Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan Mattay Tyurrattam Akkssu(! Dzzhussallyy (! Sarrkand(! Dzzhanssugurrovv (!Ushttobe 70°0'0"E 75°0'0"E Talldy-- 80°0'0"E Kurrgan (o! 45°0'0"KNzzyyll-- (! 45°0'0"N OrdaCORRIDOR COMING FROM RIGA PORT, LATVIA Karrabullak Or(!da (! Tekellii(! Akkssuyyekk(! TALDYKORGAN (!Kugally (! Sarryözek Kokttall Chiillii(! (! Kazakhstan (! Kapchagay Yanyykkurrgan (! Chullakkurrgan(! Novotroitskoye No(!votroitskoye Kenttau (!Chu Diimiittrriiyevka (! (!Ottarr (! Panffiillova ALMATY (! (! !Turrkesttan (o! (! IIssyk ( ! Tallgarr (Krrassnogorrkka ! (! (!Karrattau ( Allmatty MANAS INTERNATIONAL A(o!IRPORT Kaskellen Bellovodskoye Sarrybasttau! TARAZ Zhambyyll (! Biishkek IIvanovka ( (! (! Challdovvarr Kalliiniinskoye Sokulluk Kantt(! (! Lugovoye (! ! (! Bugun (o! Pokrovka Merrke (! (! ( ! .! o (! Pokrovka ( KANT AIR BASE (! (! ! Kaiindyy Perrvomayskiiy Tokmak Burrullday ! (! ! Grroznoye ( ( Ananyevo ( Narrynkoll(! (! (!Sosnovka Grriigorryevka Tyyup Vannovka (! (! Kirovskoye Burrnoye Kirovskoye Rybachye o Arys (!Karrabullak (! (!Tallass Rybachye TAMCHY AIRPORT Arys SHYMKENT (! ! (! Leniinpoll Chuy ( Pokrovka (o! Pokrovk(!a Shymkent(! Talas Shymkent Lengerr (! (! Kocchkkorrkka Ysyk-kol (!Chayyekk (! (! CHIRCHIK (!Gazallkentt KARAVAN AFLD Karra--kull Zarraffshan o Jalal-abad Chiirrchiik (! o Narryn (! Sarryagach(! (! Tashkentt Kasansay Kyrgyzstan Naryn !( We(!nsu !( .!(o! (! !( TASHKENT INTL AIRPORT Kochkorr-- (! Aksu Yangiiyull Ucchkkurrgan (! (! (! (! (! atta At-Bashi (! Angrren At-Bashi (! Chinaz (! Chust Namangan (! Jalalabad Chinaz Akkhangarran (!Chust (! Khakkkkullabad Jalalabad (! (o! !( IIlliicch Solldattsskkiiyy ! NAMANGAN AIRPORT (! o(! JALALABAD AIRPORT !( Dzzhettyyssayy (! ( (! (! (! (! (! Pskent (! !( (! (! (! Pskent Almalyk ANDIZHAN AIRPORT (!Andiizhan Kurrganttepa Uzgen Syrrdarrya Almalyk (!Uzgen Aspara GGrroozzdd'' (! Aspara !( (! (o! (!Karra--Su !( SSttaavvrrooppooll'k'kaa (o! (! !( Shakkhrriikkhan ! !( MANAS INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT Geeoorrggiiyyeevvkkaa Kokand (Leniinsskk OSH AIRPORT !( Kokand (o! !( KKeenneess Margilan AAkkyyrrttoobbee LLuuggoovvooyy !( Bellovvodsskkoyye AArraall Chhaattkkeell Uzbekistan (! Margilan (! (! !( Chatkël' (! (! !( Chatkël' (! Kuva o Osh FRAME A !( Lugovoye OOyyttaall Gulliisttan (! ARAVAN WEST Osh Lugovo!(ye !( !( (! !( Biishkek Kantt IIvvanovvkka Yaypan PPooddggoorrnnooyyee Tyshtebay (! !( LLuuggoovvaayyaa (! VVooyyeennnnoo--AAnnttoonnoovvkkaa (! (!Yaypan FERGANA (!Ferrgana Tyshtebay KKaameennkkaa Sokkullukk ! (! PAKHTAKOR Khudzhand (! (! ! LLuuggoovvkkaa Challdovvarr Kaindy Kalliiniinsskkoyye ( Krraassnnoorreecchheennkkaa Bekabad Chkkallovvsskk (o! (! Kaindy ! !