All Object Lessons
Belief & Identity

The Persian Carpet: A Garden Woven in Wool

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 art, history, mathematics, ethics, citizenship
Core question How did Iran produce one of the world's greatest textile traditions, continuous for 2,500 years — and what does the Persian carpet teach us about how craft, geography, and politics shape what humans make?
A Persian carpet from the Khorasan region of Iran. Persian carpet-making has about 2,500 years of continuous history. Each carpet is hand-knotted, sometimes with millions of knots, and can take months or years to complete. Photo: Carpetbeggers - Discount Persian Rugs / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0
Introduction

In Iran, in cities and villages from the Caspian Sea to the Persian Gulf, weavers have been knotting carpets for at least 2,500 years. The oldest surviving knotted carpet in the world is the Pazyryk Carpet, found preserved in a frozen Siberian tomb. It dates to about 400 BCE and is likely Persian or made by a closely related people. The continuous tradition since then has produced some of the most refined textiles ever made. A Persian carpet is hand-knotted. The weaver sets up vertical threads on a loom — these are called warp threads. Then, knot by knot, they tie short pieces of dyed wool around pairs of warp threads. After each row of knots, they weave horizontal threads (weft) across to lock the knots in place. They beat the row tight with a heavy comb. Then they tie the next row of knots. Then the next. A typical room-sized carpet has several million knots. A fine carpet may have one million knots per square metre — each one tied by hand. The work takes months or years for a single carpet. Different regions of Iran produce different distinctive styles. Tabriz in the northwest is known for elaborate medallion designs. Isfahan in the centre is known for elegant curving floral patterns. Kerman in the southeast is known for soft pastel colours. Qom is known for fine silk carpets with extraordinarily high knot counts. Kashan, Hamadan, Mashhad, and many other cities each have their own traditions. Some carpets follow strict regional designs handed down through generations. Some are signed by their makers. Some are made for specific people or events. The patterns themselves carry meaning. A central medallion may represent a heavenly garden — the Persian word for paradise, pardis, gives us our word 'paradise', and means literally an enclosed garden. Many Persian carpets are stylised representations of gardens, with flowers, birds, trees, and water flowing through. To walk on a Persian carpet was to walk through a small piece of paradise. Today, the Iranian carpet industry faces serious challenges. International sanctions on Iran have made it hard for Iranian carpets to be exported. Many traditional dyes have been replaced by chemical ones. Younger people in Iran often prefer city work to weaving. Cheap machine-made carpets compete with hand-knotted ones. Yet the tradition continues. Master weavers train new students. Iranian government programmes support the industry. The Carpet Museum of Iran in Tehran preserves and displays the tradition's greatest achievements. This lesson asks how a Persian carpet is made, what its patterns mean, and what its long survival teaches us about craft and continuity.

