SYMBOLISM and ICONOGRAPHY in ARMENIAN WOVEN ART

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  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2013
  • INTERRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ORNAMENTATION PRINCIPLES OF THE ARTISTIC WEAVING OF THE ARMENIAN CARPET
    ICONOGRAPHY IN ARMENIAN WOVEN ART
    One of the most ancient types of decorative arts of Armenia is carpeting, an ideal mix of aesthetics, functionality and material culture. A hand woven rug can represent a throne, "holy area," sign of wealth or royalty, testament or dedicatory object.
    Rug weaving is a true folk art. Striking as the carpets are, their geometric patterns were not created solely for aesthetic purposes, but to summon up a symbolic language. A deep red field isn't just beautiful, it has significance. Four zoomorphic figures arranged around a cross and centered in the field axis doesn't just form the medallion of the rug, it's a statement of a specific faith.
    The Armenian Wheel of Eternity is one of the countries most ancient and sacred symbols, its origin are traced to the early observations of the sky and worship of the Armenian Deity of the Sun. As one of the most common and sacred symbols of Armenian culture, the Wheel of Eternity stemmed from worship of the sky and the sun, and shares a common origin with the swastika, known as the sun wheel or cross symbol, it represents the sun and time, recurrence, universe and the eternal motion of life. There exist many variation of the symbol in Armenian culture with overall the same celestial associations but with slightly different metaphors.
    Worship of the solar deity continued well into the pre-Christian iconography of the region. During the Iron Age Kingdom of Ararat (860 BC), Armenians frequently used various solar disks and the sacred tree of life in their depictions of deities and sacred rituals.
    The solar symbolism was so essential to the Armenians that it made its way into the medieval Armenian culture. Absorbed by the Armenian Christian tradition it became as sacred as the Holy Spirit. The symbol could be seen everywhere in medieval Armenia. From monumental arts, outside and inside church decorations and murals, tomb stones, holy scriptures, Armenian Illuminated Manuscripts, sacred relics that are known as 'Khachkars' or 'Armenian cross-stones', ceramics, metallurgy, pottery, embroidery, lace and of course on carpets.
    In historic Armenia (Greater, Smaller, Higher, Cilicia), carpets were objects of necessity, people ornately covered the walls, ground floors of palaces, public and ecclesiastical buildings with mats, matting and rugs. In most of the settlements, people made flat woven Kilims, house-flannels, coverlets, curtains, saddles and saddlebags, blankets, salt-bags, horse-coverlets and carpets. This handicraft was so strongly linked with domestic life, learning it became a necessity. Rugs formed an indispensable part in the dowry of Armenian girls who familiarized themselves at an early age with the art and prepared their own dowry of carpets.
    Every region in Armenia wove with its own preference of mythological, flora, fauna and other motifs of nature, instruments of labor and domestic articles. As different as they may seem, weavers shared the most patterns of secular and religious icons. Their representations were closely connected with Pagan and Zoroastrian faith, worship rites and superstitions.
    Symbols woven in Armenian rugs vary according to their placement in the pattern, changes of color, or slight modifications of shape, much like context, intonation and stress alter the meaning of words in a narrative spoken in a local dialect. But, at its core, rug design is the language of images.
    To understand the meaning of designs in Armenian rugs, perhaps one needs to be in a community of spirit attainable only by members of the clan, but ingrained cultural affinity and the deep empathy by an expert is sufficient to grasp the design's overall meaning.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 32

  • @fulldistancegoing2801
    @fulldistancegoing2801 4 роки тому +4

    Thank you for a lovely lesson on Armenian story. 🙏🏻🌻

  • @hasmikaghuzumtsyan6195
    @hasmikaghuzumtsyan6195 3 роки тому +4

    Hratch Kozibeyokian, thank you very much for an awesome lecture!

  • @sc1388
    @sc1388 Рік тому +1

    This is so interesting, thank you.

  • @hasmikaghuzumtsyan6195
    @hasmikaghuzumtsyan6195 6 років тому +4

    Thank you Mr. Hratch Kozibeyokian, it was very interesting great job!

  • @karenlove4025
    @karenlove4025 2 роки тому

    Thank you very much for such a fascinating lesson. I have been looking at this symbol, it's meaning and how it appears in so many embroideries over the world. You have really helped me to get a deeper understanding

  • @MV_SS
    @MV_SS 6 років тому +3

    THANK YOU for your amazing contribution!