( Bekabad (! (! Rapkkan Riishttan ( (!Kyzyll-- (! ( Malovodnoye .! o Avval (! (! Malovodnoye o Khavastt (! Koniibodom Avval Merrkke !( (! KANT AIR BASE (! (! o! (! kiiya Kara-Balta KKrraassnnooookkttyyaabbrr's'skkiyiy!( (! (! ( Gaffurrovv Vuadiill !( KKaaiinnddaa Kara-Balta (!Navoii Dzhiizak Prrollettarrsk(! KHUJAND (! (! GGrraannititooggoorrsskk Perrvvomayysskkiiyy VVeerrkkhhnnyyaayyaa AAllaaaarrcchhaa (! Giizzhduvvan (o! (! Nau ISFARAoIIsffarra Osh !( !( Yuurryyeevvkkaa N4A0V°0O'0I"YN AIRPORT !( VVoorroonnttssoovvsskkooyyee !( 40°0'0"N (! IImmeenni i KKaarrlala MMaarrkkssaa UUcchh--EEmmcchheekk (! (! ! (!Urra-- (! Aktash (Kattttakurrgan !( !( Bukharra Aktash Tyube Sossnovvkka (o! SAMARKAND AIRPORT Batken (! (!Bachu Khashdala !( Tallass Kagan (o! (!Khashdala (! (! BBuuddeennnnyyyy Samarrkand (! !( oPENJIKENT Kashii (!(! Shulle TURKMENABAT AIRPORT Chardzhou Kasan !( Chardzhou (! Kasan GHARM AIRPORT !( Kallllyyg (! SSuussaammöörr SSttaattee FFaarrmm Komsomolsk o Komsomolsk Karrshii (! !( (! Yengiisarr (o! KARSHI AIRPORT KKyyzzaarrtt BBaasshhkkuuggaannddyy !( Dushanbe DUSHANBE (! ! Dzhangyaryk Regarr ( Dzhangyaryk ! (! Tajikistan KKyyzzyyloloyy KKaaiirrmaa !( (! .!(oOrrdzzhoniikkiidzzeabad !( TToolulukk (! !( TTookkttoogguull (!Shache !( KKaaggooyy (!Nurrex DDzzhhaannggii--DDzzhhooll (! !( TToorrkkeenntt Chayyekk (!Denau (! UUcchhtteerreekk !( SSaarryykkaammyysshh !( Kyzylkurgan !( Kyzylkurgan KKaarraakkeecchhee !( !( SSaarraaggaattaa KULOB Miinn--KKuusshh (o! Yecheng (! (!Kullyab Kerrkii Gaurrdak KURGAN-TYUBE (! (! (! (! (o! Karra--kkull KERKI AIRPORTo DDzzhhaannggii--DDzzhhooll !( KKrraassnnyyyy OOkkttyyaabbrr'' KAKAYDY (!Vakhsh !( NNaannaayy Piisshan !( Karavan Karavan KKaaiinnddyy o TTeerreekk--SSaayy (! (! o SSuugguutt Dyudyumel' MOSKOVSKIY PYANDZH KARAVAN AFLD Dyudyumel' !( o !( AAkkkkyyyyaa !( KKaazzaarrmmaann !( AAllaa--BBuukkaa Kyzylungungir Këkiyrim !( AAkk--TTaall ZZaarrkkeenntt Kyzylungungir Këkiyrim Karachi Khazratsho Karachi !( o !( Khazratsho !( FARKHOR AIR BASE BBaayyaasstatann !( !( !( TERMEZ Tash-Kumyr BBaayyggoonncchhookk Tash-Kumyr KKyyzzyyl-l-OOkkttyyaabbrr'' Moyu !( Turkmenistan (! !( Moyu !( AArrsslalannbboobb China Karaburgen (o! IIsskkoovvaatt !( CChheettbbuulalakk (! Karaburgen Terrmez(! FAIZABAD (! SShhaammaaldldyy SSaayy Achi !( !( Achi BBaayyeettoovvoo (! Kaassaannssaayy !( !( Chaharr Osaviakhim !( Emam AAlilkikhhaann Osaviakhim o!(! !( !((! AAkkcchhiyiy TTeerreekk Bagh Salieb (! (Feyzabad Hottan (!Lop !( !( Chub Salieb YYaannggiikkuurrggaann Chiicchkkeh ! Choku-Biy-Rabat OOzzffeerryyuusshh (! (! Khvajjeh ( Choku-Biy-Rabat !( Bash--e Dzhalpak-Sary !( Andkhvoy(! Aqcheh(! VVaarrzzyyxx Dzhalpak-Sary MMaazzaarr--BBuulalakk KKuuggaarrtt DDzzhheerrggeettaall do K uh Barzyk !