Tashkent

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<td colspan="2" align="center" style="width:100%; font-size: 1.25em; white-space: nowrap;">Tashkent
Uzbek:
Toshkent, Тошкент</br> Template:LangWithName </td> </tr> <tr class="mergedtoprow"> <td colspan="2" style="text-align:center;background:#cddeff;">—  '  — </td> </tr><tr class="mergedtoprow"> <td colspan="2" style="text-align:center;">Tashkent</td> </tr> <tr> <td colspan="2" style="text-align: center; padding: 0.7em 0.8em 0.7em 0.8em;;"> Aerial view of Tashkent

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<td colspan="2" style="text-align: center;">Tashkent

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<tr class="mergedbottomrow"> <th colspan="2" style="text-align: center; font-size: smaller; padding-bottom: 0.7em;">Coordinates: Template:Geobox coor</th>

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<tr class="mergedtoprow"> <th>Country

               <th class="adr">Uzbekistan

</tr><tr class="mergedrow"> <th>Province

               <th class="adr">Tashkent Province

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<tr class="mergedrow"> <th>Settled</th> <td>5th to 3rd centuries BC</td> </tr>


<tr class="mergedtoprow"> <td colspan="2">Population (2006)</td> </tr> <tr class="mergedrow"> <th> - Total</th> <td>1,967,879</td> </tr> <tr class="mergedtoprow"> <th>Time zone</th> <td>  (UTC+5) </tr>




Tashkent (Uzbek: Toshkent, Тошкент, Template:LangWithName) is the capital of Uzbekistan and also of the Tashkent Province. The population of the city in 2006 was 2.1 million.

In medieval times the town and the province were known as "Chach". Later, the town came to be known as Chachkand/Chashkand, meaning "Chach City." (Kand, qand, kent, kad, kath, kud--all meaning a city, are derived from the Old Persian, kanda, meaning a town or a city. They are found in city names like Samarkand, Yarkand, Penjikent etc.).

After the 16th century, the name was steadily changed slightly from Chachkand/Chashkand to Tashkand, which, as "stone city", was more meaningful to the new inhabitants than the old name. The modern spelling of Tashkent reflects Russian orthography.

Contents

[edit] Geography

Tashkent is located at 41°18′N, 69°16′E in a well watered plain to the west of the last Altai mountains on the road between Chimkent and Samarkhand. Tashkent sits at the confluence of the Chimgan river and several of it tributaries and is built on deep alluvial deposits (up to 15 metres). It is a lively tectonic area suffering large numbers of tremors and some earthquakes. One earthquake in 1966 measured 7.5 on the Richter scale. The local time in Tashkent is UTC/GMT +5 hours.

[edit] History

The principality of Chach, whose main town had a square citadel built around the 5th to 3rd centuries BC, some Template:Km to mi south of the Syr Darya River. By the 7th century AD, Chach had over 30 towns and a network of over 50 canals, forming a trade center between the Sogdians and Turkic nomads. The region came under the sway of Islam in the early parts of the 8th century.

Hsien-tsang (Xuanzang) mentioned the name of the city as Che-shih. The Chinese chronicles Sujshu, Bejshu and Tanshu mention a possession called Shi or Chzheshi with a capital with the same name since the V c. AD [Bichurin, 1950. v. II].

Under the Samanid dynasty, the city came to be known as Binkath. However, the Arabs retained the old name of Chach for the surrounding region, pronouncing it al-Shash instead. The modern Turkic name of Tashkent (City of Stone) comes from Kara-Khanid rule in the 10th century.

Image:Statue of Amir Timur in Tashkent.jpg
Statue of Amir Timur in Tashkent

The city was destroyed by Genghis Khan in 1219, although the great conqueror had found that the Khorezmshah had already sacked the city in 1214. Under the Timurids and subsequent Shaybanid dynasties the city revived, despite occasional attacks by the Uzbeks, Kazakhs, Persians, Mongols, Oirats and Kalmyks.

In 1809, Tashkent was annexed to the Khanate of Kokand. At the time, Tashkent had a population of around 100,000 and was considered the richest city in Central Asia. It prospered greatly through trade to Russia, but chafed under Kokand’s high taxes. The Tashkent clergy also favored the clergy of Bukhara over that of Kokand. However, before the Emir of Bukhara could capitalize on this discontent, the Russian army arrived.

