Сообщения

Сообщения за май, 2024

Blog 5

Изображение
 Hi  Today we went to Modarixon Madrasah with our group and our teacher Zarina Bahodirovna  Historians highly appreciate Abdullah Khan's efforts to improve the territory. With it, thanks to the strengthening of the central authority, large-scale construction work was carried out. Abdulla Khan built more than 1000 buildings and fountains, many madrassas, mosques, bridges, reservoirs. In Bukhara, an extensive trade center was established.       So in the western part of the historical part of Bukhara is Kosh Madrasah. It is an architectural ensemble consisting of two madrasahs: MedressaModari Khan and Medrese Abdullah Khan. ensemble consisting of two madrasahs: MedressaModari Khan and Medrese Abdullah Khan.   Madari Khan was first built in 1566 - 1567. Modari Khan is translated as "Khan's mother", since this madrasah was built by the Uzbek Khan Abdullah Khan II in honor of his mother.       The main facade of the Modari Khan of the rich is decorated with tiles of multi-

Blog 4

Изображение
 Hi there T oday we went to Boboyi Porado'z with our group and our teacher Zarina Bahodirovna. The Boboyi Poradoz Mausoleum (Uzbek: Boboyi Poradoʻz maqbarasi) is a monument of architecture in Bukhara, Uzbekistan. The mausoleum was built in the 19th century and is located behind the Salakhona gate. Today the mausoleum is located opposite the Ibn Sina Library of Bukhara. The mausoleum is included in the National List of Objects of Material Cultural Heritage of Uzbekistan of Republican Importance The mausoleum of Hazrat Boboyi Poradoz is located in the southeast part of Bukhara, near the city gate of Salakhona. Here, in the early 20th century, there was a mazar with a complex of architectural structures (mausoleums, mosques, rooms for pilgrims, residential houses, wells). Now only the center of the mausoleum remains, where Boboyi Poradoz was once buried, and in his honor the whole mazar was named. Boboyi Poradoz was a scholar and sheikh, born in Bukhara in 842 and died in 925. Overall

Blog 3

Изображение
 Hi everyone  Today is the third day of our practical week and today's destination is Piridastgir mosque  It is one of the mosques built for praying during Eid festivals. It was built behind the gate of the prayer hall in the southern part of Bukhara by Shams al-Mulk (1068-1080), who ruled Bukhara under the Kara-Khanid dynasty, in the 11th century.[1] It was built in the 11th-16th centuries. The mosque's facade is on the west side, with a mihrab in the center of the mosque, made of baked bricks. The arch is decorated with carved and glazed tiles. The mosque was destroyed and demolished in the 11th century. In 1119–1120, by the order of Muhammad Arslan ibn Sulaymon, the ruler of the Qarakhanid state, a new arch was built in place of the old prayer hall, with a mihrab and a place for the nobles. The mosque has survived to this day in its rebuilt form. The mihrab of the mosque is decorated with complex geometric patterns, "almonds", and floral motifs. The names of Muhamm

Blog 1

Изображение
 Hello Today is the beginning of our practical week and our first destination is Chor Bakr complex. I have never been this place before it is really interesting for me. Chor-Bakr is a memorial complex in the village of Sumitan at 5 km of Bukhara in Uzbekistan, built over the burial place of Abu-Bakr-Said, who died in the year 360 of the Muslim Calendar (970–971 AD), and who was one of the four of Abu-Bakrs (Chor-Bakr) – descendants of Muhammad. The complex includes the necropolis of family tombs, and courtyards enclosed with walls The Chor Bakr Memorial Complex, also known as Sumitan's cemetery, was established by Shaybanid ruler Abdullaxon II in 1559, and it includes a mausoleum, a mosque, a madrasa, and a large courtyard surrounded by high walls.[2][3] In the following centuries, additional buildings were constructed, and the complex was expanded to include adjacent areas. Abdullaxon II allocated 70,000 gold coins for the construction of this memorial complex.[4] The central buil

Blog 2

Изображение
 Hi everyone  Today is the second day of our practical lesson and we went to Chor minaret with our group and our teacher.  Chor Minor (Char Minar Uzbek: Chor minor), alternatively known as the Madrasah of Khalif Niyaz-kul, is a historic gatehouse for a now-destroyed madrasa in the historic city of Bukhara, Uzbekistan. It is located in a lane northeast of the Lyab-i Hauz complex. It is protected as a cultural heritage monument, and also it is a part of the World Heritage Site Historic Center of Bukhara.[1] In Persian, the name of the monument means "four minarets", referring to the building's four towers. The structure was built by Khalif Niyaz-kul, a wealthy Bukharan of Turkmen origin in 1807 under the rule of the Manghit dynasty.[2] The four towered structure is sometimes mistaken for a gate to the madras that once existed behind the structure, however, the Char-Minar is actually a complex of buildings with two functions, ritual and shelter. Originally, it was a part of