Offenbar wurde der Teppich unter dem Namen „An Ancient Armenian-Karabach Carpet“ in Los Angeles zum Verkauf (Auktion) angeboten. Ein in Los Angeles lebender Aserbaidschaner kaufte den Teppich auf einer Auktion und schenkte ihn dem aserbaidschanischen Teppichmuseum zurück. Update: Sie können diesen Teppich im Nationalen Teppichmuseum in Shusha finden. Dieses Bild habe ich während meines Besuchs im Jahr 2024 gemacht.

    https://i.redd.it/g75mabi73r9e1.jpeg

    Von MythArrow0001

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    12 Kommentare

    1. What’s the writing in red under the flowers? Seems like cyrillic alphabet?

    2. LMAO, there is literally a text in Azerbaijani on bottom. What a loser people they are

    3. minuddannelse on

      Obviously it was ignorantly mislabeled, but how do we know that it was “stolen”?

    4. Anteater7716 on

      Nice carpet, but I can’t find anything online that verifies your claim that it was auctioned off as an ermenian carpet in LA? Could you please reply with a link to an article or something?

    5. Sadly this happens all over the world where carpets are sold as something they are not. I have seen many times where armenian rugs are displayed/sold as turkish or azerbaijani. Im not justifying this but this happens sadly from both sides

    6. AmStillHereAnyway on

      To be honest you’re making a fuss over a carpet. There are children dying of hunger around the world. Get a life. Read a book. Learn a new skill. Damn … 👿

    7. ExpensiveAdz on

      It is a cheap story to mock Armenians for no reason.
      Which Auction would allow me to sell a carpet (that has a manufactured label on the bottom, 1971) in the US and sell it as ancient?
      So this patriot Azerbaijan man in LA has paid big money for “Ancient Carpet“ for no reason?
      Would not no one in the Auction notice the Year label on the carpet? Do you believe this? Was no one interested in Text before they put it on sale? You can translate text with google translate.

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