( !( !( (! Kallan Barzyk (! !( Yussoff (! ! Chhaarrttaakk Bazar-Kurgan Bagysh ( Mazar Bagysh Ballkh Mazarr--e S harriiff Mazar (! NNaauukkeenntt Bazar-Kurgan (! Khollm Qonduz KUNDUZ Talloqan (! GGaavvrrililoovvkkaa !( Kairma Miirrzzaii (!Yangii (! (! !( !( !( Kairma (! CChhaarrkkaassaarr !( Akhman Almas Chust Koshkenchi Pashmi (o! (! Almas Chust (! (! Akhman Koshkenchi (! Pashmi NAMANGAN AIRPORT Arimdzhan Aman-Ail (! Aregh (! ! Naamaannggaann Arimdzhan !( Aman-Ail !( Aregh o Akhcha Sheberrghan MAZAR I SHARIF ( Akhcha !( Kocchkkorr--atta Qalleh (! !( (o! Pakhtaabad KKhhooddzzhhaarraabbaadd JALALABAD AIRPORT !( Pakhtaabad !( NNuurraa SShhaakkhhaanndd !( !( (! !( Mingbulak Teshiktash o AAkkbbeeitit BBuurraammaatututt Mingbulak Urganchi Teshiktash (! SSaanngg !( (! Urganchi !( JJallallabad SSaarryy !( KKhhooddzzhhaaaabbaadd !( !( MMaayyggyyrr AArraall !( Sarr--e !( Kok-Tundy Dzhamashuy !( !( Pamyat' Il'icha Kok-Tundy KKaarraa--KKaalplpaakk Dzhamashuy Pamyat' Il'icha Poll !( AAnnddiizzhhaann IIII Andiijjan (! KKhhoonnoobboodd !( !( !( FRAME A: AREA OF CONCERN Kariz Uzzgen !( DDoonngguuzzttaauu (! !Kariz (! IImmeenni i KKaalilinnininaa !( ( ANDIJAN AIRPORT Kurrganttepa KKaarraa--KKëëll'' ! Kum-Sigoza D !( ( Takhta (!Baghllan Kum-Sigoza !( Kanduga Takhta Yangi ! !( Kanduga (!Yangi !( KKhhaarrttuumm ( Kara-Su !( Kuyaly-Kurgancha Kara-Su Kilometers Bazarr Poll--e K homrrii Kuyaly-Kurgancha (! (o! (! (!LLeenniinnsskkooyyee Qalleh Afghanistan !( AAnnddizizhhaann MMaammirir--RRaavvaatt !( (! DDzzhhaannggyyaarryykk Meymaneh BBuuvvaaididyy D !( Kara-Kuldzha (! Kara-Kuldzha 0 510 20 30 40 !( OSH AIRPORT PPaakkyyrr--AAbbaadd (! KKuuttaarrmmaa MMaannaakk KKyyzzyylslsaannggirir !( !( !( !( !( DDaannggaarraa !( !( PPeerrvvoommaayysskkooyyee Leniinsskk IIsskkii--KKuurrppaa (o! Khasan-Chek GGuuzzaarr NNaarriimmaann Khasan-Chek Karasu KALAI MOR Kookkaanndd Uchkupryuk !( Karasu Uchkupryuk !( Mady !( !( Mady Nominal Scale 1:1,500,000 at A2 (! o DOSTUK(! !( KKyyzzyylklkiyiyaa Margilan D KKlloozziinn Margilan ARAVAN WEST !( SSeerroovvoo !( (! BORDER Ossh !( !( MAIN MAP Fergana Yaayyppaann Fergana 70°0'0"E Rishtan 75°0'0"E 80°0!('0"E Rishtan (! !( !( AAimimcchhaakkaakkyyrr o!FERGANA Akbilyal' ( Akbilyal' !( !( !( !( !( (! (! !( !( !( Pakistan !( !( o Airfield !( Primary Road !( National boundary Surface Waterbody Nat(!ional Capital !( !( Date Created: 28-JUN-2010 .! Kizöl-Kurgan Shuran Kizöl-Kurgan Map Num: LogCluster-KGZ-009-A2 (!Charriikkarr Shuran !( Coord.System/Datum: Geographic/WGS84 (o! Airport Vuuaaddiill Secondary Road First level admin boundary Seasonal Mineral Pans (o! GLIDE Num: BAGRAM AIRBASE (! (! Major Town Kilometers Tertiary Road Seasonal Waterbody !