Misplaced Pages

Midyat Filigree Museum

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Midyat Filigree Museum ( Turkish : Midyat Telkâri Müzesi ) is an art museum in Midyat , Mardin Province , southeastern Turkey, exhibiting handcrafted silver filigree ( Turkish : Telkâri ). Opened in late 2023, it is owned and operated by the local municipality.

#836163

4-632: The museum is located in the Ulus St. of Akçakaya neighborhood in Midyat district of Mardin Province , southeastern Turkey. It is situated in a 1850-built house of Assyrian Gelle Hirmız family, which was donated to the Municipality of Midyat. The museum was established by the local municipality, and opened to the public on 10 December 2023. In the museum, handcrafted silver filigree artwork from

8-534: The Roman Empire , Byzantine Empire , ottoman Empire periods and the Republican era are on display. There is a workshop inside the museum, where visitors can observe the silversmithing, and also participate in handcrafting. The museum offers filigree artwork for sale to the visitors. The art of silversmithing in the region goes back to around three millemium B.C. The thousands of years old artwork in

12-428: The diameter to 0.022 mm (0.00087 in). Filigree masters from Midyat handcraft bracelets, necklaces, earrings, rings, belts, rosaries, keychains, objects containing religious symbols, kitchen objects, jewelry and ornaments decorated in different ways designed with plant patterns and geometric symbols using traditional techniques with great mastery. Midyat Too Many Requests If you report this error to

16-597: The museum are examples from Anatolia and Mesopotamia . Silverware was used in the history as kitchen items due to its anti bacterial property, and also as decorative items. Silver was used during the Roman period to prevent water in ornamental pools from gathering algae . The art of filigree is the hand embroidery of Assyrian masters from Midyat, shaped by the master-apprentice relationship throughout history. The silver wires used for handcrafted filigree artwork are melted at 950 °C (1,740 °F), and thinned by reducing

#836163