The object
Origin
Iran. The tradition has continuous roots going back at least 2,500 years. The oldest surviving knotted carpet is the Pazyryk Carpet, found in a Siberian tomb and dating to about 400 BCE — likely Persian or related to early Persian work.
Period
At least 2,500 years of continuous tradition. Major periods include the Sassanid era (3rd-7th centuries CE), the Safavid era (1501-1736, often considered the golden age of Persian carpets), and continuing today.
Made of
Hand-knotted carpets are made of wool on a cotton or silk foundation. Some luxury carpets are entirely silk. The wool is dyed with natural or chemical dyes — traditional natural dyes include madder root (red), indigo (blue), saffron (yellow), and walnut husks (brown). Each knot is tied by hand around two warp threads.
Size
Persian carpets vary enormously, from small prayer rugs about 1 metre long to enormous palace carpets several metres on a side. A typical room carpet might be 2 metres by 3 metres, with several million knots.
Number of objects
Many tens of millions of Persian carpets exist worldwide. Iran continues to produce hundreds of thousands of new carpets each year. Major historical pieces are in museums worldwide.
Where it is now
Made across Iran today, with major centres in Tabriz, Isfahan, Kashan, Qom, Kerman, Mashhad, Hamadan, and many other cities. Major museum collections at the Carpet Museum of Iran in Tehran, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and many others. The famous 16th-century Ardabil Carpet is at the V&A.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. The Persian carpet is one of the world's great textile traditions. How will you teach this with the same respect you would give to any major art form?
  2. Iran is a real modern country with its own complex politics. How will you keep the lesson grounded in current Iran rather than 'ancient Persia'?
  3. The carpet industry is currently struggling under sanctions and economic pressure. How will you handle this without making the lesson into political commentary?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Let me explain how a Persian carpet is made. The weaver starts with a loom — usually vertical, with two strong wooden beams. They tie cotton or silk threads vertically between the beams. These are the warp threads. They will become the structural foundation of the carpet but will not be visible in the finished work. Now the knotting begins. The weaver takes a short piece of dyed wool — perhaps 1 cm long. They tie it around a pair of warp threads, using one of two main knot types (Persian or Senneh knot, asymmetrical; or Turkish or Ghiordes knot, symmetrical). They cut the ends short. Then they tie the next knot, next to it, around the next pair of warp threads. Each knot is one tiny dot of colour in what will become the design. After completing a full row of knots — perhaps several hundred or several thousand, depending on the carpet width — the weaver weaves horizontal threads (weft) across, going under and over the warps, locking the knots in place. They beat the row tight with a heavy metal comb. Then they tie the next row of knots. A fine Persian carpet has 500,000 to 1,000,000 knots per square metre. A small prayer rug (1 metre by 1.5 metres) might have 1.5 million knots. A large room carpet might have ten million or more. Why might one tradition develop such a slow, labour-intensive technique?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because the result is unmatched. Hand-knotted carpets are denser, stronger, and longer-lasting than any other type of carpet. They can last for centuries with care. They can carry incredibly detailed designs because each knot is one pixel of colour, and a million knots gives you a lot of pixels. The labour is enormous, but so is the result. The same logic applies to many other slow crafts. Hand-knotted carpets, hand-stitched embroidery (we have seen the suzani lesson), hand-painted ceramics (Korean celadon), hand-carved sculpture (Angkor stones, Nataraja). In each case, the slow work produces something machines cannot. The Persian carpet is one of the world's clearest examples of this principle. A weaver might spend a year on a single carpet, working alone or with apprentices. The result is an object that can be passed down through generations, that can be used as everyday floor covering or treasured as art. Students should see that 'craft' is not just slow making for its own sake. It is making with care and skill that produces results that justify the time. The Persian carpet has earned its 2,500 years.

2
The patterns of Persian carpets are not random. They follow specific traditions, often passed down through generations of weavers in particular cities or regions. The major Iranian carpet centres each have their own distinctive style. Tabriz, in the northwest, is known for elaborate medallion designs — a large central medallion surrounded by smaller motifs. Tabriz carpets are often deep red with cream and dark blue. Some Tabriz carpets feature pictorial scenes — gardens, hunting scenes, religious imagery. Isfahan, in central Iran, is known for elegant curving floral patterns and famous medallions. Isfahan was the capital of the Safavid dynasty (1501-1736), often called the golden age of Persian carpets. Many of the finest historical carpets in museums worldwide were made in or near Isfahan in this period. Kashan, also central, is famous for delicate floral patterns in soft colours. Kashan was the source of many of the most prized historical Safavid carpets. Qom, in the holy city of the same name, is famous for very fine silk carpets — sometimes with two million knots per square metre, made by master weavers over many years. Qom silk carpets are often considered the highest expression of the modern Iranian carpet tradition. Kerman, in the southeast, is known for soft pastel colours, complex curving patterns, and pictorial scenes. The 'Mille Fleurs' (thousand flowers) Kerman style features many small flowers across a soft background. Mashhad, Hamadan, Bijar, Heriz, and many other cities have their own distinctive traditions. Each region has its own preferences for colours, motifs, knot density, and structural details. Why might one craft become so regionally diverse?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because each region developed its own traditions over generations, building on local materials, local taste, and local economy. The same kind of regional diversity exists in many other crafts. French wines have specific regions, each with its own style. Italian cheeses are tightly tied to specific places. Indian saris vary by state. Korean celadon was made differently in different kilns. The principle is universal: when craft is rooted in local communities, those communities develop their own approaches. Knowing the regional differences is part of basic literacy in carpet appreciation. A knowledgeable buyer can often identify a carpet's region of origin within seconds, just from the colour palette and pattern style. The Iranian government and the carpet industry both support this regional diversity, both because it produces better results and because it creates economic opportunities for many cities and villages. Students should see that 'Persian carpet' is not one thing. It is a family of related traditions, each with its own identity. The whole family is part of one national tradition; the individual members are distinctive and recognisable.

