2002 Visit of / Visite de / Besuch von / Visita de / Chiamata di de Samarkande (ouzbekistan) /
Samarkand (uzbekistan)
Semerkand /
Самарқанд / Samarkand / の訪問 / زياره
سمرقند / 访问萨马尔罕 / Samarkand / 의 방문
Samarkand (
Greek:
Marakanda) is one of the oldest inhabited cities in the world, prospering from its location on the (
Silk Road) trade route between
China and
Europe. At times Samarkand has been the greatest city of
Central Asia, and for much of its history it has been under
Persian rule. Founded circa 700
BCE it was already the capital of the Sogdian satrapy under the
Achaemenid dynasty of
Persia when
Alexander the Great conquered it in 329 BCE (see Afrasiab,
Sogdiana). Under
Sassanid Empire of Persia, Samarkand flourished and became one of the most important cities of the
Persian empire.
Under
Abbasid rule, the secret of papermaking was obtained from two
Chinese prisoners from the
Battle of Talas in 751, which led to the first paper mill in the
Islamic world to be founded in Samarkand. The invention then spread to the rest of the Islamic world, and from there to Europe (either through
Spain or through crusaders).
From the 6th to
13th centuries it grew larger and more populous than modern Samarkand and was controlled by the
Western Turks,
Arabs (who converted the area to
Islam), Persian
Samanids, Karakhan
Turks,
Seljuk Turks, Karakitay, and
Khorezmshah before being sacked by the
Mongols in 1220. A small part of the population survived, but Samarkand suffered at least another
Mongol sack by
Khan Baraq to get treasure he needed to pay an army with.
The town took many decades to recover from these disasters.
In 1370,
Timur the Lame (
Tamerlane) decided to make Samarkand the capital of his projected world empire, which extended from
India to
Turkey. For the next 35 years, he built a new city, populating it with artisans and craftsmen from all of the places he had captured.
Timur gained a reputation for wisdom and generosity, and Samarkand grew to become the center of the region of Transoxiana.
His grandson
Ulugh Beg ruled the country for 40 years. In Samarkand, Ulugh Beg created a scientific school that united outstanding astronomers and mathematicians. He also ordered the construction of an observatory; it contained a gigantic but precision-made marble sextant with an arc length of 63 meters. Ulugh Beg is also founder of uzbek language and uzbek nation
.
In the 16th century,
Shaybanids moved their capital to
Bukhara, and Samarkand went into decline. After an assault by the Persian warlord
Nadir Shah, the city was abandoned in the
18th century.
In 1868, the city came under
Russian rule, when the citadel was stormed by a force under
Colonel A.K. Abramov (1836-1886). Shortly thereafter the small Russian garrison of
500 men were themselves besieged. The assault was led by
Abdul Malik Tura, the rebellious elder son of the
Bukharan Emir, together with the Bek of
Shahrisabz, and the attack was beaten off with heavy losses. Abramov, now a general, became the first
Governor of the
Military Okrug which the
Russians established along the course of the
River Zeravshan, of which Samarkand was the administrative centre. It later became the capital of the
Samarkand Oblast of
Russian Turkestan, and grew in importance still further when the
Trans-Caspian railway reached the city in
1888. It became the capital of the
Uzbek SSR in 1925 before being replaced by
Tashkent in
1930. (wikipedia)
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- published: 14 Jul 2006
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