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Twin-Column Tekke Gül Bokhara Field

Afghanistan & the Turkmen steppe

Twin-Column Tekke Gül Bokhara Field

Afghan & Turkmen · Representative imagery

A representative Turkmen-style piece, its madder-red ground carried by two orderly columns of octagonal elephant-foot güls — the tribal heraldic medallions quartered in cream, indigo and ochre that act almost as a clan signature. Diamond minor güls float between the rows, framed by a banded kufic-influenced border and the plain end skirts typical of the tradition. The dense, even pile and lustrous handspun wool give the deep field its characteristic glow.

The tradition

Afghanistan & the Turkmen steppe

The Turkmen tribes of Central Asia and northern Afghanistan wove some of the most disciplined carpets ever made: deep madder-red fields filled with rows of repeating güls. Each major tribe — Tekke, Salor, Ersari, Yomut — carried its own gül, so the medallion functioned almost as heraldry, identifying who had made the piece.

Afghan war and trade carried these designs westward, and the 'Afghan' carpet of the bazaar — rich red with bold elephant-foot güls — remains one of the most recognisable tribal styles in the world.

Motifs & meaning

Reading the design

Turkmen design is built almost entirely from the repeating gül and its companions.

  • Gül

    The tribe's heraldic medallion, repeated as a badge of identity.

  • Elephant-foot (Filpa)

    The large octagonal gül of Afghan weaving.

  • Kepse / Dyrnak gül

    Tribe-specific medallion variants of the Yomut and others.

  • Kufic border

    An angular guard band derived from early script.

Materials & technique

How it is made

Hand-knotted in lustrous wool on a wool foundation, with the dense, even pile and predominant madder red that define Turkmen and Afghan weaving.

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