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China Inspired Iranian Pottery Craftsmen

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  • China Inspired Iranian Pottery Craftsmen

    Persian Journal
    Sept 23 2004

    China Inspired Iranian Pottery Craftsmen

    CHN

    Following the discovery of some white and blue porcelain potteries in
    the historical gardens of the northern Iranian city of Behshahr,
    experts believe the influence of Chinese porcelain art on Iranian
    pottery makers is well-documented.

    Abbasabad garden complex in Behshahr dates back to the reign of the
    Safavid Shah (king) Abbas. The 500-hectar property is comprised of
    several posh mansions, the Freedom Tower, and bath.

    "In the latest excavation season, carried out with the intent of
    recognizing the intricate irrigation system and the eastern gate,
    some porcelain china with Iranian designs and motifs were unearthed,"
    said Abdulvahab Musavi-nasab, director of the research center in
    Behshahr.

    One of the discovered vessels is a 45-cm high earthenware pot which
    clearly manifests the influence of the Chinese craft on Iranian
    pottery makers. The Abbasabad garden complex is located in the
    northern Mazandaran province.
    A militant Islamic Sufi order, the Safavids, appeared among Turkish
    speaking people of west of the Caspian Sea, at Ardabil. The Safavid
    order survived the invasion of Timurlane to that part of the Iran in
    the late 13th century.

    By 1500 the Safavids had adopted the Shiite branch of Islam and were
    eager to advance Shiite Islam by military means. Safavid males used
    to wear red headgear. They had great devotion for their leader as a
    religious leader and perfect guide as well as a military chieftain,
    and they viewed their leaders position as rightly passed from father
    to son according to the Shiite tradition.

    Under Shah Abbas I, Iran prospered; he also transplanted a colony of
    industrious and commercially astute Armenians from Jolfa in
    Azerbaijan to a new Jolfa next to Isfahan. He patronized the arts,
    and he built palaces, mosques and schools, Isfahan becoming the
    cultural and intellectual capital of Iran. Shah Abbas encouraged
    international trade and the production of silks, carpets, ceramics
    and metal ware for sale to Europeans. Shah Abbas also founded a
    carpet factory in Isfahan.

    Royal patronage and the influence of court designers assured that
    Persian carpets reached their zenith in elegance during the Safavid
    period. He advanced trade by building and safeguarding roads. He
    welcomed tradesmen from Britain, the Netherlands and elsewhere to
    Iran. His governmental monopoly over the silk trade enhanced state
    revenues. Merchants of the English East India Company established
    trading houses in Shiraz and Isfahan.

    After Shah Abbas ousted the Portuguese from the island of Hormuz at
    the entrance to the Persian Gulf in 1622, Bandar Abbas (Port of
    Abbas) became the center of the East India Company's trade. But Later
    the Dutch East India Company received trade capitulations from Shah
    Abbas. The Dutch soon gained supremacy in the European trade with
    Iran, outdistancing British competitors. They established a
    spice-trading center at Bandar Abbas.

    In 1623-24 Shah Abbas I launched an offensive against Ottomans and
    established control over Kurdish territories, Baghdad and the Shiite
    holy cities of Najaf and Karbala.
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