3
The patterns of Persian carpets often have specific meanings. The most famous tradition is the garden carpet. The Persian word for paradise — pardis or pairi-daeza — originally meant an enclosed garden. The English word paradise comes from this. To Persian thinking, paradise was a beautiful, ordered, walled garden full of flowers, trees, water, and birds. Many Persian carpets are stylised gardens. The carpet might be divided into squares representing garden plots. Water channels flow through, indicated by long lines of patterned blue. Trees stand at intervals — cypresses for eternity, willows for sadness, fruit trees for plenty. Birds perch on branches. Animals — sometimes real, sometimes mythical — wander through. The central medallion of a carpet often represents the centre of the garden, where water meets in a fountain. The four corners may represent the four corners of the world or the four seasons. The borders represent the walls that enclose the garden — the protection that turns wild nature into ordered paradise. To walk on a Persian carpet, in this view, is to walk through a small piece of paradise. To pray on one (the prayer rug version is often a stylised mihrab, the niche in a mosque indicating the direction of Mecca) is to face paradise itself. The carpet is not just decoration; it is a way of bringing sacred order into daily life. Why might a carpet become a representation of paradise?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Because in Persian and Islamic thought, the garden was a major image of perfect order. In a hot dry climate, where water is precious and shade is precious, the garden — walled, watered, full of trees — was the most desirable place. Paradise was the ultimate garden. By making your floor a representation of paradise, you brought a piece of perfection into your home. The same idea appears in many cultures. Christian and Jewish thought also imagined paradise as a garden (the Garden of Eden). Buddhist temple grounds often include carefully designed gardens that represent spiritual ideals. The Japanese tea garden is a similar attempt to bring order and meaning into a designed natural space. The Persian carpet is one of the clearest portable representations of this universal human longing — to bring perfect order into daily life through art. Students should see that 'pattern' and 'meaning' are not separate. The pattern of a Persian carpet is its meaning. Knowing what to look for changes how you see one. End the discovery on this idea of carpets as gardens.

