Introduction
Samarkand is the second-largest city in Uzbekistan and the capital of Samarqand Province. The city is most noted for its central position on the Silk Road between China and the West, and for being an Islamic centre for scholarly study. The Bibi-Khanym Mosque remains one of the city’s most famous landmarks. The Registan was the ancient centre of the city. In 2001, UNESCO inscribed the 2750-year-old city on the World Heritage List as Samarkand – Crossroads of Cultures.
Early history
Samarkand city in east-central Uzbekistan that is one of the oldest cities of Central Asia. In the 4th century bc, then known as Maracanda, it was the capital of Sogdiana and was captured (329) by Alexander the Great.
The city was later ruled by Central Asian Turks (6th century ad), the Arabs (8th century), the Samanids of Iran (9th–10th century), and various Turkic peoples (11th–13th century) before it was annexed by the Khwarezm-Shah dynasty (early 13th century) and destroyed by the Mongol conqueror Genghis Khan (1220).
After it revolted against its Mongol rulers (1365), Samarkand became the capital of the empire of Timur (Tamerlane), who made the city the most important economic and cultural centre in Central Asia. Samarkand was conquered by Uzbeks in 1500 and became part of the khanate of Bukhara.
By the 18th century it had declined, and from the 1720s to the 1770s it was uninhabited.
19th – 21st centuries
Only after it became a provincial capital of the Russian Empire (1887) and a railroad centre did it recover economically.
It was briefly (1924–36) the capital of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. Samarkand consists of an old city dating from medieval times and a new section built after the Russian conquest of the area in the 19th century.
The old city’s plan consisted of streets converging toward the centre from six gates in the 5-mile (8-kilometre) long, 11th-century walls. The walls and gates were destroyed after the capture of the town by the Russians, but the plan of the medieval period is still preserved. The old city contains some of the finest monuments of Central Asian architecture from the 14th to the 20th century, including several buildings dating from the time when Samarkand was Timur’s capital city.
Among the latter structures are the mosque of Bibi-Khanom (1399–1404), a building that was commissioned by Timur’s favorite Chinese wife, and Timur’s tomb itself, the Gur Amir mausoleum, built about 1405.
To the second half of the 15th century belongs the Ak Saray tomb with a superb fresco of the interior. The Registan Square, an impressive public square in the old city, is fronted by several madrasahs (Islamic schools): that of Timur’s grandson, the astronomer Ulugbeg (1417–20), and those of Shirdar (1619–1635/36) and Tilakari (mid-17th century), which together border the square on three sides.
Samarkand has several other mausoleums, madrasahs, and mosques dating from the 15th to the 17th century, though they are not as impressive as the structures from Timur’s day. The principal features of Samarkand’s ancient buildings are their splendid portals, their vast coloured domes, and their remarkable exterior decorations in majolica, mosaic, marble, and gold. The historic city was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2001.
The newer, European section of Samarkand, construction of which began in 1871, expanded considerably during the Soviet period, and public buildings, houses, and parks were built. There are Uzbek and Russian theatres, a university (established 1933), and higher-educational institutions for agriculture, medicine, architecture, and trade.