Uzbekistan

Save

Introducing Uzbekistan

No country in Central Asia seems to have it so good, yet at the same time have it so bad, as Uzbekistan. The region’s cradle of culture for more than two millennia, it is the proud home to a spellbinding arsenal of architecture and artefacts, all deeply infused with the raw, fascinating history of the country. But as students of that history know, it’s also sprung a few bad apples over the years. Tyrants enamoured by the country’s physical bounty have run the territory we now call Uzbekistan since time immemorial.

Concentrating on the good, if there was a Hall of Fame for Central Asian cities, Uzbekistan would own the top-three entries: Samarkand, Bukhara, Khiva. The names practically epitomize the region, conjuring up images of knife-twirling dervishes, serpentine desert caravans and architecture that blends with the sand.

Show full overview

Advertisement

Travel Services

Travel insurance

You'll be glad you got it.

Get a quote

Flights

Leave on your kind of jet plane.

Compare flights
See all travel services

Advertisement

Tilla-Kari Medressa in the Registan.
View gallery

Tilla-Kari Medressa in the Registan.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Andrew Bain
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Dome and minaret at Guri Amir Mausoleum, resting place of Timurlane.
  • Camels and yurts, Ayaz-Qala in the Kyzylkum Desert.
  • Mural on the side of a building depicting various types of Uzbke military men.
  • Young girl and two women at the bazaar selling spices with a picture of waterfalls behind them.
  • The tiled dome and minarets of the Sher Dor Medressa ( Lion Medressa ), finished in 1636, which flouts the Islamic prohibitions of depicting living beings
  • Entrance to Sher Dor Medressa.
View gallery