Uzbekistan History
Uzbekistan History
Where is Uzbekistan?
Uzbekistan – Central Asia
Region
Uzbekistan – General Information
•Area: 447,001 km2 (172,588 mi2) or 2.5 size of Florida
•Population: 26 million (July 2003 est.)
•Ethnic Groups: Uzbek 80%,
Russian 5.5%, Tajik 5%, Kazakh 3%,
Karakalpak 2.5%, Tatar 1.5%, other 2.5%
(1996 estimates)
•Independence in August 1991 from former USSR
•President: Islom Abduganievich KARIMOV (since 1990)
•Capital: Tashkent (population 2 million)
•Religion: Muslim, Eastern Orthodox
Geography & Administration
• Uzbekistan is a landlocked country in Central Asia.
• The nation is divided into 12 vilayats (governmental
regions) plus one autonomous republic: Karakalpakstan
(the Aral Sea region).
• The country can be divided into three zones:
• Desert (Kyzylkum), steppe and semi-arid region
covering 60% of the country, mainly the central and
western parts;
• Fertile Valleys (including the Fergana valley) that skirt
the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers;
• Mountainous Areas in the east with peaks of about
4500 m(14765 ft) above sea level (Tien Shan and
Gissaro-Alay mountain ranges).
Climate
Temperature is continental, dry and hot :
Summer 107-116 ºF in the plains
77-86 ºF in the mountainous zone
Winter 12 ºF in the north
35 - 37 ºF in the south
Rainfall:
Annual 10 inches
4 inches in the northwest
17 inches in the mountainous zone, middle and southern
Rainfall occurs during the winter season, mainly between
October and April.
Uzbekistan – Central Asia
Region
City of Samarkand
Uzbekistan
Kyrgyzstan
Turkmenistan
Amu Darya (river) Tajikistan
Afghanistan
What am I doing now?
Actions to be taken are:
Educate young people and professionals by training in the
college where I teach;
Bring young professionals from Uzbekistan to Florida,
discuss major problems, and come to common point of
view in water management issues.
Facilitate the adoption of US water management methods
and irrigation systems in Uzbekistan and educate Uzbek
people on why American systems work efficiently.
Improving drinking water supply, health and general
actions to promote the socio-economic conditions of the
population in the area.
If you are interested in details, please visit the web site
UzbekWater.net
UzbekWater.NET
Uzbekistan
Dr. Abror N. Gadaev
Samarkand, Uzbekistan
History of Uzbekistan
500-300 B.C. Early History
700-800 A.D. The Early Islamic Period
900-1200 The Turkification of Mawarannahr
1219-1380 The Mongol Period
1380-1510 The Rule of Timur
1510-1870 The Uzbek Period
1867 Arrival of the Russians
1867-1900 The Russian Conquest
1900 Entering the Twentieth Century
1900-1930 The Jadidists and Basmachis
1929-1953 The Stalinist Period
1953-1982 Russification and Resistance
Sep 1, 1991 Independence
Early History
Cities such as Bukhoro (Bukhara) and
Samarqand (Samarkand) began to appear
as centers of government and culture. By
the fifth century B.C., the Bactrian,
Soghdian, and Tokharian states
dominated the region. As China began to
develop its silk trade with the West,
Iranian cities took advantage of this
commerce by becoming centers of trade.
Using an extensive network of cities and
settlements in the province of
Mawarannahr (a name given the region
after the Arab conquest) in Uzbekistan
and farther east in what is today China's
Xinjiang Uygur Auton-omous Region, the
Soghdian intermediaries became the
wealthiest of these Iranian merchants.
Because of this trade on what became
known as the Silk Route, Bukhoro and
Samarqand eventually became extremely
wealthy cities, and at times Mawarannahr
was one of the most influential and
powerful Persian provinces of antiquity.
Zoroastrianism
Alexander the Great conquered the region
in 328 B.C., bringing it briefly under the
control of his Macedonian Empire.
In the same centuries, however, the region
also was an important center of
intellectual life and religion. Until the first
centuries after Christ, the dominant
religion in the region was Zoroastrianism
but Buddhism, and Christianity also
attracted large numbers of followers.
Zoroastrianism, the dominant pre-Islamic
religious tradition of the Iranian peoples,
was founded by the prophetic reformer
Zoroaster in the 6th or 7th century BC (if
not earlier).
The Early Islamic Period