( !( Logistics Corridors !( (! Inter!(mediate Town The boundaries and names and the designations KKABUYL INTERRNATIONGAL Y Z S T A N Main Entry Points Trail River used on this map do not imply official endorsement 0 40 80 120 160 !( Rail and Road Supply Route or acceptance by the United Nations. (o! (! Small Town Railway Rail Supply Route Email: [email protected] Nominal Scale 1:3,000,000 at A2 !( (o! Village Warehouse Website: www.logcluster.org L o g i s t i c s O v eJArLAvLAiBAeD w Data Sources: GAUL, WFP, GLCSC D Border Post Road Supply Route Global Logistics Cluster Support Cell, Rome/Italy.
Recommended publications
  • Administrative Management of Territories Inhabited by Kyrgyz and Kipchaks in the Kokand Khanate
    EPRA International Journal of Environmental Economics, Commerce and Educational Management Journal DOI : 10.36713/epra0414 |ISI I.F Value: 0.815|SJIF Impact Factor(2020): 7.572 ISSN:2348 – 814X Volume: 7| Issue: 1| August 2020 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ADMINISTRATIVE MANAGEMENT OF TERRITORIES INHABITED BY KYRGYZ AND KIPCHAKS IN THE KOKAND KHANATE Boboev Mirodillo Kosimjon ugli Student of Fergana State University, Uzbekistan. -----------------------------------ANNOTATION-------------------------------- This article provides information about territories inhabited by Kyrgyz and Kipchaks in the Kokand Khanate, their forms of social, economic and administrative management, as well as their senior management positions. KEYWORDS: Kyrgyz, Kipchak, tribe, khan, governor, mirshab, Kokand, channel, feudal, valley. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- DISCUSSION In the first half of the XIX century, the Kokand khanate was the largest region in Central Asia. The Kokand khanate was bordered by East Turkestan in the east, the Bukhara Emirate and the Khiva Khanate in the west. The territory of the khanate in the north was completely subjugated by three Kazakh juzes and bordered by Russia. The southern borders of the khanate included mountainous areas such as Karategin, Kulob, Darvaz, Shogunan. For these regions, there will be bloody wars with the Emirate of Bukhara, which passed from hand to hand. The territory of the Kokand khanate, in contrast to the Bukhara emirate and the Khiva khanate had many wetlands, valleys and fertile lands. The center of the khanate was the Fergana Valley, where such large cities as Kokand, Margilan, Uzgen, Andizhan, and Namangan were located. Large cities such as Tashkent, Shymkent, Turkestan, Avliyota, Pishtak, Oqmasjid were also under the rule of Kokand khanate. The population of the Kokand khanate is relatively dense, about 3 million.
