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A Rich Culture, Fed By Oil

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  • A Rich Culture, Fed By Oil

    A RICH CULTURE, FED BY OIL

    Wall Street Journal
    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB12247928833956379 9.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
    October 24, 2008

    A century ago, half of the world's oil came from one place: Baku,
    the capital of Azerbaijan, located on a stretch of Caspian coastline
    so rich with petroleum and natural gas deposits that the ground
    could actually catch on fire. Baku, a traditional meeting point
    of the Ottoman, Persian and Russian Empires, was transformed by
    the oil boom. European and local oil barons reinvented the city,
    importing European-style luxuries while pioneering the use of the oil
    tanker. Baku is currently undergoing a second oil boom, with offshore
    deposits providing profits.

    Both oil booms are evident in a lavish exhibition at Berlin's
    Ethnological Museum, called "Azerbaijan: Land of Fire," which
    chronicles 5,000 years of history and culture in the Caucasus, with
    highlights from Baku's major museums. It's all here: Bronze Age relics;
    medieval Islamic ceramics; 19-century handicrafts; early 20th-century
    political caricatures; late 20th-century political propaganda; and
    contemporary Azerbaijani art.

    The variety of objects is dazzling, but the carpets are a standout. The
    most impressive are the Karabakh carpets, marked by dramatic colors
    and geometric forms, produced in the 19th century, when Azerbaijan's
    carpet industry reached a highpoint. Around the corner from the
    carpets, a slideshow documents life in Baku during the first boom
    with a parade of images featuring medieval-looking barbershops,
    Dickensian oil derricks and elegant boulevards.
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