We explore the fabled cities of Uzbekistan

Trip Start May 25, 2008
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Trip End Jul 27, 2008


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Thursday, June 26, 2008

 
UZBEKISTAN
            Uzbekistan is another country we knew little about.
            By the start of the 19th century the entire region was dominated by three weak, feuding Uzbek city-states - Khiva, Bukhara and Kokand.  Later in the century all the khanates had fallen to the Russians. Russian domination continued until independence in 1991, with Islam Karimov elected as its leader.  However parties with a religious platform were forbidden to take part in the election, so he had no real opposition.  Under its constitution Uzbekistan is a secular, democratic presidential republic, but apparently the reality is quite different. There is very little open dissent due to control of the media, police harassment and imprisonment of activists.
Around 85% of Uzbeks claim to be Muslim, although only around 5-15% are practising, and mosques (with a couple of exceptions) are not permitted to broadcast the azan (call to prayer). The religious connection was weakened during the Soviet era. As well, open attendance at mosques invites harassment by government agents.
            Soviet rule forced collectivisation of the agriculture and a massive shift to cotton cultivation, which has had dire results for the rural population, and the Aral Sea. 
  
Tuesday 24th June                          Uzbekistan border - Khiva
   Meet our guide, who seems pretty good,speaks good English, and greases the path through customs.  We only had one English language copy of the custom form, so took a long time for everyone to copy the sample. Paul flirts with trouble by being over friendly with, and patting, the border German Shepherd, but gets away with it.
                                           US$1 = 1300 sum (at bank)
                                           US$1 =  1350 sum (black market)
1. Cultivation in Uzbekistan
1. Cultivation in Uzbekistan
2. Bringing in the crops, Uzbekistan
2. Bringing in the crops, Uzbekistan
Only about an hour to Khiva, through irrigated farmland, with small towns. A fair few rice paddies beside the road and a  lot of cotton fields with water flooding the channels between the rows.
  Do a fair bit of threading through narrow streets to find our Caravanserai style hotel (Arqonchi) in the old city, 3. View from our bedroom, Khiva
3. View from our bedroom, Khiva
4. View from our hotel rooftop - Khiva
4. View from our hotel rooftop - Khiva
5. Dinner at our hotel - Khiva
5. Dinner at our hotel - Khiva
6. Close-up of our dinner, Khiva
6. Close-up of our dinner, Khiva
right inside the main wall. We have organised to have a communal $5 meal in the hotel later, so  get a shower and out to look at the town in the cool of the evening  The town is stunning with beautifully restored mosques and medrassas, and a massive truncated minaret, fully tiled. Take sunset photos from our roof, and then down for dinner.  Tables are set up outside in the cool, and look great, heaped with salads, fruit etc etc. Have a good meal with traditional foods. Certainly a good introduction to Uzbekistan.
Reasonable night's sleep in spite of a rattling, ineffective a/c unit.
   Wednesday 25th June                      Khiva (Uzbekistan)
   Early start for breakfast in the hotel and 9AM start of the city tour, with our guide, at the entrance gate to the walled city (Ichon Qala) with the map, and Unesco plaque. As it turns out later this is where we lose Fulvio, but everyone assumes he was never there, as he frequently does his own thing.
            Khiva certainly existed by the 8th century as a minor fort and trading post on a side branch of the Silk Road. It grew from there, but in 1740 was wrecked by Nadir Shah of Persia.  By the end of the 18th century it was rebuilt, and its slave market was the biggest in Central Asia.
Buy photo tickets, and look at the outside of the Muhammad Aminxon medressa (1851-1855) which is now a hotel, and was a prison for five years in Stalin's time. 
