NaxçivanSights

Sights in Naxçivan

  1. Carpet Museum

    The Carpet Museum is housed in the rebuilt palace of Ehsan Khan, Naxçivan’s 18th-century monarch. Despite the şəbəkə windows and attractive exterior porches, the building isn’t quite as impressive as Şəki’s equivalent. Nonetheless the rug displays are well chosen if you want to learn the difference between a kilim and a sumax or palaz, or to recognise the four main styles of Azeri carpet making. The ghoulish centrepiece is a totally non-ironic silk-wool carpet portrait of a young Heydar Әliyev, replete with Soviet medals. Two side rooms relate to the history of the Naxçivan khanate, replicate the khan’s cushion-throne and gratuitously add photos of Yerevan (n…

    reviewed

  2. Museum

    The town’s interesting museum housed in an 18th-century domed building that has been used variously as a silk shop, restaurant and zurkhaneh (‘house of strength’ – for the practice of a unique Iranian sport based on sufi philosophy). If you feign ignorance of Russian maybe the museum’s superkeen curator won’t force you to peruse the books he’s written to celebrate Ordubad’s ‘celebrity’ citizens.

    reviewed

  3. Kazim Karabəkir Paşa Mosque

    Not to be outdone by the Iranians funding mosques in town, Turks stumped up money to build the impressive Kazim Karabəkir Paşa Mosque behind the bazaar. This grandly-domed stone edifice has elegant missile-style twin minarets and splendid gilt inscriptions on the white marble doorway. However, if you're coming from Turkey you'll be likely to have seen dozens of similar structures.

    reviewed

  4. Möminə Xatun Mausoleum

    The impressive Möminə Xatun mausoleum is Naxçivan’s icon and one of Azerbaijan’s best-known landmarks. It’s a glorious, gently leaning 26m brick tower decorated with geometric patterns and Kufic script (a stylised, angular form of Arabic) picked out in turquoise glaze.

    reviewed

  5. İmamzadə

    The khans who once ruled from the carpet museum were buried in a squat, rather over-restored brick tomb complex with a simple blue-glaze dome. Known simply as the İmamzadə, it's below a graveyard on what were once the city's citadel walls. Access is from the road to the train station.

    reviewed

  6. Heydar Әliyev Museum

    The grandly rebuilt Heydar Әliyev Museum is a veritable modern palace of shiny marble. It’s somewhat more interesting than other such hagiographic shrines elsewhere in Azerbaijan if only because Naxçivan was Heydar’s home region.

    reviewed

  7. Mausoleum of Yusif Hüseynoğlu

    Hidden in Naxçivan back streets are a couple of medieval pointed tomb-towers in an octagonal form common throughout eastern Anatolia. The best known is the 1162 Mausoleum of Yusif Hüseynoğlu, by the same architect as the Möminə Xatun tower.

    reviewed

  8. Həzrət Zohra Mosque

    Built in pallid yellow brick the Həzrət Zohra mosque sports twin, rectilinear minarets and a metal-clad dome looking more like a lagged boiler tank.

    reviewed

  9. Blue Mosque

    The red-brick Blue Mosque isn’t very blue at all but makes a useful landmark when approaching the Möminə Xatun area by marshrutka.

    reviewed

  10. House-Museum

    Cavid’s sweet little wooden house-museum, where the writer once lived, long before being infamously deported to Siberia.

    reviewed

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  12. Historical Museum

    If you have time to kill, the Historical Museum is attractively presented, if fairly standard.

    reviewed