    [Show full text]
  • Classification of Fergana Valley Chaykhana (Tea Houses)
    Review Volume 11:2, 2021 Journal of Civil & Environmental Engineering ISSN: 2165-784X Open Access Classification of Fergana Valley Chaykhana (tea houses) Tursunova Dilnoza Raufovna* and Mahmudov Nasimbek Odilbekovich Department of Teacher of Feragana polytechnic institute, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria Abstract In this article, you will learn about the rapid development and maintenance of traditional chaykhana in Central Asia, as well as the new approaches to household and service facilities. And an architectural solution is given, taking into account modern, national and climatic, functional and traditional factors. Keywords: Chaykhana, Teahouse, Ferghana Valley, Andijan chaykhana, Market chaykhana, Sheikh Islam, Isfara Guzari, Khudoyarhon Park, Kokand, Uzbegim, Ferghana, Afrosiyab. important as working out an architectural solution of these places Introduction [1-3]. After the independence in 1995, for the first time in history the law Purpose: Fergana teahouse in the design, construction, of the Republic of Uzbekistan on “architecture and urban planning" explication, as well as socio-economic, demographic and natural- was adopted. Due to this law implementation and execution climatic conditions on architectural projects, forming the basis of numerous industry opportunities appeared and on the basis of modern requirements [2-5]. historical, cultural resources, climate, and earthquakes and in general, taking into account the circumstances of specific location 148 national state "of construction norms and rules" was figured out. Methodology It should be noted that the path of independence, especially in the Historical formation, project analysis, observations and export field of urban planning, increased attention to the construction of the requests of Fergana Valley chaykhana studied the origin, formation of the service facilities [1,2].
    [Show full text]
  • The Silk Roads: an ICOMOS Thematic Study
    The Silk Roads: an ICOMOS Thematic Study by Tim Williams on behalf of ICOMOS 2014 The Silk Roads An ICOMOS Thematic Study by Tim Williams on behalf of ICOMOS 2014 International Council of Monuments and Sites 11 rue du Séminaire de Conflans 94220 Charenton-le-Pont FRANCE ISBN 978-2-918086-12-3 © ICOMOS All rights reserved Contents STATES PARTIES COVERED BY THIS STUDY ......................................................................... X ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ..................................................................................................... XI 1 CONTEXT FOR THIS THEMATIC STUDY ........................................................................ 1 1.1 The purpose of the study ......................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Background to this study ......................................................................................................... 2 1.2.1 Global Strategy ................................................................................................................................ 2 1.2.2 Cultural routes ................................................................................................................................. 2 1.2.3 Serial transnational World Heritage nominations of the Silk Roads .................................................. 3 1.2.4 Ittingen expert meeting 2010 ........................................................................................................... 3 2 THE SILK ROADS: BACKGROUND, DEFINITIONS
    [Show full text]
  • Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia Kyrgyzstan’S Evolving Foreign Economic and Security Interests
    JUNE 2015 1616 Rhode Island Avenue NW Washington, DC 20036 202-887-0200 | www.csis.org Lanham • Boulder • New York • London 4501 Forbes Boulevard Lanham, MD 20706 301- 459- 3366 | www.rowman.com Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia Kyrgyzstan’s Evolving Foreign Economic and Security Interests AUTHORS Andrew C. Kuchins Jeffrey Mankoff Oliver Backes A Report of the CSIS Russia and Eurasia Program ISBN 978-1-4422-4100-8 Ë|xHSLEOCy241008z v*:+:!:+:! Cover photo: Labusova Olga, Shutterstock.com. Blank Central Asia in a Reconnecting Eurasia Kyrgyzstan’s Evolving Foreign Economic and Security Interests AUTHORS Andrew C. Kuchins Jeffrey Mankoff Oliver Backes A Report of the CSIS Rus sia and Eurasia Program June 2015 Lanham • Boulder • New York • London 594-61689_ch00_3P.indd 1 5/7/15 10:33 AM hn hk io il sy SY eh ek About CSIS hn hk io il sy SY eh ek For over 50 years, the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) has worked to hn hk io il sy SY eh ek develop solutions to the world’s greatest policy challenges. ­Today, CSIS scholars are hn hk io il sy SY eh ek providing strategic insights and bipartisan policy solutions to help decisionmakers chart hn hk io il sy SY eh ek a course toward a better world. hn hk io il sy SY eh ek CSIS is a nonprofit or ga ni za tion headquartered in Washington, D.C. The Center’s 220 full- time staff and large network of affiliated scholars conduct research and analy sis and hn hk io il sy SY eh ek develop policy initiatives that look into the future and anticipate change.