In May 1865, General Mikhail Grigorevich Chernyayev (Cherniaev), acting against the direct orders of the tsar, and outnumbered at least 15-1 staged a daring night attack against a city with a wall Template:Km to mi long with 11 gates and 30,000 defenders. While a small contingent staged a diversionary attack, the main force penetrated the walls, led by a Russian Orthodox priest armed only with a crucifix. Although defense was stiff, the Russians captured the city after two days of heavy fighting and the loss of only 25 dead as opposed to several thousand of the defenders (including Alimqul, the ruler of the Kokand Khanate). Chernyayev, dubbed the "Lion of Tashkent" by city elders, staged a "hearts-and-minds" campaign to win the population over. He abolished taxes for a year, rode unarmed through the streets and bazaars meeting common people, and appointed himself "Military Governor of Tashkent", recommending to Tsar Alexander II that the city be made an independent khanate under Russian protection.

The Tsar liberally rewarded Chernyayev and his men with medals and bonuses, but regarded the impulsive general as a "loose cannon", and soon replaced him with General Konstantin Petrovich Von Kaufman. Far from granting Tashkent its independence, Tashkent became the capital of the new territory of Russian Turkistan, with Kaufman as first Governor-General. A cantonment and Russian settlement were built across the Ankhor Canal from the old city, and Russian settlers and merchants poured in. Tashkent was a center of espionage in the Great Game rivalry between Russia and the United Kingdom over Central Asia. The Trans-Caspian Railway arrived in 1889, and the railway workers who built it settled in Tashkent as well, bringing with them the seeds of Bolshevik Revolution.

[edit] 20th century

With the fall of the Russian Empire, a provisional government attempted to maintain control in Tashkent. It was quickly overthrown and local Muslim opposition crushed. In April 1918, Tashkent became the capital of the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Turkestan ASSR). The new regime was threatened by White forces, basmachi, revolts from within, and purges ordered from Moscow. Tashkent fell within the borders of the Uzbek SSR, and became the capital of the Uzbek SSR in 1930, displacing Samarkand.

The city began to industrialize in the 1920s and 1930s, but industry increased tremendously during World War II, with the relocation of factories from western Russia to preserve the Soviet industrial capacity from the invading Nazis. The Russian population increased dramatically as well, with evacuees from the war zones increasing the population to well over a million. (The Russian community would eventually comprise nearly half of the total residents of Tashkent.[citation needed])

On April 26 1966, Tashkent was destroyed by a huge earthquake (7.5 on the Richter scale) and over 300,000 were left homeless.

At the time of the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Tashkent was the fourth largest city in the country and a center of learning in the science and engineering fields.

Tashkent today is a very Soviet city, with few reminders of its position on the Silk Road or its 2000+ years of history. It is the most cosmopolitan city in both Uzbekistan and Central Asia, with large ethnic Russian and Korean minorities. The city is noted for its tree lined streets, numerous fountains, and pleasant parks. As capital of the nation, it has also been the target of several terrorist attacks since Uzbekistan gained independence, which the government has attributed to Islamic fundamentalists.

In 2007, Tashkent was named the cultural capital of the Islamic world[1] as the city is home to numerous historic mosques and religious establishments.

Image:Tashkent street near Darhan.jpg
The view of the street near Darkhan

[edit] Sights

Due to the destruction of most of the ancient city during 1917 revolution and, later, to the 1966 earthquake, little remains of Tashkent's traditional architectural heritage. Tashkent is, however, rich in museums and Soviet-era monuments.

  • Kukeldash Madrassa

Dating back to the reign of Abdullah Khan (1557-1598) it is currently being restored by the provincial Religious Board of Mawarannahr Moslems. There is talk of making it into a museum, but it is currently being used as a mosque.

  • Chorsu Bazaar

Near the Kukeldash Madrassa, this huge open air bazaar is the center of the old town of Tashkent. Everything imaginable is for sale.

  • Telyashayakh Mosque (Khast Imam Mosque)

Contains the Uthman Qur'an, considered to be the oldest extant Qur'an in the world. Dating from 655 and stained with the blood of murdered caliph Uthman, it was brought by Timur to Samarkand, seized by the Russians as a war trophy and taken to Saint Petersburg. It was returned to Uzbekistan in 1989.

  • Yunus Khan Mausoleum

A group of three 15th century mausoleums, restored in the 19th century. The biggest is the grave of Yunus Khan, grandfather of Mughal Empire founder Babur.

  • Palace of Prince Romanov

During the 19th century Grand Duke Nikolai Konstantinovich (1850-1918), a first cousin of Alexander III of Russia was banished to Tashkent for some shady deals involving the Russian Crown Jewels. His palace still survives in the centre of the city. Once a museum, it has been appropriated by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

  • Alisher Navoi Opera and Ballet Theatre

Built by the same architect who designed Lenin's Tomb in Moscow, Aleksey Shchusev, and built with Japanese prisoner of war labor in World War II, this theatre hosts Russian ballet and opera to Uzbek concerts.

