A piece of the pile of a Seljuk carpet
(قطعة من وبر سجادة سلجوقية)

Title A piece of the pile of a Seljuk carpet
Title Original قطعة من وبر سجادة سلجوقية
Publication Date: Approximately 800 AH / approximately 1400 AD
Publication Place - David Collection, Copenhagen, Denmark
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library: Museum With No Frontiers
Library Asset ID Inv.no. 3/1991
Record ID object;EPM;dn;Mus21;33;ar
Library Location David Collection, Copenhagen, Denmark
Date Approximately 800 AH / approximately 1400 AD
Notes This piece has been traditionally associated with a number of carpets found in Konya and dating back to the thirteenth century. Almost all of them have cup-like borders and a simple geometric main field. These are the newest in the collection and this has been confirmed by radiocarbon dating 14. Anatolian carpets were loved by travelers such as Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta in the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
Sample Text “A piece of the pile of a Seljuk rug” within Discover Islamic Art Collections. Museum Without Borders, 2026. https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;EPM;dn;Mus21;33;ar
View in source Museum With No Frontiers Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search
Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search Museum With No Frontiers

A piece of the pile of a Seljuk carpet

(قطعة من وبر سجادة سلجوقية)
Publication Date Approximately 800 AH / approximately 1400 AD
Publication Place - David Collection, Copenhagen, Denmark
Type Other
Language Undetermined
Digital Yes
Manuscript No
Library Museum With No Frontiers
Library Asset ID Inv.no. 3/1991
Record ID object;EPM;dn;Mus21;33;ar
Library Location David Collection, Copenhagen, Denmark
Date Approximately 800 AH / approximately 1400 AD
Notes This piece has been traditionally associated with a number of carpets found in Konya and dating back to the thirteenth century. Almost all of them have cup-like borders and a simple geometric main field. These are the newest in the collection and this has been confirmed by radiocarbon dating 14. Anatolian carpets were loved by travelers such as Marco Polo and Ibn Battuta in the late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries.
Sample Text “A piece of the pile of a Seljuk rug” within Discover Islamic Art Collections. Museum Without Borders, 2026. https://islamicart.museumwnf.org/database_item.php?id=object;EPM;dn;Mus21;33;ar
Museum With No Frontiers - Ottoman library catalog search
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