SAMARKAND

sămərkăndˈ, Rus. səmərkäntˈ, city (1991 pop. 395,000), capital of Samarkand region, in Uzbekistan, on the Trans-Caspian RR. It is one of the oldest existing cities in the world and the oldest of Central Asia. At the time of its greatest splendor medieval Samarkand was a fabulous city of palaces and gardens, with paved and tree-lined streets and a water system that supplied most of the individual houses. It had great silk and iron industries and was the meeting point of merchants' caravans from India, Persia, and China.

Modern Samarkand still is a major cotton and silk center. Wine and tea are produced, grain is processed, and there are industries producing metal products, tractor parts, leather goods, clothing, and footwear. The irrigated surrounding region has orchards and gardens and wheat and cotton fields. Samarkand is the seat of the Uzbekistan state university and of medical, agricultural, and teachers' institutes and the site of a regional museum.

Points of Interest

The old quarter of Samarkand with its maze of narrow, winding streets occupies the eastern part of the city and centers on the Registan, a great square. It contains some of the most remarkable monuments of central Asia, built during the reign of Timur and his successors. The most famous of these is Timur's mausoleum, surmounted by a ribbed dome and faced with multicolored tiles; the conqueror's tomb was opened in 1941. Other buildings include the Bibi Khan Mosque, with its turquoise cupola, erected by Timur to the memory of his favorite wife; several other magnificent mosques; the mausoleums of the Timurid cemetery (Shah-i-Zinda); and the ruins of the observatory built by Ulugh-Beg, a grandson of Timur.

History

Built on the site of Afrosiab, which dated from the 3d or 4th millennium b.c., Samarkand was known to the ancient Greeks as Marakanda; ruins of the old settlement remain north of the present city. The chief city of Sogdiana, on the ancient trade route between the Middle East and China, Samarkand was conquered (329 b.c.) by Alexander the Great and became a meeting point of Western and Chinese culture. The first paper mill outside China was established there in 751.

The Arabs took Samarkand in the 8th cent. a.d., and under the Umayyad empire it flourished as a trade center on the route between Baghdad and China. In the 9th and 10th cent., as capital of the Abbasid dynasty in central Asia, Samarkand emerged as a center of Islamic civilization. The tomb of Bukhari (d. 870), near Samarkand, is a major Muslim shrine. Samarkand continued to prosper under the Samanid dynasty of Khorasan (874–999) and under the subsequent rule of the Seljuks and of the shahs of Khwarazm.

In 1220, Jenghiz Khan captured and devastated the city, but it revived in the 14th cent. when Timur (or Tamerlane) made it the capital of his empire. Under his rule the city reached its greatest splendor; sumptuous palaces were erected, and mosques and gardens laid out. Under Timur's successors, the Timurids, the empire soon was much reduced; it broke up in the late 15th cent. and was ruled by the Uzbeks for the following four centuries. Samarkand eventually became part of the emirate of Bukhara (see Bukhara, emirate of) and fell to Russian troops in 1868, when the emirate passed under Russian suzerainty. In 1925, Samarkand became the capital of the Uzbek SSR, but in 1930 it was replaced by Tashkent.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Samarkand  - 1108 results

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The Golden Peaches of Samarkand The Golden Peaches of Samarkand A STUDY OF TANG EXOTICS by Edward H. Schafer...Berkeley and Los Angeles 1963 The Golden Peaches of Samarkand A STUDY OF TANG EXOTICS by Edward H. Schafer...
...5 Night Train for Samarkand 122...their shell factories for peace. In Samarkand the restoration of Tamerlanes tomb had...to the hidden cities of Tashkent and Samarkand, deep in the heart of Asia. My idea...
...eleventh. The urban population both in Samarkand and Kashgar remains fundamentally of...Changan, Loyang, Kaifeng or Peking, Samarkand, Ispahan or Tabriz Tauris , Konya...Kanda, an abbreviation of Markanda or Samarkand. 77 The two Chinese accounts add...
...cities like Panjikent in Tajikistan, or Samarkand and Bukhara in Uzbekistan are only the...defile about half-way between Balkh and Samarkand that breaks the low mountain range extending...word meaning town : Panjikent, Uzgend, Samarkand, Numijkat (the original name of Bukhara...
...Southern Silk Route 305 Chu-chu-po 305 Khotan 306 West Turkestan 323 Ferghana 323 Tashkent 325 Samarkand 327 Kab dh n 330 Ho 331 Kish 332 M imargh 333 Bukhara 334 Wu-na-ho 335 Mu 335 Tokharia...
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journal articles on: Samarkand  - 73 results