4
Iran today is a country of about 90 million people, with one of the world's oldest civilisations and one of the world's most internationally complicated political situations. The Iranian Revolution of 1979 created an Islamic Republic. Tensions with the United States and other Western countries have been ongoing for decades. Heavy economic sanctions, especially from the United States, have hit the Iranian economy hard since the early 1990s and especially since 2018. The carpet industry has been particularly affected. For most of the 20th century, the United States was a major market for Persian carpets — wealthy American collectors and decorators bought the best ones. After the 1979 revolution, US sanctions blocked most Iranian carpet imports. There were brief openings (especially in the mid-2010s during the Iran nuclear deal), but most US sanctions are now back. European and other markets continue, but at lower levels than before. Within Iran, the carpet industry employs about 1.2 million people, most of them in rural areas. Many weavers are women, working at home or in small village workshops. The economic pressure has been severe. Some master weavers have left the trade. Some traditional patterns are at risk of being forgotten. Cheaper machine-made carpets — many made in countries that are not under sanctions — have taken much of the international market. Meanwhile, master weavers continue. The Iranian government supports the industry through training programmes, exhibitions, and research. The Carpet Museum of Iran in Tehran preserves the greatest achievements. New generations of weavers are being trained. International collectors and decorators outside the United States continue to value Persian carpets. The 2010 inscription of Iranian carpet weaving on the UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage list (specifically the Fars and Kashan styles) was a vote of international support. What is the situation today?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Genuinely difficult, but the tradition continues. The Iranian carpet industry is smaller than it was, but it is not gone. Hundreds of thousands of new carpets are made each year. Master weavers continue. The patterns continue. International recognition continues. The challenges are real — sanctions, machine competition, urbanisation, generational change. The industry is not in crisis but is under pressure. The same kind of pressure faces many traditional craft industries worldwide — silk weaving in India, hand-papermaking in Japan, traditional pottery in many places. Each is being squeezed by mass production, cheaper competition, and changing tastes. Some adapt and continue; some shrink dramatically; some find new niches as luxury goods. The Persian carpet is finding its way through this. The lesson is not pessimistic — the tradition has survived 2,500 years and many earlier crises (Mongol invasion, Safavid decline, mid-20th-century industrialisation). It is likely to survive the current pressures too. Students should see that 'tradition' is not preserved in a museum. It is kept alive by the people who continue to make and care about it. The Iranian weavers continue. The carpets continue to be made. The story is not finished.

What this object teaches

The Persian carpet is one of the world's great textile traditions, with about 2,500 years of continuous history in Iran. Hand-knotted carpets are made of wool (sometimes silk) on a cotton or silk foundation, with each knot tied individually around pairs of vertical warp threads. A fine Persian carpet has 500,000 to 1,000,000 knots per square metre and can take months or years to complete. Different cities of Iran produce distinctive styles — Tabriz (medallion designs), Isfahan (elegant florals), Kashan (delicate florals in soft colours), Qom (fine silk), Kerman (pastel colours), and many others. Each city has its own colour preferences, knot density, and traditional motifs. Many Persian carpets represent gardens — the Persian word for paradise (pardis) originally meant an enclosed garden, and many carpets are stylised paradises with central medallions, water channels, trees, and birds. The Safavid era (1501-1736) is often considered the golden age of Persian carpets; many of the finest historical pieces date from this period. The oldest surviving knotted carpet in the world is the Pazyryk Carpet (about 400 BCE), found in a Siberian tomb. The Iranian carpet industry today employs about 1.2 million people, mostly in rural areas, and faces serious challenges from international sanctions, machine-made competition, and urbanisation. Master weavers continue the tradition. UNESCO inscribed Iranian carpet weaving on the Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2010.