  • @keghamminasarmeniansoul
    @keghamminasarmeniansoul 7 років тому +7

    Awesome and very rich *
    Thanks and congrats to Mr Hratch Kozibeyokian .

    • @adanfinnley991
      @adanfinnley991 2 роки тому

      you prolly dont care at all but does anyone know of a tool to log back into an Instagram account??
      I somehow lost the account password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me!

    • @iangerald7415
      @iangerald7415 2 роки тому

      @Adan Finnley instablaster :)

    • @adanfinnley991
      @adanfinnley991 2 роки тому

      @Ian Gerald I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site thru google and I'm in the hacking process atm.
      Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.

    • @adanfinnley991
      @adanfinnley991 2 роки тому

      @Ian Gerald It did the trick and I now got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
      Thanks so much you saved my ass!

    • @iangerald7415
      @iangerald7415 2 роки тому

      @Adan Finnley No problem :D

  • @user-bw8ym5fd1x
    @user-bw8ym5fd1x 8 років тому +1

    shat hianali e ,,, shnorhakalutyun

  • @ArsenKarapetyan1
    @ArsenKarapetyan1 6 років тому +3

    Thank u!!

  • @safranpollen
    @safranpollen 5 років тому

    Inspiring for my love for old armenian rugs. I bow and say thank you ! What happens today at Armenia with carpets ? I haven`t seen good new pieces, the sparkle is gone.

  • @arpimangassarian7668
    @arpimangassarian7668 5 років тому +1

    Dear Hratch do you have the armenian translation of this video? it's so interesting

  • @VahramMekhitarian
    @VahramMekhitarian 10 років тому +5

    See also:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian_carpets
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Armenian_Eternity_sign

    • @VahramMekhitarian
      @VahramMekhitarian 10 років тому +2

      I added link to here in Armenian Wikipedia. See:
      hy.wikipedia.org/wiki/Հավերժության_հայկական_նշան

    • @ruglinkdotcom
      @ruglinkdotcom  10 років тому

      Thank you.

  • @ericebrard1401
    @ericebrard1401 8 місяців тому

    Good day , do you think know how is still existing in armenia ? at this moment ,
    Kind regards

  • @Healthytruth
    @Healthytruth 3 місяці тому

    🙏🏻🇦🇲❤️💙🧡🇦🇲🙏🏻

  • @Evlatlarimherseyimdir
    @Evlatlarimherseyimdir 2 роки тому +1

    Turkish (Anatolian) & Ottoman Rugs are the best ones of the entire world 🌍 I’ve been making a deep research 🔬 since long time. And this is my final decision.

    • @egorboroda1099
      @egorboroda1099 Рік тому

      И чем они лучше Иранских? Вы бы аргументированно рассказали, плиз

  • @egorboroda1099
    @egorboroda1099 Рік тому

    Автор, об армянских коврах было бы хорошо рассказывать на русском языке. Большинство людей в Армении знают русский язык. А армяне в России тем более!

  • @modo203
    @modo203 7 років тому +1

    Don't waste your time. If it's not Afghani or Persian then it's not a rug.

    • @globalistbrat8317
      @globalistbrat8317 7 років тому +5

      Pathetic fool. Who do you think took the craft to those territories? You actually believe those primitives conceived such a complex tradition?

    • @edwardb7811
      @edwardb7811 3 роки тому +1

      Surely you jest. Many countries make wonderful rugs. Talent has no nationality. Further, many tribes were nomadic. They may now be in Afghanistan or Iran, or maybe they were there before but are somewhere in the Caucasus now. We may have our individual preferences, but I recommend exploring the rugs of the world, along with everything else, such as cuisine.

    • @user-vr6io5xb9e
      @user-vr6io5xb9e 3 роки тому

      There’s no such thing as Armenian rug. He’s making up staff mostly inspired by Anatolian rugs and carpets

    • @kishmish64
      @kishmish64 3 роки тому +1

      @@user-vr6io5xb9e Anatolia once had a huge Armenian population until the massacres began

    • @kishmish64
      @kishmish64 3 роки тому

      Absolute nonsense ! You have no knowledge in this field at all !!!