    [Show full text]
  • 2 Trade and the Economy(Second Half Of
    ISBN 92-3-103985-7 Introduction 2 TRADE AND THE ECONOMY(SECOND HALF OF NINETEENTH CENTURY TO EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY)* C. Poujol and V. Fourniau Contents Introduction ....................................... 51 The agrarian question .................................. 56 Infrastructure ...................................... 61 Manufacturing and trade ................................ 68 Transforming societies ................................. 73 Conclusion ....................................... 76 Introduction Russian colonization in Central Asia may have been the last phase of an expansion of the Russian state that had begun centuries earlier. However, in terms of area, it represented the largest extent of non-Russian lands to fall under Russian control, and in a rather short period: between 1820 (the year of major political and administrative decisions aimed at the Little and Middle Kazakh Hordes, or Zhuzs) and 1885 (the year of the capture of Merv). The conquest of Central Asia also brought into the Russian empire the largest non-Russian population in an equally short time. The population of Central Asia (Steppe and Turkistan regions, including the territories that were to have protectorate status forced on them) was 9–10 million in the mid-nineteenth century. * See Map 1. 51 ISBN 92-3-103985-7 Introduction Although the motivations of the Russian empire in conquering these vast territories were essentially strategic and political, they quickly assumed a major economic dimension. They combined all the functions attributed by colonial powers
    [Show full text]
  • C:\Documents and Settings\Owner\My Documents\Sounds of Silk Booklet.Php
    Sounds of Silk an exhibit of Instruments and Textiles from Silk Road Cultures The Silk Road passed through Central Asia, linking China in the east to Iran and the Mediterranean to the west. Connecting pathways went north to Russia and south to India and Afghanistan. Central Asia was inhabited by nomadic and settled peoples whose lives revolved economically around the Silk Road. They also absorbed new ideas and influences through contact with incoming traders, travelers and conquerors. In this exhibition of Central Asian arts, you can see the legacy of the Silk Road in the blending of these foreign ideas with the existing cultural patterns of both nomadic and settled peoples. Funded in part by Utah Humanities Council, Utah Arts Council, and Salt Lake County Zoo Arts and Parks Program. Utah Humanities Council promotes understanding of human traditions, Studies reveal that it was monks who first brought cocoons to Byzantium from China in the year 555 A.D.; the cocoon trade spread from Byzantium to Greece and from there to Italy, Spain and France from the 7th Century onward. The caravans of merchants either followed the road leading to the Caspian Sea by passing through the Afghan valleys, or climbed the Karakorum Mountains and arrived in Anatolia via Iran. From Anatolia, the caravans proceeded to Europe either by sea or by the Silk Road that passed through the Thrace Region. During the time of the Mongols with Ghengiz Khan in the 13th and 14th centuries Marco Polo took the Silk Road to reach China. Even today, the Silk Road offers an extraordinary variety of historic and cultural riches.
