At Ghiordes the
number of looms is estimated to be about 300; at Coula, to be about
200.
"The proportion at Ushak is 70 per cent of carpets to 30 per
cent of rugs and mats. The carpets vary in size from 12 feet by
9 feet to 50 feet by 25 feet, and in a few exceptional instances
more. For a very large carpet, exceeding the last-mentioned dimension,
a special loom would have to be constructed. The mats and rugs vary
in size from 2 feet 9 inches by 1 foot 6 inches, to 11 feet by 8
feet.
"At Ghiordes it is estimated that the manufacture of carpets
and rugs is about the same as at Ushak, while at Coula the proportion
of mats and rugs is much larger, and it would not be an overestimate
to say that 80 per cent. of carpets is the correct output of that
section. The bulk of the looms at Coula are not wider than 5 to
7 feet.
"At Ushak, the number employed in the manufacture of carpets
and rugs, including the dyers, is from 5,000 to 6,000. At Ghiordes
and Coula the number varies from 1,500 to 6,000....The number of
hands at work varies according to the season, as many work in the
fields in summer and manufacture carpets in winter...
"At Ushak the dyeing, save in rare instances, is no longer
performed by the weavers themselves, as in former times, but is
carried on by a separate class (of men). Spinning is carried on
by elderly women at odd moments, when not occupied with their household
duties. The yarn is loosely spun, so as to allow the fibers to mix
slightly together in the pattern and present a blended appearance.
The washing of the wool is performed by men in the streams and combed
and spun by women. The bulk of the wool is spun in the outlying
villages of Ushak, etc. At Ghiordes the division of labor is similar
to that of Ushak, while at Coula the spinning and dyeing is usually
done by the weavers themselves.
"The carpet merchants in Smyrna have native agents at Ushak,
Ghiordes, and Coula, who act as intermediaries between said merchants
and the owners of the looms. These native agents are paid a commission
carrying from 3 to 4 per cent., and their duties consist in superintending
the carpets while in process of manufacture and accepting and delivering
the same when completed. Advances are usually made to the owners
of the looms, but total payment is not effected until the carpet
is taken from the loom and measured. The price is fixed per Turkish
arsheen or pike of 26 5/8 inches square.
"The bulk of the carpets and rugs made in the interior are
for export and a very small portion of the whole remain in the country.
Ushak turns out about 300,000 arsheens or pikes [1,500,000 sq. ft.]
of carpets per annum. Ghiordes and Demardjik about 65,000 pikes
[325,000 sq. ft.]; Coula 20,000 pikes [100,000 sq. ft.]. England
imports about two-thirds of the whole product. America ranks next
in importance, then France and Austria, and lastly, Germany and
Italy.
"The Smyrna carpet dealers are either the special agents of
the European consuming firms, and as such charge a commission varying
from 3 to 5 per cent., or else they submit firm offers free on board
at Smyrna, which would include such remuneration as they are able
to secure for themselves....
"Sivas. Report by Consul Jewett. Owing to the want of
any system of collecting statistics by the government or otherwise,
it is impossible to give any very definite replies to the questions
asked as to the number of establishments, looms, and persons employed
in the manufacture of carpets.
"The carpets and rugs manufactured in this area... are entirely
of wool. The industry is carried on by families in their own houses.
There are no factories. It is impossible to say how many persons
are employed. In almost every village there are a number of families
who make carpets. Hand-looms only are used. Most of the work is
done by women and young girls...Three to four piasters (14 to 19
cents) is considered a good day's wage...
"The dyeing, spinning, weaving, etc., are all conducted unitedly,
the women of each family engaged in the business doing all the work
from the spinning of the yarn by hand, dyeing it with vegetable
dyes, to the weaving and completion of the carpet. The carpets seldom
exceed 3 by 4 feet in size. The product is sold usually at home,
being placed on the market, by the makers going from house to house,
or by sending the carpets to Constantinople to be sold in the bazaars.
"There has recently been started in this city by two or three
families the manufacture of a new style of carpet which is quite
remarkable for the beauty and novelty of the patterns and the excellence
of the finish. The prices asked for these are higher than has been
usual, and average about 32 cents per square foot.