RegionDistinctive styleNotable feature
Tabriz (northwest)Elaborate medallion designsPictorial scenes; deep reds and creams
Isfahan (centre)Elegant curving floralsSafavid heritage; golden age work
Kashan (centre)Delicate florals in soft coloursSource of many prized historical carpets
Qom (centre)Fine silk carpetsUp to 2 million knots per square metre
Kerman (southeast)Soft pastel colours'Mille Fleurs' style with many small flowers
Heriz (northwest)Bold geometric medallionsStrong colours; durable construction
Key words
Persian carpet
A hand-knotted carpet made in Iran, with a continuous tradition going back at least 2,500 years. Made of wool (sometimes silk) on a cotton or silk foundation. Different regions have distinctive styles.
Example: A typical Persian room carpet might be 2 metres by 3 metres, made of wool on cotton, with around 5 million hand-tied knots, and take a master weaver 6 to 12 months to complete.
Knot
The basic unit of a hand-knotted carpet. A short piece of dyed wool tied around pairs of vertical warp threads. Two main types are used in Persian carpets: the Persian (Senneh) knot is asymmetrical; the Turkish (Ghiordes) knot is symmetrical.
Example: Knot density (knots per square metre or per square inch) is one of the main quality measurements of a hand-knotted carpet. Higher density allows more detailed patterns and longer-lasting carpets.
Pardis
The Persian word for paradise. Originally meant an enclosed garden — a walled, watered space full of trees, flowers, and birds. The English word 'paradise' comes from this Persian root through Greek and Latin.
Example: Many Persian carpets are stylised pardis — representations of paradise as a perfect garden. The central medallion may represent the centre of the garden; water channels flow through; trees and birds are scattered across.
Safavid era
A Persian dynasty that ruled Iran from 1501 to 1736. Often considered the golden age of Persian carpets. The Safavid kings actively patronised carpet workshops, and many of the finest historical carpets in museums worldwide date from this period.
Example: The Ardabil Carpet (now at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London) was made for the Safavid shrine of Sheikh Safi al-Din at Ardabil, completed in 1539-1540. It contains about 26 million knots and is one of the most famous carpets in the world.
Pazyryk Carpet
The oldest surviving knotted carpet in the world. Found preserved in a frozen Siberian tomb (the Pazyryk burials) in 1949 and dating to about 400 BCE. Likely Persian or made by a closely related people. Now in the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg.
Example: The Pazyryk Carpet is about 1.83 by 2 metres, with about 360,000 knots per square metre — already a sophisticated technique 2,400 years ago. Its preservation through millennia in ice gives us our oldest evidence of the carpet-making tradition.
UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage
A UNESCO programme that recognises living cultural traditions. Different from the World Heritage list, which protects physical sites. Iranian carpet weaving (specifically the Fars and Kashan traditions) was inscribed in 2010.
Example: UNESCO recognition has helped raise international awareness of the Iranian carpet tradition and supported government programmes to maintain it. Many other Iranian crafts have also received UNESCO recognition.
Use this in other subjects
  • Geography: On a map of Iran, mark the major carpet-making cities — Tabriz, Isfahan, Kashan, Qom, Kerman, Mashhad, Hamadan, Heriz. Discuss how the geography (mountains, deserts, rivers) shapes the regional differences. Iran is roughly the size of Western Europe, with very diverse climates and resources.
  • History: Build a class timeline: Pazyryk Carpet (about 400 BCE), Sassanid era carpets (3rd-7th centuries CE), Mongol invasion (13th century, disrupting many traditions), Safavid golden age (1501-1736), Qajar era (1789-1925), Pahlavi era (1925-1979), Islamic Republic (1979-present). The carpet tradition runs through all of this.
  • Mathematics: A Qom silk carpet might have 2,000,000 knots per square metre. A typical room carpet of 2m × 3m would have how many knots? (12 million.) If a master weaver ties one knot per second for 8 hours per day, six days a week, how long would the carpet take? (Many years!) Discuss the patient labour required.
  • Citizenship: International sanctions on Iran have hit the carpet industry hard. Discuss the broader question of how international sanctions affect ordinary people — especially craftsmakers in rural areas. The carpet case is one specific example of a wider question about economic statecraft.
  • Art: Look at images of carpets from different Persian regions. Each student designs their own carpet on paper, choosing a regional style and meaningful patterns. Display the designs. Real Iranian weavers think this way every time they begin a new carpet — the design, the colours, the patterns are deliberate choices.
  • Ethics: Discuss the ethics of buying carpets from sanctioned countries. International collectors who buy genuine Persian carpets support master weavers; those who buy machine-made fakes do not. The same questions apply to many other traditional crafts. What are the responsibilities of buyers?
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Persian carpets are just decorative items.

Right

They are also major cultural objects, often representations of paradise, used as floor covering, prayer rugs, wall hangings, and family heirlooms. The patterns carry specific meanings. The work involved is enormous. They are art, craft, and household items at once.

Why

'Just decorative' undersells what Persian carpets are. They are deeply meaningful objects in their cultural context.

Wrong

Persian and Iranian carpets are different things.

Right

They are the same thing. 'Persia' is the older name for the country now called Iran. Iranians often use 'Persian' for cultural items (carpet, language, food) while using 'Iranian' for political and modern matters. Both names refer to the same country and people.