7. Interesting walkway to minaret, Khiva
7. Interesting walkway to minaret, Khiva
8. Interesting old door, Khiva, Uzbekistan
8. Interesting old door, Khiva, Uzbekistan
9. The unfinished minaret, Khiva, Uzbekistan
9. The unfinished minaret, Khiva, Uzbekistan
10. Inside a medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
10. Inside a medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
11. Close-up of tile work, Khiva, Uzbekistan
11. Close-up of tile work, Khiva, Uzbekistan
12. Close-up of intricate paintwork, Khiva
12. Close-up of intricate paintwork, Khiva
13. Green tilework, Khiva, Uzbekistan
13. Green tilework, Khiva, Uzbekistan
14. One of the gates in the walls, Khiva
14. One of the gates in the walls, Khiva
15. A camel for the tourists, Khiva, Uzbekistan
15. A camel for the tourists, Khiva, Uzbekistan
16. Baking the local bread, Khiva, Uzbekistan
16. Baking the local bread, Khiva, Uzbekistan
17. Close-up of local bread cooking, Khiva
17. Close-up of local bread cooking, Khiva
Visit the residence (Ark) of the Kahns, Kuhna Ark, then Muhammed Rakhim Khan Medressa. On the way watch a woman making bread for a nearby hotel (not for sale to the likes of us), visit a woodworking shop, see multi-position intricate book rests made from one piece of wood, pestles, and walking sticks. At the silk carpet workshop we see skeins of wiry raw silk, straight off the cocoon, and soft treated silk which has had the glue (which combined the fine strands) washed out. The young women making carpets are a lot older than we would have expected. 
18. Outside of our hotel, Khiva, Uzbekistan
18. Outside of our hotel, Khiva, Uzbekistan
19. Silk-carept making and selling, Khiva
19. Silk-carept making and selling, Khiva
20. Making silk carpet, Khiva, Uzbekistan
20. Making silk carpet, Khiva, Uzbekistan
21. Minaret, Khiva, Uzbekistan
21. Minaret, Khiva, Uzbekistan
22. Entrance to medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
22. Entrance to medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
23. Khiva, Uzbekistan
23. Khiva, Uzbekistan
24. Juma Mosque with lots wooden pillars, Khiva
24. Juma Mosque with lots wooden pillars, Khiva
We visit the Pahlavon Mahmud Mausoleum, for a famous wrestler and leader, look at the tallest minaret in town, then visit the Juma Mosque, which is a low-rise building with a forest of pillars supporting a timber and earth roof. The pillars are all finely carved, tapered toward the top, and reduced at the bottom to sit on felt washers on top of metre high stone pediments. There are 218 columns, 6 from the 10th century, the rest from the 18th.
25. Alleyway in Khiva, Uzbekistan
25. Alleyway in Khiva, Uzbekistan
26. Medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
26. Medressa, Khiva, Uzbekistan
27. Harem of the "Stone House" Khiva
27. Harem of the "Stone House" Khiva
28. Intricate painted patterns, Khiva, Uzbekistan
28. Intricate painted patterns, Khiva, Uzbekistan
Next we visit Tosh-Hovli Palace (Stone House), built 1832-1841), with a harem for 4 wives and 50 concubines. The exterior rooms are all tiled, mainly in blue, the interior rooms are plainer, as they are for winter, and the walls would be hung with carpets.
   Looking at our photos, the highlights were tiling on the walls, carved wooden doors, intricately carved wooden columns and ceiling timbers, lavishly decorated ceilings, and the buttressed, brick clad city walls.
   At the end of the tour, end up in the market where the guide tees up a set black market rate, and we change $US100 ,others all change something. The money man is carrying a plastic shopping bag full of banknotes. MP buys an European power board for 4000 sum.  Have lunch at a nearby restaurant with most of the group, then back to the hotel for rest.
29. Modern market, Khiva, Uzbekistan
29. Modern market, Khiva, Uzbekistan
30. View of town from Kuhna Ark watchtower, Khiva
30. View of town from Kuhna Ark watchtower, Khiva
31. View of homes within walls of Khiva
31. View of homes within walls of Khiva
32. View of part of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
32. View of part of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
33. Another view of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
33. Another view of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
  Arrange to go with the guide for a 5PM climb to the watch tower on the Kuhna Ark, and take photos all around. This, like most things we have done today, costs. Only the mosques seem to be free.
   Afterward, walk right around the city walls, climb the wall at the west gate, walk through some of the back streets, but find the city does not look particularly "lived-in".