    [Show full text]
  • The University of Chicago Old Elites Under Communism: Soviet Rule in Leninobod a Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Di
    THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO OLD ELITES UNDER COMMUNISM: SOVIET RULE IN LENINOBOD A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY FLORA J. ROBERTS CHICAGO, ILLINOIS JUNE 2016 TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures .................................................................................................................... iii List of Tables ...................................................................................................................... v Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................ vi A Note on Transliteration .................................................................................................. ix Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 1 Chapter One. Noble Allies of the Revolution: Classroom to Battleground (1916-1922) . 43 Chapter Two. Class Warfare: the Old Boi Network Challenged (1925-1930) ............... 105 Chapter Three. The Culture of Cotton Farms (1930s-1960s) ......................................... 170 Chapter Four. Purging the Elite: Politics and Lineage (1933-38) .................................. 224 Chapter Five. City on Paper: Writing Tajik in Stalinobod (1930-38) ............................ 282 Chapter Six. Islam and the Asilzodagon: Wartime and Postwar Leninobod .................. 352 Chapter Seven. The
    [Show full text]
  • Uzbekistaninitiative
    uzbekistaninitiative Uzbekistan Initiative Papers No. 9 February 2014 Seeking Divine Harmony: Uzbek Artisans and their Spaces Gül Berna Özcan Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Key Points - • DespiteCentral Asia.extensive Soviet purges and the state monopoly in manufacturing, Uz bekistan today still remains home to the most fascinating artisanal traditions in • Forinto morepottery. than a millennium, great masters and their disciples have expressed their virtuosity in weaving silk, shaping metals, carving wood, and turning mud - • The most fascinating region, rich with such traditions, is the Fergana Valley where, dotted along a stretch of the ancient Silk Road, numerous small towns are special ized in particular crafts. • Throughlivelihood. tireless repetition of time-honored practices, many artisans and families have managed to maintain their crafts as rituals, as well as a source of identity and- • The social fabric of the community is nested in craft production, cottage indus tries and barter trade. Neighbors and relatives frequently cooperate and perform additional tasks. Extensive networks of relatives and friends help with buying and selling. The opinions expressed here are • Uzbek Government praise artisans as symbols of Uzbek national authenticity, those of the author only and do not represent the Uzbekistan sources of pride and generators of jobs. But, there seems to be no real will and Initiative. structure in place to improve the working conditions of artisans. Moreover, trade restrictions, arbitrary customs rules and corruption suffocate small enterprises. IntroductionUzbekistan Initiative Papers No. 9, February 2014 repeatedly shown vocal opposition to external power domination, as seen during the Basmachi The Fergana Valley is the cultural and spiritual- revolts in the 1920s against Soviet expansion and heart of Central Asia.
    [Show full text]
  • Uzbekistan Atlas Map Population and Geographic Data Section As of July 2005 Division of Operational Support Email : [email protected] R O W
    PGDS in DOS Uzbekistan Atlas Map Population and Geographic Data Section As of July 2005 Division of Operational Support Email : [email protected] R O W . C L 3 A _ s a ) )))))))) )))))))) l ))) Novokazalinsk t A ) )))))))) )))))))) _ ))) n a t s i ) )))))))) )))))))) k ! !!!!!!!! !!!!!!!! ))) Tyuratam e ! ! ! b z U ))))))))))))))))) Dzhusaly Aral Sea ))))))))))))))))) Kzyl-Orda KAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTANKAZAKHSTAN ))))))))))))))))) Chili ))))))))))))))))) Yanykurgan ) )))))))) )))))))) ))) Muynak ))))))))))))))))) Chulakkurgan ))))))))))))))))) Kentau ))))))))))))))))) Turkestan ))))))))))))))))) Karatau ))))))))))))))))) Kungrad ))))))))))))))))) Chimbay ) )))))))) )))))))) ))))))))))))))))) Zhambyl ))) Lugovoye ))))))))))))))))) Merke ) )))))))) )))))))) ))) Bugun ))))))))))))))))) Pokrovka ) )))))))) )))))))) ))))))))))))))))) Karabulak ))))))))))))))))) Burnoye))) Groznoye Nukus ) )))))))) )))))))) ) )))))))) )))))))) ))) ))) ))))))))))))))))) Talas ) )))))))) )))))))) ))))))))))))))))) Leninpol ))) ))))))))))))))))) ))))))))))))))))) Arys Kunya-Urgench ))))))))))))))))) Khodzhelyli ) )))))))) )))))))) ))) Shymkent ))))))))))))))))) Lenger Kalinin ))))))))))))))))) ))))))))))))))))) Mangit Il Yaly ))))))))))))))))) UZBEKISTAN ) )))))))) )))))))) UZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTANUZBEKISTAN ) ) ) UZBEKISTAN ) ) ) UZBEKISTAN ) )) UZBEKISTAN
    [Show full text]
  • Republic of Uzbekistan
