Turkish Rugs on Tudor Walls: 16th-Century Trade between England and the Islamic World 

About

Five hundred years ago, the Islamic world ruled much of North Africa, Persia, and Eastern Europe. Protestant Christian England, newly estranged from Catholic Europe, forged lucrative trade, diplomatic, and cultural relations with these Muslim global powers. By the late 1500s, few prosperous English homes lacked a Turkey carpet, silks, ceramics, or tapestries. These goods, as well as domestically produced versions of them, later found their way into English daily life. Yet, as much as the English admired the sumptuous wares, the tiny, isolated island nation wrestled over doing business with a people it deemed "heathen." This exhibition examines that fundamental attraction and ambivalence.

Dates

The dates for this event have passed. No future dates are available at this time.
  
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