  • Fine Arts Museum of Uzbekistan

Contains a major collection of art from the pre-Russian period, including Sogdian murals, Buddhist statues and Zoroastrian art, along with a more modern collection of 19th and 20th century Uzbek applied art, such as suzani embroidered hangings. Of more interest is the large collection of paintings "borrowed" from the Hermitage by Grand Duke Romanov to decorate his palace in exile in Tashkent, and never returned. Behind the museum is a small park, containing the neglected graves of the Bolsheviks who died in the Russian Revolution of 1917 and to Ossipov's treachery in 1919, along with first Uzbek President Yuldush Akhunbabayev.

  • Museum of Applied Arts

Housed in a traditional Uzbek house originally commissioned for a wealthy tsarist diplomat, the house itself is the main attraction, rather than its collection of 19th and 20th century applied arts.

  • History Museum

Tashkent's largest museum, housed in the ex-Lenin Museum.

An impressive building with brilliant blue dome and ornate interior (see photo to the right). Inside, the exhibits of Timur and of President Islom Karimov vie for the visitor's attention. The gardens outside contain a statue of Timur on horseback, surrounded by some of the nicest gardens and fountains in the city.

  • Navoi Literary Museum

A commemoration of Uzbekistan's adopted literary hero, Alisher Navoi, with replica manuscripts, Persian calligraphy and 15th century miniature paintings.

[edit] City built environment

[edit] Education

[edit] Media

  • 9 Uzbek language newspapers, 4 in English and 9 publications in Russian
  • Several television and cable television facilities, including Tashkent Tower, the tallest structure in Central Asia.

[edit] Public Transportation

  • Buses
  • Light rail trains/Street cars
  • Metro system
  • Trolley buses

[edit] Sister Cities

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://mnweekly.ru/world/20070524/55252222.html

[edit] Sport

Famous cyclist Djamolidine Abdoujaparov and footballer Vassilis Hatzipanagis were born in the city.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Template:Commonscat

<tr><th style="white-space:nowrap;background:#ddddff;text-align:right;">Central Asia</th><td colspan="1" style="text-align:left;width:100%;font-size:95%;">Astana, Kazakhstan ·Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan ·Dushanbe, Tajikistan ·Ashgabat, Turkmenistan ·Tashkent, Uzbekistan</td></tr><tr><th style="white-space:nowrap;background:#ddddff;text-align:right;">East Asia</th><td colspan="1" style="text-align:left;width:100%;font-size:95%;background:#f7f7f7;">Beijing, People's Republic of China ·Taipei, Republic of China (Taiwan) ·Tokyo, Japan ·Pyongyang, North Korea ·Seoul, South Korea ·Ulan Bator, Mongolia</td></tr><tr><th style="white-space:nowrap;background:#ddddff;text-align:right;">South Asia</th><td colspan="1" style="text-align:left;width:100%;font-size:95%;">Dhaka, Bangladesh ·Thimphu, Bhutan ·New Delhi, India ·Malé, Maldives ·Kathmandu, Nepal ·Islamabad, Pakistan ·Kotte, Sri Lanka</td></tr><tr><th style="white-space:nowrap;background:#ddddff;text-align:right;">Southeast Asia</th><td colspan="1" style="text-align:left;width:100%;font-size:95%;background:#f7f7f7;">Bandar Seri Begawan, Brunei ·Naypyidaw, Burma ·Phnom Penh, Cambodia ·Dili, East Timor ·Jakarta, Indonesia ·Vientiane, Laos ·Kuala Lumpur (official) and Putrajaya (administrative), Malaysia ·Manila, Philippines ·Singapore, Singapore ·Bangkok, Thailand ·Hanoi, Vietnam</td></tr><tr><th style="white-space:nowrap;background:#ddddff;text-align:right;">Southwest Asia</th><td colspan="1" style="text-align:left;width:100%;font-size:95%;">Kabul, Afghanistan ·Yerevan, Armenia ·Baku, Azerbaijan ·Manama, Bahrain ·Nicosia, Cyprus ·Tbilisi, Georgia ·Tehran, Iran ·Baghdad, Iraq ·Jerusalem, Israel ·Amman, Jordan ·Kuwait City, Kuwait ·Beirut, Lebanon ·Muscat, Oman ·Doha, Qatar ·Riyadh, Saudi Arabia ·Damascus, Syria ·Ankara, Turkey ·Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates ·San‘a’, Yemen</td></tr><tr><td style="text-align:center;background:#ddddff;" colspan="2">
Afghanistan is often considered Central/South Asian · See Positions on Jerusalem for details on its status as capital
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