34. More tiling, Khiva, Uzbekistan
34. More tiling, Khiva, Uzbekistan
35. Close-up of unfinished minaret
35. Close-up of unfinished minaret
36. Statue with Old Town in background, Khiva
36. Statue with Old Town in background, Khiva
37. Another view of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
37. Another view of town walls, Khiva, Uzbekistan
38. Restaurant on "hauz" (artificial pool) Khiva
38. Restaurant on "hauz" (artificial pool) Khiva
39. Outside view of hamam (bathhouse), Khiva
39. Outside view of hamam (bathhouse), Khiva
40. Locals living in walled town, Khiva
40. Locals living in walled town, Khiva
41. Sunset, Khiva
41. Sunset, Khiva
       Try to arrange a small meal at the hotel, but end up with almost the full production of salads and trimmings, then limb to the hotel roof about 8.30 for sunset photos.  Dianne still having very restless sleep, and Murray has diarrhoea, which is not improving.  Since our lunch of take-away meat thingos a few days ago, more and more of the group are getting sick.
   Thursday 26th June                   Khiva- Bukhara
   Leave Khiva (which we have thoroughly enjoyed, although we've been told it's the lesser of the three main tourist cities of Khiva, Bukhara and Samarkand) at 8am, and head out of town through irrigated farmland, then 42.Rice cultivation - with canal water
42.Rice cultivation - with canal water
43. Amu-Darya River (formerly called Oxus River)
43. Amu-Darya River (formerly called Oxus River)
44. Countryside is dry!
44. Countryside is dry!
45. They rely on canals/river for water
45. They rely on canals/river for water
into drier land before coming to large canals and then the bridge over the massive Amu-Darya River, historically the Oxus.  Now been travelling for a couple of hours, and see sign saying still 470km to Bukhara. It's going to be a LONG day.
  Into dry land, coming upon a large canal with a good flow in it, then into very dry desert, with some high ground. See large water bodies off to the right, turns out to be the Amu-Darya, with Turkmenistan on the far side, and, according to the guide, hogging most of the water. Stop for lunch at a sun-blasted restaurant on a bluff 46. Scenery is pretty boring at midday
46. Scenery is pretty boring at midday
47. Scenery hasn't improved much by 4pm.
47. Scenery hasn't improved much by 4pm.
overlooking the river, with temperatures in the high 30's. Crack out DP's watermelon, and everyone gets stuck into it, after our wedges of samosa supplied by the hotel. Back on the road again -flat, very dry, very boring, and very hot.
48. Scenery changes dramatically by 4.45pm
48. Scenery changes dramatically by 4.45pm
Get back into irrigated land, with flood irrigated cotton, paddy fields close to Bukhara.
  Into town on wide divided roads, then into the narrower roads in the shadow of the old city walls, Stop at our flash looking hotel, Caravan, about 5.30pm. 
49. Miri Arab Medressa. Bukhara, Uzbekistan
49. Miri Arab Medressa. Bukhara, Uzbekistan
50. Kalon minaret, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
50. Kalon minaret, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
51. Close-up of dome, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
51. Close-up of dome, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
52. Garden inside our hotel, Caravan, Bukhara
52. Garden inside our hotel, Caravan, Bukhara
     Out to look at the city in the "cool"of the evening, taking photos of the major landmark buildings, medressas, mosques, minarets, old market buildings. Reach the ornamental pools, Lyabi-Hauz about dinner time. Have a look at the ancient mulberry trees, open air restaurants, and very basic perimeter water fountain, which is not operating. Decide on the north one of the three restaurants, and order a very cold large coke, a good aubergine and tomato salad, and a sliced beef/potato/tomato dish. Think it is a dish for two, but get two dishes. Too much for the two of us, but not bad. Took most of our ready cash at 17,000 Sum.  Used the internet, then back to the hotel for a good night's sleep in our good beds, with good sheets, and a quiet a/c unit which works. Dianne took a sleeping tablet, and successfully broke the habit of waking every 1-2 hours during the night. The heat and non-stop travel is starting to tell on us.