Why

This confusion sometimes makes people think they are buying different products. They are buying the same tradition.

Wrong

All Persian carpets are made the same way.

Right

Different cities and regions have different distinctive styles, knot densities, materials, and patterns. A Tabriz carpet, an Isfahan carpet, and a Qom silk carpet are all Persian but look very different. The regional diversity is part of the tradition's richness.

Why

'All the same' misses what makes the tradition rich. Each regional style is its own thing.

Wrong

Hand-knotted Persian carpets and machine-made carpets are similar.

Right

They are very different in quality, durability, and value. Hand-knotted carpets can last for centuries; machine-made carpets typically last decades. Hand-knotted carpets carry meaning through their making; machine-made carpets do not. The price difference is enormous (a fine hand-knotted carpet costs hundreds of times more than a machine-made imitation). Knowing the difference is part of basic literacy.

Why

Many people buy machine-made carpets thinking they are similar to real Persian carpets. They are not.

Teaching this with care

Treat Iranian culture with the respect of any major civilisation. Iran has about 90 million people, a continuous civilisation going back over 2,500 years, and a rich modern culture. Avoid 'ancient Persia' framings that make Iran sound like a museum object — it is a real modern country. Use 'Persian' (cultural) and 'Iranian' (modern, political) thoughtfully — they overlap but have different connotations. Pronounce 'Iran' as 'ee-RAHN' (not 'eye-RAN'); 'Persian' as 'PUR-zhun'. Some students may have Iranian heritage; give them space to share but do not put them on the spot. Be aware that Iran's political situation is genuinely controversial. The Iranian Revolution of 1979, the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988), the nuclear programme, and US sanctions have made Iran a politically charged subject in many Western countries. Avoid taking strong political positions in this lesson — focus on the carpet tradition, mention sanctions as a factor affecting the carpet industry today, but do not turn the lesson into commentary on Iranian government or American foreign policy. The carpet weavers are ordinary working people, mostly women, who are affected by political decisions made far from them. Treat them with respect. Avoid the lazy 'Orientalist' framing that treats Persian carpets as exotic mystery. They are sophisticated craft objects with mathematical precision, complex history, and continuing relevance. Avoid suggesting that the tradition is dying — it is under pressure but very much alive. The Iranian carpet industry employs about 1.2 million people. New carpets are made every year. The story is continuing. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Iranian weavers are working today. The patterns are being knotted today. The story continues.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about the Persian carpet.

  1. How is a Persian carpet made?

    A Persian carpet is hand-knotted. The weaver ties short pieces of dyed wool around pairs of vertical warp threads, knot by knot, building the design row by row. After each row, weft threads are woven across to lock the knots in place. A fine carpet has 500,000 to 1,000,000 knots per square metre.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains the basic knotting process and gives some sense of the labour involved (knot count or time).
  2. Why are different Persian carpets so different from each other?

    Different cities and regions of Iran produce distinctive styles. Tabriz is known for medallion designs, Isfahan for elegant florals, Kashan for delicate patterns in soft colours, Qom for fine silk carpets, Kerman for soft pastel colours. Each region has its own colours, motifs, knot density, and traditions.
    Marking note: Strong answers will name at least three regional styles with their distinctive features.
  3. What does pardis mean, and how is it connected to carpets?

    Pardis is the Persian word for paradise. It originally meant an enclosed garden — walled, watered, full of trees and flowers and birds. Many Persian carpets are stylised gardens, with central medallions, water channels, and trees representing this paradise. The English word 'paradise' comes from this Persian root.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains both the original meaning and the carpet connection. The English etymology is a bonus.
  4. What is the Pazyryk Carpet, and why is it important?

    The Pazyryk Carpet is the oldest surviving knotted carpet in the world. Found preserved in a frozen Siberian tomb in 1949 and dating to about 400 BCE. Likely Persian or made by a closely related people. It shows that the Persian carpet tradition was already sophisticated 2,400 years ago.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the date, the discovery, and the implications for understanding the tradition's age.
  5. What challenges does the Iranian carpet industry face today?

