??????In terms of style, Azerbaijani carpets
can be divided into three groups: Quba-Shirvan (carpets woven in Quba, Baku
and the Shirvan region), Gandja-Qazakh (carpets from the Gandja and Qazakh
regions) and Qarabagh (carpets from the Qarabagh, Shusha and Djabrail regions).
Carpets from the Quba-Shirvan group have a border comprising several bands
of repeat design and a central field in white or a saturated tone, either
containing one or more large geometrical medallions or a number of small
geometrical or stylized ornamental flower elements. The key design elements
of the Gandja-Qazakh group are a chain of three polygonal medallions or
one large medallion surrounded by stylized trees or small stars and S-shaped
volutes symbolizing a dragon. The S-shaped volute or dragon design is also
a principal element in flat-woven rugs (see KILIM). The border consists
of three bands of rhomboids and wavy lines or simplified figures of birds.
Repeated squares of stylized birds are also found in a 19th-century kilim
from the village of Khizi. In carpets of the Qarabagh group the central medallion and surrounding
elements derive from vegetal, floral, bird or animal forms. In some instances
the central field is completely filled with large rosettes linked by geometrical
designs. There are no precise stylistic borders and often variations of
the same motif, such as the buta, are incorporated into the ornamental schemes
of carpets in all three carpet groups.
??????Technically Azerbaijani carpets are of
high quality, averaging 1600 knots per sq. decimetre in flat-woven rugs and
4900 knots per sq. decimetre in pile carpets. This factor and the ornamental
compositions ensured that Azerbaijani carpets became greatly sought after
on the international carpet market when an export route via Russia developed
in the late 19th to early 20th century. During this period the carpets of
Shirvan and Qarabagh began to include multi-figure designs imitating Western
tapestry.