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The Modernization of Iran and the Development of the Persian Carpet Industry: The Neo-Classical Era in the Persian Carpet Industry, 1925–45
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
Abstract
The two decades, 1925–45, witnessed a dramatic transformation and revitalization of the Persian carpet industry in response to developments in Iranian governance, society and economy. Two historical watersheds were covered by that period, notably the replacement of the Qajar dynasty by a modernizing administration under Reza Shah Pahlavi, and the subsequent wartime occupation of Iran jointly by the Soviet Union and Great Britain. It was during those two decades that Iran acquired a centralized system of government and the beginnings of a modern industrial base. The accompanying social transformation brought about the emergence of new classes of administrators and managers who constituted the dominant elite of the Reza Shah era. This twin process of centralization and modernization had a telling impact on Iranian culture and the arts, including the carpet arts.
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- Copyright © 2011 The International Society for Iranian Studies
Footnotes
I wish to express my gratitude to Rippon Boswell & Co. AG of Switzerland, and its Chairman Mr Samuel Wennek, for their generous support for the research that enabled the undertaking of this study, and for the provision of photographs of examples from the Soleyman Moradpour Collection of fine Persian carpets to accompany its publication. I am also grateful to Iain Stewart for comments on an earlier draft and his valuable input to the preparation of this study, and to the Iranian Studies reviewer for constructive advice.
References
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