    International sanctions (especially from the United States) have blocked many exports. Cheap machine-made carpets compete with hand-knotted ones. Younger Iranians often prefer city work to weaving. About 1.2 million people still work in the industry, mostly in rural areas, and master weavers continue the tradition. The industry is under pressure but not gone.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions multiple challenges and recognises that the tradition continues despite them.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. A Persian carpet can take a year of work by a master weaver. The same length of carpet can be machine-made in minutes. Are they 'the same kind of thing'?

    Push students to think carefully. They serve some of the same functions (covering floors, decoration). They look superficially similar to inexperienced eyes. But they are completely different in materials, durability, value, and meaning. A hand-knotted Persian carpet can last for centuries; a machine-made carpet typically lasts decades. The hand-knotted carpet carries the work and care of a specific person; the machine-made carpet does not. Strong answers will see that 'same kind of thing' depends entirely on what you mean. Functionally similar; meaningfully very different.
  2. International sanctions have hurt the Iranian carpet industry, where about 1.2 million people work — mostly women in rural areas. What is the right policy response when sanctions hurt ordinary people?

    This is a real ethical and political question. Students may suggest: humanitarian carve-outs, more targeted sanctions, ending sanctions entirely, supporting affected workers through aid programmes. Strong answers will see that this is a serious dilemma without a simple solution. The same question applies to many other sanctioned countries. End by saying that the carpet weavers are ordinary working people who did not make the political decisions that led to sanctions. The ethical complexity is real.
  3. Many Persian carpets represent paradise. In your culture, are there art forms that represent ideal places or states?