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...camels and clear springs": the Salars Samarkand origins. by Ma Jianzhong...thirteenth century their ancestors left Samarkand in present-day Uzbekistan and eventually...and 1424 certain Saluer crossed through Samarkand, the Turpan Basin (in present-day Xinjiang...
...carried out in and around the city of Samarkand between July 2003 and April 2004, and...the interviews was usually Uzbek or, in Samarkand city, occasionally Russian. A particular...to refer to healers like Gulnorahon in Samarkand and Andijan were bakshi or folbin, (7...
...This led me to the Samarkand Pedagogical Institute in 1928. In the...taking place. A column of Samarkand women entered the building of the...me to express the wish of the women of Samarkand for the...
...is discussed by Andre Gunder Frank. Samarkand in Uzbekistan in the Commonwealth of...Registan Square, said to mark the center of Samarkand. As Fodors 92 guide describes the square...According to Franck and Brownstone, p. 26, Samarkand may have had a population of over half...
...for a flourishing caravan trade between Samarkand and China through the Pamirs and Kashgar...Embajada a Tamerlan , p. 220, in Samarkand: "de Catay vienen panos de seda...overland to Tebriz, and probably Mashed and Samarkand as well. 51 These overland networks...
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magazine articles on: Samarkand  - 83 results

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The Golden Journey to Samarkand: John Lawton Visits the Fabled Cities...Journey ... to divine Bukhara and happy Samarkand. Marlowe, Milton and Keats wrote about...been there. In fact, so remote were Samarkand and Bukhara behind their natural barriers...
...Central Asia around His Glorious Capital, Samarkand. Now the Government of Uzbekistan Is...UNESCOs celebrations of Temurid culture in Samarkand, its timing proved disastrous. Muminov...Under Tamerlane, the imperial capital of Samarkand became the unrivalled Pearl of the East...
...churches and a synagogue) are open in Samarkand, but while Soviet subsidies restored...Jules Verne began package tours to Samarkand, the old Timurid capital. The six hour flight from London to Samarkand takes the traveller back 600 years...
...Chance The turquoise domes of Samarkand and Bukhara, in the former Soviet republic...photograph of the Shah-i-Zinda necropolis in Samarkand. This extraordinary palimpsest of the...focus of tourism. But a recent visit to Samarkand found the Shah-i-Zinda almost deserted...
...spawned fabled cities such as Bukhara, Samarkand and Tashkent. Marco Polo was the first...a vast empire, including Bukharas and Samarkands glorious mosques and monuments. Statues...From Bukhara, we boarded a bus to Samarkand. The road passes through endless miles...
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newspaper articles on: Samarkand  - 78 results

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Paperbacks. Byline: SIMON SHAW Murder In Samarkand by Craig Murray Mainstream pounds sterling7.99 pounds sterling7.99 free p p (0870 165 0870) uUuUuUuUuU Craig Murray was appointed...
Our Man in Trouble. Byline: CHRISTOPHER HUDSON Critics choice MURDER IN SAMARKAND by Craig Murray (Mainstream, pounds sterling18.99) THE subtitle to this coruscating memoir is A British Ambassadors Controversial...
...is where the great cities of Bukhara, Samarkand and Tashkent flourished. Marco Polo...heartland of his vast empire, Bukharas and Samarkands glorious mosques and monuments. His...flushed. From Bukhara, we boarded a bus to Samarkand. The road passes through endless miles...
...Jonathan Stroud Doubleday pounds 12.99 This is the third and the best in a trilogy and you really must read The Amulet of Samarkand and the Golems Eye first. In this final part London is still ruled by magicians but seems to be falling apart with riots and...
...Jonathan Stroud Doubleday pounds 12.99 This is the third and the best in a trilogy and you really must read The Amulet of Samarkand and the Golems Eye first. In this final part London is still ruled by magicians but seems to be falling apart with riots and...
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encyclopedia articles on: Samarkand  - 25 results

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SAMARKAND sam rkand , Rus. s m rkant , city (1991 pop. 395,000), capital of Samarkand region, in Uzbekistan, on the Trans-Caspian RR. It is...Central Asia. At the time of its greatest splendor medieval Samarkand was a fabulous city of palaces and gardens, with paved...
...1405, Mongol conqueror, b. Kesh, near Samarkand. He is also called Timur Leng Timur the...the entire area from his capital at Samarkand . Campaigns he waged against Persia...of his Russian conquests to return to Samarkand and invade (1398) India along the route...
...east. Tashkent , the capital, and Samarkand are the chief cities. Land and People...the Chirchik and Angren rivers, and the Samarkand and Bukhara oases by the Zeravshan. Uzbekistan...the 14th cent. Timur made his native Samarkand the center of his huge empire. The realm...
...between the Oxus (Amu Darya) and Jaxartes (Syr Darya) rivers. Corresponding to the later emirate of Bukhara and region of Samarkand, it was also known as Transoxiana. Sogdiana, though often a possession of other countries, had its own language, culture...
...Pamir-Alai mountain system, in Tajikistan. It flows westward through the agricultural Zeravshan valley, then into Uzbekistan, past Samarkand and Bukhara, and disappears in the desert near the Amu Darya, N of Charjew. The valley, irrigated by the Katta-Kurgan reservoir...
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