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Samarkand
Samarkand,
also Samarqand, is perhaps the most famous city of modern
Uzbekistan. The city center is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The site of Samarkand was settled about 2000 BC. In times of
old the city was also known as Afrosiab, and also Maracanda by
the Greeks. The city was the capital of Sogdiana, an ancient
Persian province, and was conquered by Alexander the Great in
329 BC. It subsequently grew as a trade center on the Silk Road,
the great trading route between China and the Mediterranean
region. In the early 8th century AD, it was conquered by the
Arabs and soon became an important center of Muslim culture. In
1220 Samarkand was almost completely destroyed by the Mongol
ruler Genghis Khan. It flourished again when Timur-i-Leng (known
as Tamerlane in the West) made it the capital of his empire in
1369. As his capital Timur put Samarkand on the world map and
much of the architecture visible today was built by him or his
descendants. The empire declined in the 15th century, and
nomadic Uzbeks (Shaybanids) took Samarkand in 1500. In 1784 the
emirate of
Bukhara conquered it. The city was taken by Russia in 1868
and once again began to assume importance. From 1924 to 1930,
Samarqand was the capital of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic
(SSR).
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