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Christopher Aslan Alexander "A Carpet Ride to Khiva" 2010



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Khiva, Uzbekistan

Christopher Aslan Alexander "A Carpet Ride to Khiva" 2010
Khiva is one of the largest and most ancient city centres of the Khoresm agricultural oasis,
located in the southern delta of the Amu Darya River, south of the Aral Sea, in the west of
the Central Asia. The Kyzyl-Kum desert begins here.
It is rare to come across an entire city that is a museum. Though Bukhara is packed with
remarkable sites it is still nonetheless a living, working city. Khiva (population 50,000),
however, is more akin to a film set, the local population, rightly or wrongly, sidelined in
order to preserve historic buildings and present a manicured scene to tourists.
Tourist sites
Indeed, Khiva is the most intact and most remote of Central Asia's Silk Road cities, the final
destination of a trip back through the centuries from socialist Tashkent to medieval slave
town. Where Samarkand leaves the imagination exhausted, Khiva's khanate romance is
plain to see and where Urgench lies restricted to two dimensions, Khiva revels in all four, as
visions of the past float through its narrow streets like superimposed film: the Ichon Qala in
particular is a labyrinth of madrassas and mosques, minarets and trading domes that, at
least on the surface of it, look just as they would have done at the end of the 19th century
before Soviet town planners, demolition crews and modernist architects got their hands on
Uzbekistan. On a cold winters evening, after the wedding parties have departed and the few
tourists are enjoying their supper, you can be entirely alone with the ghosts of the past,
wandering the narrow streets and soaking up the atmosphere. Which decade, indeed which
century, you care to imagine yourself in is entirely up to you.
There are number of national legends about Khiva and the origin of its name. One of them
attributes the city's foundation to the son of the biblical Noah - Sim, where it is said that
Sim, after the Flood, he found himself wandering in the desert alone. Having fallen asleep,
he dreamt of 300 burning torches. On waking up, he was pleased with this omen, he
founded the city with its outlines in the form of a ship mapped out according to the
placement of the torches, about which he had dreamt. Then Sim dug out the "Kheyvak" well,
the water from which had a surprising taste. It is possible to see this well in Ichan-Kala (an
internal town of Khiva City) even today.
Khiva’s name, redolent of slave caravans, barbaric cruelty and terrible journeys across
deserts and steppes infested with wild tribesmen, struck fear into all but the boldest 19th


century hearts. Nowadays it’s a mere 35km southwest of Urgench, past cotton bushes and
fruit trees.
Khiva's tourist sites are divided between the Ichon Qala (the medieval walled citadel) and
the Dishon Qala (the mostly 19th- and early 20th-century outer walled city). Visitors tend to
spend most of their time in the former (the so-called 'Museum City'), but the Dishon Qala is
not without its own considerable charms.
It is free to wander around both the Ichon Qala and the Dishon Qala and to enter some of
the buildings. A single entrance ticket (US$12) covers the various small museums, entrance
to the mosques etc and is available from the booth at the Ata Darvoza (West Gate).
History
Khoresm was the scene of many battles and skirmishes for Alexander the Great, and the
Arabian army. Under the command of Kuteyb ibn-Muslim, his army attacked Gurgandzh
(the former capital of Khoresm) in 680, but could not permanently subduo the state for any
length of time. After some centuries, Genghis Khan's united army managed to rush into the
capital of the powerful state of Khoresmshah-Anushtegenids - Gurgandzh after a year long
siege, having destroyed the dams on the Amu Darya River. A consequence of which was that
the water of this turbulent river rushed into the city and practically wiped it from the face
of the earth. However, the capital of Khoresm revived 200 years later.
Between the IX and XII centuries, a number of Muslim educational institutions, and large
centres of science functioned successfully in Khoresm: schools of astronomy, mathematics,
medicine and chemistry. The most well known was the Mamun Academy of Khoresm,
which recently celebrated its 1000th anniversary; joined by the world community under the
aegis of UNESCO. Muhammad-al-Khoresmi's fundamental works in mathematics,
geography, and geodesy were already known in Europe by the IX century, and have not lost
their importance to the present day. Al-Biruni, Agakhi, Nadzhmiddin Kubro and other
scientists and seminary students, whose names are also connected with Khoresm, have left
a rich, scientific and cultural heritage.
Amir Timur pursued five campaigns in Khoresm in the XIV century, but only in 1388 did he
manage to win it completely. In due course, Khoresm blossomed again, and for a short
period became one of the most important spiritual centres of the Muslim world. After
Khiva's khanate was formed at the beginning of the XVI century, Khiva became its capital in
1598.
A major aspect of modern Khiva is characterised by the architecture of the Khivan khanate
from the end the XVII century until the beginning of the XX century. However,
archaeological excavations recently conducted here, show that in the basis of some rather
"young" buildings rests ancient layers connected to the III and earlier centuries BC.
The historic heart of Khiva has been so well preserved that it’s often criticised as lifeless – a
‘museum city’. Even if you subscribe to that theory, you’ll have to admit that it’s one
helluva museum. To walk through the walls and catch that first glimpse of the fabled Ichon-
Qala (inner walled city) in all its monotoned, mud-walled glory is like stepping into another
era. History is just a sniff away here.
The architectural monuments of Khiva are of unique value to the world. In the list of values
of universal importance, Khoresm occupies a special place, as one of the centres of world
civilisation and an important centre on the Great Silk Road. The city of Khiva was one of the
first in Central Asia to be added to the UNESCO list as a place pertaining to the world
heritage of mankind in 1990. Khiva celebrated its 2500th anniversary under the aegis of
UNESCO in 1997.


You can see it all in a day trip from Urgench, but you’ll take it in better by staying longer.
Khiva is at its best at dawn and by night, when the moonlit silhouettes of the tilting columns
and medressas, viewed from twisting alleyways, work their magic.

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