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| The region of Southeastern
Anatolia may also be called Upper Mesopotamia as it is watered
by the upper reaches of both the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers
and was undoubtedly under heavy Sumerian influence, perhaps
even direct rule. The area embodies enormous historical heritage
of importance to Judaism, Christianity and Islam because this
is where Abraham, the prophet venerated by all three religions,
is believed to have lived nearly 4000 years ago before migrating
to Canaan. Sumerian antecedents of biblical stories testify
to that ancient connection. Signs of Chaldean Christian, Armenian
and Arab influence on architecture can be detected in this land
contested for ages. Today the region has a large Kurdish population
subdivided into numerous clans, many still socially organized
along feudal lines and kilims have been woven by many. Regional
kilim designs and motifs, however, have their origins buried
deep in the amalgamated heritage emanating from all the civilizations
and cultures of the region’s past inhabitants, and it
is simply incorrect to ascribe them only to the present denizens. |
| Gaziantep |
| Known previously as Antep or Aintab, Gaziantep was given the
honorific title “gazi” (loosely translated as “veteran
of war for the faith”) by the Turkish parliament following
its stubborn defense (1919-1921) against French and auxiliary
Armenian forces in the Turkish War of Independence.
The Gaziantep region has a documented past in excess of 6000 years.
It is not known who first built a bastion where the Gaziantep
fortress stands today, but it is known that the original was enlarged
and strengthened by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian and much later
by the Ottoman Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent.
Gaziantep is justly proud of the superb remains of the oldest
known school of sculpture in the world, already producing works
of art when conquered by the Hittites ca. 1375 BC. The magnificent
mosaics and sculptures of Zeugma, made famous by the recent internationally
supported efforts to save them from the rising waters of a new
dam built on the Euphrates River, further attest to the region’s
past artistic accomplishments.
Although still in the realm of plausibility rather than fact,
it seems probable that Gaziantep stands on or near the site of
an Imperial Roman city called Doliche, but the ravages of man
and time have left too few vestiges of that era to verify this
thesis.
A region with such an ancient, diversified history enriched by
the cultures of a motley procession of inhabitants produced some
lovely kilims in the past and some periodically surface on the
market. They are usually in slitweave, often made in two halves.
The colors used are medium to dark reds, blues, greens and browns,
with white cotton contrasts. Six-pointed star motifs, frequently
with yin-yang symbols inside the stars, are featured in horizontal
bands which constitute the kilim. The wool is usually finely spun,
so Gaziantep kilims are sought after for their quality and rarity
since none are known to be currently produced. |
| Marash (Kahramanmarash) |
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The documented ancestry of this city is ancient
indeed since it goes back to the records of the Assyrians who
call it by its pre-1973 name of Marash. The addition of the
honorific prefix “kahraman”, meaning “heroic”,
was made in the emotionally patriotic times that followed a
military intervention into the civil affairs of the country,
undoubtedly meant to accentuate the devotion of Marash citizens
to the cause of national unity during the Turkish War of Independence.
Some two thousand years ago the city, then named Caesarea Germanicia,
began to mint its imperial coins ca. A.D. 38. It was part of
Commagene, a kingdom that had come under Roman rule. A millennium
later it was seized by the Norman princes Bohemond and Tancred,
two of the leaders of the First Crusade, to be added to their
conquest of the County of Edessa, today’s Urfa. Marash
was also an important stopping place on the fabulous Silk Road
that linked the West to China. This variegated heritage is reflected
in many overt and covert ways in the culture of Marash, and
although geographic and climatologic classifications include
Marash in the Mediterranean region, its kilim associations are
somewhat closer to those of Southeastern Anatolia.
Throughout Turkey Marash is primarily renowned for its thick,
tasty ice cream, but the region is also known for its highly
regarded kilims produced for the general market. These are made
mostly in workshops, mainly using the slitweave method with
designs geared to accommodate the interior decoration preferences
of urban and foreign buyers.
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