   Friday 27th June                                          Bukhara
 MP has been visiting the loo frequently, so decides to miss breakfast and try a stopper.
Out at 9.am, for a city tour with our guide. Find two older natural gas-powered minibusses outside, but a more flash diesel one turns up and we all get into it. Drive to Samani Park, and walk through to the Ismail Samani 53. 10th century Ismail Samani Mausoleum, Bukhara
53. 10th century Ismail Samani Mausoleum, Bukhara
54. 1718 Bolo-Hauz open-air mosque
54. 1718 Bolo-Hauz open-air mosque
55. Close-up of intricate work Bolo Hauz mosque
55. Close-up of intricate work Bolo Hauz mosque
Mausoleum, a 10th century monument. It is small, with an original exterior of textured brick, and a more recent brick dome.
  The building looks different on each side, due to the angle of the sun on the bricks. Inside the building, the structure is intricate, with spaces between the internal arches and the outer wall, and a variety of bricklaying patterns. The tomb itself is very ugly, in plain brick with typical flat ends and a peaked roof.
   We move on to the Chasma Ayub Mausoleum , built over the spring created by THE Job of Bible fame, striking his staff on the ground.
            Next to it is the new Imam Ismail al-Bukhari memorial complex.
 On to the 1718 Bolo-Hauz open air mosque, behind a pool, with an impressive decorated facade, and an open pavilion of timber ceiling supported by long, intricately carved and decorated timber pillars. Mosque staff are busy rolling out long carpets for the Friday prayer session.
  Some information on Islam and the State. While not banning worship, they make sure that they know who is going to Mosque and for how long, by putting in their own mullahs. State workers who want to get on shouldn't be seen as too devout. It is also forbidden to make the call to prayer, with a few special exceptions. The trouble in the Fergana Valley is all about suppression of over-zealous Muslims. There are eight active medrassas in Uzbekistan now, and they are controlled by the State.
56. Ugly 1927 Russian water tower, Bukhara,
56. Ugly 1927 Russian water tower, Bukhara,
  Close by is the 1927 Russian water tower, now disused. It is made from two oppositely wound hyperboloids of straight steel angle to form a curved structure. similar to the tower above Prague. Looks a bit like an Eiffel structure. Has a scary looking steep spiral staircase, and an even scarier builder's construction lift for paying sightseers.
   We cross the main road to the gate of the Ark, and squeeze past a big group of locals in the narrow passage to the top.  Hopefully get some good photos of the locals.
57. Walls of the Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
57. Walls of the Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
58. Entrance to Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
58. Entrance to Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
59. Locals at Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
59. Locals at Registan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
60. The walls will look even better next visit!
60. The walls will look even better next visit!
The area is known as Registan - (Regi = sand, stan = place)  The whole thing is mud walls, faced with brick, and filled with sand.  An Ark is a residence, in this case of the Khan. A khan is a ruler who is a descendant of Ghengis Kahn. If a ruler is not a descendant of Ghengis Kahn, he must be a so-called descendant of Prophet Mohammed, in which case he is called an emir. This is where the two British officers, Stoddart and Conolly, were executed in 1842. The building dates from the 5th century, and was occupied right up till 1920, when 80% of it was destroyed by Russian bombing.
   Take photos of the decoration and structure of the highly decorated Juma (Friday) Mosque, and the Coronation Court, plus an interior of the museum, and exterior shots of an interesting lion sculpture, trying to get colourful locals in the shot.
   Outside, take photo of the walls on the way back to the hotel where Dianne changes into cooler gear, and gets her water cooled neck band.
  From here we headed down our street to the major landmark structures, minaret and domes.  Have a look in the front of the Miri Arab Medrassa, but it is a working medrassa. One of these was used for training Soviet spy mullahs when they had Middle East ambitions.