    This is a creative question. Students may suggest: religious paintings, landscape paintings, garden design, architecture (cathedrals as heaven, mosques as paradise), poetry, music. The deeper point is that humans across cultures use art to imagine and represent perfect places or states. The Persian carpet is one specific example of a wider human longing. Many cultures have similar representations. The garden as paradise is particularly common — Christian Garden of Eden, Buddhist temple gardens, Japanese tea gardens, Chinese scholar gardens, and many others.
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'How long would it take to tie one million knots by hand?' Take guesses. Then say: 'That is what is involved in making a single fine Persian carpet. The tradition has been continuing for at least 2,500 years. We are going to find out about it.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe the Persian carpet: hand-knotted in Iran, with 2,500 years of continuous tradition, different distinctive styles in different cities (Tabriz, Isfahan, Kashan, Qom, Kerman). Pause and ask: 'Why might one country develop such a refined and varied carpet tradition?' Listen to answers.
  3. THE GARDEN (15 min)
    Explain the pardis tradition. The Persian word for paradise meant an enclosed garden. Many Persian carpets are stylised gardens — central medallion as the centre, water channels, trees, flowers, birds. The English word 'paradise' comes from this Persian root. Discuss: walking on a Persian carpet is walking through a small piece of paradise. End by asking: 'How does knowing this change how you see one?'
  4. THE REGIONAL STYLES (10 min)
    On the board, list five major styles with their features: Tabriz (medallions), Isfahan (elegant florals), Kashan (delicate florals, soft colours), Qom (fine silk), Kerman (pastel colours). Discuss: each region has its own tradition. A trained eye can identify a carpet's region within seconds. Knowing the regional differences is part of basic carpet literacy.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'What does the Persian carpet teach us about the value of slow careful work?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'For 2,500 years, Iranian weavers have been tying knots by hand. The patterns have evolved. The regional styles have developed. The tradition has weathered Mongol invasions, Safavid decline, and modern sanctions. Today, about 1.2 million Iranians still weave. The garden continues to be made, knot by knot. The story is not finished.'
Classroom materials
Design a Garden Carpet
Instructions: Each student designs their own Persian-style garden carpet on paper. They include: a central medallion (representing the centre of the garden), water channels (long lines of patterned blue), trees (cypresses, willows, fruit trees), flowers, and birds. They label the parts. Display the designs. Discuss: real Iranian weavers think this way every time they begin a new carpet.
Example: In Mr Rahimi's class, students designed carpets with combinations of central medallions, water channels, and trees. The teacher said: 'You have just done what Persian weavers have done for centuries. Each part of your carpet is a deliberate choice. The medallion is the centre of paradise; the water channels make it possible; the trees provide shade; the flowers fill the spaces. Real Iranian carpets are meaningful in this way. Now you have made one — even if just on paper.'
Count the Knots
Instructions: On the board, present these facts: a fine Persian carpet has 500,000 to 1,000,000 knots per square metre. A typical room carpet is 2m × 3m. Calculate: how many knots in such a carpet? (3-6 million.) If a weaver ties one knot per second for 8 hours per day, six days a week, how long does the carpet take? Discuss the patient labour involved.
Example: In Mrs Mirza's class, students calculated that a typical room carpet would take 2-4 years of full-time work. The teacher said: 'You have just understood why hand-knotted carpets cost so much. The labour alone, even at low wages, is enormous. Add the materials, the dyeing, the design work, the master weaver's expertise — and you have something that costs thousands of dollars and is genuinely worth it. Machine-made imitations cost much less because they take minutes, not years.'
Regional Identification
Instructions: On the board, show images of five Persian carpet styles (Tabriz, Isfahan, Kashan, Qom, Kerman). Without labels, ask students to look carefully at each. Then describe the distinctive features of each region. Reveal which is which. Discuss what makes each style identifiable. The exercise teaches the basic literacy of carpet appreciation.
Example: In one class, students were able to identify some carpets correctly even before knowing the rules. The teacher said: 'You have just done what carpet experts do daily. Each regional style has consistent visual features — colour palette, motif style, complexity, and so on. With practice, identification becomes quick. The regional diversity is one of the riches of the Persian tradition. Knowing the differences is one piece of basic respect for the makers.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the suzani for another textile tradition with strong regional variations and women's craft.
  • Try a lesson on Indonesian batik for another textile tradition where patterns carry specific meanings.
  • Try a lesson on the kente cloth for another national textile tradition.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the Safavid dynasty and Persian art history.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on Islamic geometric design and the principles of Persian pattern.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how international sanctions affect ordinary working people.
Key takeaways
  • The Persian carpet is one of the world's great textile traditions, with about 2,500 years of continuous history in Iran. The oldest surviving knotted carpet (the Pazyryk Carpet) dates to about 400 BCE.
  • Persian carpets are hand-knotted, with each knot tied individually around pairs of warp threads. A fine carpet has 500,000 to 1,000,000 knots per square metre and can take months or years to complete.
  • Different Iranian cities produce distinctive styles — Tabriz (medallions), Isfahan (elegant florals), Kashan (delicate florals), Qom (fine silk), Kerman (pastel colours), and many others.
  • Many Persian carpets represent paradise (pardis in Persian, originally meaning an enclosed garden). Central medallions, water channels, trees, and birds are common motifs. The English word 'paradise' comes from this Persian root.
  • The Safavid era (1501-1736) is often considered the golden age of Persian carpets. Many of the finest historical carpets in museums worldwide date from this period, including the famous Ardabil Carpet.
  • The Iranian carpet industry today employs about 1.2 million people but faces serious challenges from international sanctions and machine-made competition. Master weavers continue the tradition. UNESCO recognised Iranian carpet weaving as Intangible Cultural Heritage in 2010.
Sources
  • Persian Carpets: A Comprehensive History — Cecil Edwards (1953) [academic]
  • The Story of the Persian Carpet — Hosseini Mohammed (2006) [academic]
  • How sanctions have hit the Iranian carpet industry — BBC News (2019) [news]
  • UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage: Iranian Carpet Weaving — UNESCO (2010) [institution]
  • The Carpet Museum of Iran — Carpet Museum of Iran, Tehran (2024) [museum]