"It may be observed here that the common people invest their
savings in carpets as the people of other countries do in savings-banks,
handing them down from father to son, and selling one when hard
pressed for money, so that one is often surprised to find in the
poorest of homes a collection of very valuable rugs.
"Syria. Report by Consul Bissinger, of Beirut. There
are no manufactories of establishments in the sense that those words
are understood in industrial centers. Carpets are exclusively made
by peasant women and girls, residing in villages located within
the political subdivisions known as 'Hakkar', 'Hossu', 'Safita',
and 'Hazzoor' in the Mutessarrifiate of Tripoli, Syria. The most
important of these villages -- about a dozen in number -- is doubtless
that of Haidamoor, about 30 miles east of Tripoli, which seems to
excel all others in the quality, durability, and design of the carpets
it produces. There is also a good quality of rugs made in a village
called Fakeh or Fiki, which are marketed at from $8 to $20 per piece.
Fakeh is distant about 25 miles from Baalbek, and politically belongs
to the district of the same name in the Vilayet of Syria.
"Power looms do not exist in Syria, and although it has not
been possible to ascertain the precise number of 'hand' looms, it
may be approximately stated as 350 in all....To make the average-sized
carpet, for instance, of 3 pics or 2 1/4 yards long by 2 pics, 1
1/2 yards wide, would consume at least six weeks of continuous or
uninterrupted work, which is not possible, as the operator is a
woman who has domestic duties to perform, besides devoting much
time to field labor...
"Every loom has a female attendant or worker, who is sometimes
assisted by a young girl, and the carpet industry in Syria is exclusively
in the hands of women. Most of the rugs are made with a small square
of some decided color, generally blue upon a black ground, placed
in a very conspicuous place, intended to ward off the 'evil eye'
.....The number of persons engaged in carpet-making in the Tripoli
district is problematical, but probably does not exceed 500...Fairs
are periodically held in 'Calaat-el-Hosson'...where merchants from
Tripoli, Homs, and Hamath gather to make purchases...Unless picked
up by tourists in their voyages along the coast, these rugs are
exclusively marketed in Turkey by merchants from Tripoli, Homs,
and Hamath.
"Early in this century [19th] a number of people from the vicinity
of Broussa emigrated to the Tripoli and Hamath Mutessarrifiates,
in Syria. These people were familiar with the art of making rugs
and introduced the industry into the various villages in which they
settled. The village of Haidamoor became especially celebrated for
its rugs, and many specimens remain to testify to the beauty of
design and color....the present inhabitants of this village...have
entirely lost the original designs and coloring introduced by their
Turkish ancestors.
"The rugs made to-day are of very inferior designs as compared
with the ancient ones; the prevailing colors are usually red and
black, varied occasionally crimson and black, with black or dark
brown figures at both ends. In one village....the colors which predominate
are red and green with white borders, having white circles about
2 inches in diameter with either red or green centers. A rude sort
of carpet is the specialty of another village; it is from 20 to
30 feet long and 4 feet wide, made in stripes about 2 inches wide
of brown color, alternating with a dingy yellow, black and a dirty
white, the white and black being the natural colors of the wool.
"Until quite recently a beautiful rug of a brown or velvety
black was manufactured, but is no longer to be seen....Blue, green,
red, old gold, orange, and other colors were formerly extracted
from roots, leaves, and barks of trees....but the introduction of
cheap foreign dye-stuffs have now completely superceded them. Rugs
vary in size from 2 feet square to 3 feet wide by 12 feet wide by
12 feet long." (1)
Just how the consuls gathered their information is unknown,
and interpretation of the descriptions and details in these reports
is the business of Turkish carpet experts. Highlights are: (1) that
a described Syria product was marketed in Turkey; and, (2) that
weaving in Sivas entailed all wool items with vegetable dyes. It
is difficult to say what significance should be attached to the
reports' omission of westernmost Asia Minor (e.g., Milas, Gordes),
but the absence should be noted.
Notes
- U.S.
Consular Reports, "Carpet Manufacture in Foreign Countries",
GPO, 1890, pp. 307--312.
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