61. Over-view of the main monuments, Bukhara
61. Over-view of the main monuments, Bukhara
62. Local colour, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
62. Local colour, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
63. Close-up of Kalon minaret, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
63. Close-up of Kalon minaret, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
65. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
65. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
64. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
64. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
66. Arched galleries of Kalon mosque, Bukhara
66. Arched galleries of Kalon mosque, Bukhara
67. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
67. Inside Kalon mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
68. Close-up of decoration, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
68. Close-up of decoration, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
Spent a lot of time, and shot a lot of photos in the Kalon Mosque, which was a hollow square with a tree in the middle, surrounded by 4 rows of arched galleries for the faithful to pray in the shade. The mosque was richly decorated with tiles on the facades, white painted in the galleries, with good view from the main courtyard portal back to the green domes and Kalon minaret.
   From here to the trade dome of the jewelers, then the Abdul Aziz Kahn Medressa which was old (1652) and unrestored, with the broken pomegranate style of portal decoration, and the stylized image of his torso, with a moustache and sunglasses. It is now a woodcarving museum. 
69. 1417 Ulugbek medressa, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
69. 1417 Ulugbek medressa, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
70. Broken pomegranate-style decoration, Bukhara
70. Broken pomegranate-style decoration, Bukhara
71. Exterior view of trade domes, Bukhara
71. Exterior view of trade domes, Bukhara
Next stop was the 1417 Ulugbek medressa, with an unusual twisted snake tiled edge to the portal, followed by a master craftsman workshop for finely crafted very sharp folding knives, offset scissors, novelty scissors. Showed us a scrapbook of a visit to Oxford as part of a craft delegation.
  We passed through the trade dome of the hat sellers, very important as in the old days, a man without a hat had to be a criminal, and could be stoned.
72. Maghoki-Attar mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
72. Maghoki-Attar mosque, Bukhara, Uzbekistan
73. Inside a trade dome -Bukhara, Uzbekistan
73. Inside a trade dome -Bukhara, Uzbekistan
74. Lunch at Lyabi-hauz - Bukhara, Uzbekistan
74. Lunch at Lyabi-hauz - Bukhara, Uzbekistan
75. Mulberry tree planted in 1477, Bukhara
75. Mulberry tree planted in 1477, Bukhara
    The next point of interest was the  Maghoki-Attar mosque, set at the 12th century ground level of the town, well below current ground level, with a 9th century facade, and 16th century dome. It is now a carpet museum, so didn't go in.
  Stopped for lunch at the 1620 Lyabi-Hauz, a plaza built around the pool, where we ate last night. The mulberry trees are very old, one is dated 1477. The pool is surrounded by mosques and medressas.
   Walk back to the hotel via the back streets, get lost in the "hutongs", but finally find a landmark and escape.
76. Backstreets still need some work -Bukhara
76. Backstreets still need some work -Bukhara
77. Backstreets still need some work - Bukhara
77. Backstreets still need some work - Bukhara
78. Jim working while we all play - Bukhara
78. Jim working while we all play - Bukhara
. Back at the hotel, Jim is sitting on the footpath, surrounded by tools and the new, hopefully improved, sound system from the truck.  Back down town later for a very unsuccessful internet. MP walks 2 km down to the commercial area and back while DP fails to send a private internet report which has a lot more juicy details about the trip.
79. Locals enjoying Friday - note dress - Bukhara
79. Locals enjoying Friday - note dress - Bukhara
80. Modern part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan
80. Modern part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan
81. Street scene - old part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan
81. Street scene - old part of Bukhara, Uzbekistan
82. Statue of Hoja Nasruddin-appears in Sufi tales
82. Statue of Hoja Nasruddin-appears in Sufi tales
83. Fanciful restaurant decorations, Bukhara
83. Fanciful restaurant decorations, Bukhara
84. Hotel Caravan, where we stayed in Bukhara
84. Hotel Caravan, where we stayed in Bukhara
  Dine at a different restaurant at the pool, once again Dianne has coke, aubergine salad and french fries. MP has only bread and some of DP's fries.  This turns out to be a good strategy, as those in our group who had the shashlyk here almost all got sick.
Come home by a more direct route, listen to BBC TV (the only English station) and read till late.
  
Where I stayed
Arqonchi Hotel, Khiva
Hotel Caravan, Bukhara
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