    E2153 v1 Republic of Uzbekistan Bukhara and Samarkand Sewerage Project Public Disclosure Authorized DRAFT REPORT ON ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT Public Disclosure Authorized of reconstruction of wastewater treatment plants and sewerage network of the city of Bukhara Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Tashkent February-May 2009 Draft REIA, P112719- Bukhara and Samarkand Sewerage Project City of Bukhara ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS: WB World Bank RU Republic of Uzbekistan CM Cabinet of Ministers GoU Government of Uzbekistan IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IDA International Development Association BSSP Bukhara and Samarkand Sewerage Project BSWSP Bukhara and Samarkand Water Supply Project (WB) ADB Asian Development Bank UNESCO United Nations Education Science and Culture Organization REIA Report on Environmental Impact Assessment DMC “Donaev Management Consulting” LLC, Uzbekistan (Consultant) EMP Environmental Management Plan PCU Project Coordination Unit VK Vodokanal WWTP Waste water treatment plant WWPS Waste water pumping station AIS Agency of Irrigation Systems AMC Agency of Main Channels CDW Collector and Drainage Waters CIS Commonwealth of Independent States EA Environmental Assessment FS Feasibility Study GWL ground water level HGAE Hydro-Geo-Ameliorative Expedition MAL Maximum admissible level MAWR Ministry of Agriculture and Water Resources MOM Manual on Operation and Maintenance NGO Non-Governmental Organization O&M Operation and Maintenance ОP Operational Policy (WB) PIU Project
    [Show full text]
  • Fayaz Tepa Surkhan Darya Region Uzbekistan
    MINIstrY OF CULTUre - BOarD OF MONUments - UNESCO / JAPan FIT fAYAZ tEPA SURKHan DarYA RegION UZBEKIstan A CRATerre-ENSAG PUBLIcatION MINIstrY OF CULTUre - BOarD OF MONUments - UNESCO / JAPan FIT fAYAZ tEPA SURKHan DarYA RegION UZBEKIstan NOVemBer 2006 A CRATerre-ENSAG PUBLIcatION FOREWORD Located at the crossroads of the ancient Steppe Route Generously funded by the Japanese Government, the Fayaz-Tepa L and Silk Road, Central Asia possesses a rich cultural project aims, first and foremost, to conserve the ancient earthen heritage, offering a living testimony to thousands of structures for the purpose of safeguarding and displaying them. years of history and to the unique contributions of an astounding Related activities carried out in the framework of the project variety of peoples and cultures. The region’s present population include training, documentation and research, the creation of is a mosaic of these diverse influences, and its deep-rooted and a site museum, and the elaboration of a master plan for the multifarious cultural identity has been forged, in great measure, management of the cultural resources of the Termez region. by this diversity. From 2000 to 2006, an interdisciplinary team of international experts, working hand-in-hand with their Uzbek colleagues, In recent years, UNESCO has undertaken several challenging have introduced state-of-the-art conservation methods, projects for the preservation of Central Asia’s precious cultural involving applied research, materials testing and painstaking heritage, as part of its overriding goal of safeguarding the documentation work. This has resulted in the transfer to the world’s cultural diversity. Our strategy in this domain has been host country of scientific knowledge and modern, up-to-date to help re-establish links between present-day populations and conservation techniques and practices, which can be employed their traditions and cultural history, with a view to building a in future restoration projects in Uzbekistan and the region.
    [Show full text]
  • Commercial Banks of Uzbekistan
    Commercial banks of Uzbekistan August 10, 2005 JETRO Tashkent office Copyright 2005 JETRO Content Part 1 Overview of Banking System ........................................................................................................................... 3 Total table: Business information...................................................................................................................... 4 Total table: Staff information............................................................................................................................ 8 Total table: Service charges .............................................................................................................................10 Total table: Owners .........................................................................................................................................12 Total table: Clients ..........................................................................................................................................15 Part 2 1. National Bank for Foreign Economic Activity of Uzbekistan .......................................................................18 2. State Joint-Stock Commercial bank "ASAKA Bank"....................................................................................22 3. State Commercial "Uzbekiston Respublikasi Xalq banki".............................................................................24 4. UzDaewoo bank ..........................................................................................................................................26
    [Show full text]