THREAD: In the UK we are currently celebrating #SouthAsianHeritageMonth so I thought I’d highlight some of the historic & cultural ties between Uzbekistan & South Asia. There are lots for me to choose from! /1
The Graeco-Bactrian Kingdom covered much of Central & South Asia. Their coins, statuary & urban planning are found in archeological sites across the region, demonstrating the movement of people, ideas, & goods. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 2/
Buddhism travelled to Central Asia from India & thrived in Uzbekistan from the 1st c BC. Some linguists think the name Bukhara comes from the Sanskrit Vihara (Buddhist monastery). Termez was a major Buddhist centre, with monasteries, temples, & stupas. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 3/
Zoroastrianism was a major faith in Uzbekistan 2,000 years ago. It spread to India in the Sassanian period. Parsis can visit the dakhmo funerary tower at Chilpyk & there are ruins of a fire temple within the Magok-i-Attari Mosque in Bukhara. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 4/
Many people know Al Khwarizmi as the founder of algebra. He was also responsible for spreading the Hindu-Arabic numeral system to the Middle East & Europe. Al Khwarizmi came from Khorezm, the area around Khiva, hence his name. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 5/
The 9-10th c Samanid Mausoleum in Bukhara is the oldest surviving monument of Islamic architecture in Central Asia & may be the first example of a Sunni mausoleum. Muhammad Ali Jinnah’s Mazar-e-Quaid in Karachi, Pakistan is modelled after this building #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 6/
Samarkand’s @unesco Bibi Khanym Mosque was paid for with the loot from Timur's attack on Delhi. He brought 95 Indian elephants to do the heavy lifting during construction, & decorated the walls with papier mâché, a handicraft from Kashmir. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 7/
Timur’s mausoleum, the Gur-i Amir in Samarkand, was the model for Mughal garden tombs. These include Babur’s Tomb in Kabul, Humayun’s Tomb in Delhi, & the Taj Mahal in Agra. All four monuments are @unesco World Heritage Sites or on the Tentative List. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 8/
The Naqshbandi order of Sufis takes it name from Bahauddin Naqshband, a 14th c Sayyid from Bukhara. His memorial complex remains a place of pilgrimage; there’s a khanqah, mosque, madrassa & the necropolis where the saint is buried. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 9/
Babur, the 1st Mughal Emperor, was born in the Fergana Valley. He wanted to reclaim Timur’s capital, Samarkand, but failed & turned his attention south to Afghanistan & then India. @DalrympleWill wrote about Babur’s homeland: on.ft.com/3zpQzPC#SouthAsianHeritageMonth 10/
I wrote my undergrad dissertation on Mughal miniatures, which were heavily influenced by the ateliers in Bukhara & Samarkand. @UNESCO has a fantastic PDF about the arts of the book, painting & calligraphy: bit.ly/36RT2WD#SouthAsianHeritageMonth 11/
One of my favourite museums in Ladakh is the Munshi Aziz Bhat Museum of Central Asian Trade Artefacts in Kargil. It tells the story of overland trade between India & C Asia before international borders closed in the 1940s. kargilmuseum.org#SouthAsianHeritageMonth 12/
Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin brokered the Tashkent Agreement, the peace treaty which ended the 1965 Indo-Pakistan War, at Hotel Uzbekistan. Uzbekistan still plays a diplomatic role today, including in the Afghan peace process bit.ly/3eJvcRl#SouthAsianHeritageMonth 13/
Bollywood films were hugely popular in the USSR. Alibaba Aur 40 Chor - a blockbuster hit in 1980 - was filmed in Uzbekistan. More recently, HoiChoi Unlimited (2018) starring Dev was a joint Indian-Uzbek project. #SouthAsianHeritageMonth 14/
The Central Asia - South Asia Connectivity Summit took place in Tashkent this month. The focus was on economy, security, & culture, topics with a long history & which are critical for the region's shared future: bit.ly/3wXjjxi#SouthAsianHeritageMonth 15/
Lastly: There are direct flights to Uzbekistan from Afghanistan, India & Pakistan, as well as from the UAE & other major hubs. Indian nationals can get an evisa for $20 & @uzbekmfa has announced Pakistani nationals will be added to the evisa list soon! /end
*father of algebra!
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1/ Approaching the end of the year I’m reflecting on books I read in 2022 which enhanced my knowledge of Central Asia, making me think about Uzbekistan & its neighbours in new ways. Here are 10 titles which impressed me:
2/ Atomic Steppe by @tkassenova is the gripping, real life story of Soviet nuclear testing and Kazakhstan’s campaign for nuclear disarmament. Painful but important reading.
Amazon: amzn.to/3EEi63R
Bookshop: bit.ly/3V9jToL
3/ Also from Kazakhstan, the new edition of @joannalillis’ Dark Shadows lifts the lid on many of contemporary Kazakhstan’s secrets, with new chapters on the January 2022 protests & Chinese repression of ethnic Kazakhs and others in Xinjiang.
Amazon: amzn.to/3U5TGWJ
Uzbekistan’s Fergana Valley came top in my poll last week, so here’s the thread you’ve been waiting for.
This lush, fertile, & partly mountainous region is in the east of UZ, bordering Tajikistan & Kyrgyzstan. 1/
It‘s the agricultural heartland of Uzbekistan, famed for its fruits in particular. Agri-tourism is in its infancy, but in the Fergana Valley you’ll find sweet melons, nectarines and apricots which taste like honey, huge bunches of grapes, & fat, juicy strawberries. 2/
The markets are magnificent (this is the Silk Road, after all), but for me nothing beats fresh pomegranate juice from a roadside stall, or plucking one straight from the tree in the orchard. 3/