Jan 122013
 

By Jenny Coad

PUBLISHED: 19:26 GMT, 11 January 2013 | UPDATED: 19:26 GMT, 11 January 2013

You don’t go to Uzbekistan for the food or the boutique hotels.

Perhaps not even for the weather, though it’s scorching in summer. It’s bright and crisp with clear blue skies when we are here, and people seem to agree that it’s best to visit in spring.

You’re miles away from the sea – this is one of only two doubly landlocked countries in the world – and surrounded by fiery neighbours, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Uzbekistan

Absolutely epic: Samarkand has been described, not without justification, as ‘the greatest city in the Asiatic’

No, you travel to Central Asia’s alluring middle for the history. To pass along the legendary Silk Road, gaze at the tiled mosques, domes and madrasas (religious schools) and marvel at a country with such a varied cultural make-up that everyone looks different.

Though the warmest hospitality is a constant. Uzbekistan has an extraordinary, often gruesome history. And it isn’t entirely out of the woods yet. President Islam Karimov, a dictator in everything but name, has held power here for 21 years, and has a murky record over human rights.

 

You won’t hear a word said against him, no matter how you phrase the question.

The country was part of communist Russia from 1924 to 1991, when it became independent. The totalitarian hangover lingers in the municipal buildings and large blank-faced hotels. Even the vast plov centre in the capital, Tashkent, has a comrade-friendly atmosphere.

This is the place to eat plov, the national dish. It is cooked outside by men using enormous stone cauldrons filled with oily rice, beef or lamb, with boiled eggs to garnish. It won’t suit every stomach.

In 1899, Lord Curzon, then Viceroy and Governor of India, advised travellers to Central Asia to take tinned spam and their own pillow. Still sound advice (if you like spam).

But at only around £2 a plate, plov is cheap and popular.

Tashkent, a seven-hour flight from London with no-frills Uzbekistan Airways, is a modern metropolis. Even the old town looks spanking new, having been heavily reconstructed in recent years, though the 16th century mosque and mausoleum will give you a taste of what is to come.

Getting around the city is easy by tram or Tube. The underground is the only one in Central Asia – crowd-free and heavily decorated.

Tamerlane Memorial

Uzbekistan

Past and present: The huge Tamerlane Memorial in Samarkand (left) – and a warm local welcome (right)

The feeling of space is mirrored above ground in a city with room to breathe. Independence Square, formerly Lenin Square, is huge. Tashkent’s big Soviet landmarks are a useful backdrop for wedding parties, who congregate for photos in front of strident statues to war heroes or earthquake victims.

Marriage is hard to avoid in Uzbekistan: wherever we go, there are brides cosseted amid a frenzy of netting.

In rural Boltali, almost a day’s drive from the capital, we hear a modern tale of romance. One newly married couple met on the phone. He dialled a wrong number, she picked up, 27 days later they met and agreed to wed. The bride shows us her trunk of traditional veils. Here, women appear in 12 different outfits to greet well-wishers after the big day.

Tashkent is a jumping-off point for the historic cities of Samarkand and Bukhara. This is Great Game territory – the term coined by Kipling for the English and Russian espionage, which was played out across Central Asia.

Samarkand is accessible in less than two hours by train. Curzon described it as the ‘greatest city in the Asiatic.’ The settlement dates from the 6th century BC, but is best known as Tamerlane’s stamping ground. He is Uzbekistan’s hero – and one of history’s most fearsome characters. During his reign in the 14th century, he conquered Iraq, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Mesopotamia, Georgia, Syria, Turkey and Egypt, killing hundreds of thousands along the way.

Tamerlane’s palace no longer exists, but his mausoleum is a landmark. It was gilded inside in 1996 to mark the 660th anniversary of his birth. Groups of Uzbek tourists come here to pay homage and to pray. His skeleton was exhumed in 1941 and archaeologists found the bloody war hero was lame on one side and every bit as terrifying to behold as his deeds suggest.

The inscription in his grave reads: ‘When I rise from the dead, the world shall tremble.’ And inside the casket the words ‘Who ever opens my tomb shall unleash an invader more terrible than I’ were found.

Two days after his grave was opened, Hitler invaded Russia.

The gentler ruler Ulug Bek -Tamerlane’s grandson – is responsible for the yawning madrasa, which sits opposite the mausoleum. Ulug Bek was an astronomer and his observatory, built between 1424 and 1429, plotted the co-ordinates for more than a thousand stars.

Uzbekistan

East of the fields: Bukhara’s mosque is a reminder of its monumental past

Outside this daunting complex is the Jewish quarter and sprawling market. Bread, which differs in every town and village, is sold from prams, and piles of dates, dried apricots and halva decorate the stalls. Women wear headscarves and the men, cosy-looking dressing gown-style coats.

Winter is unrelentingly cold. Luckily, Bukhara, a six-day journey by camel (you can still see where they re-fuelled en route) from Samarkand or three hours by car, is the place to buy very warm hats. Not everyone will approve of the furs on offer, but there are shaggy sheep hats, too.

Ancient Bukhara feels more like a working city, though the great mosque is silent and barely in use. A shame, because Bukhara was once said to be so holy that the daylight here radiated upwards, rather than down, and illuminated the heavens.

The Ark, where Arthur Connolly and Charles Stoddart – the unfortunate British military men and Great Game players – were imprisoned and killed in 1842 is closed for renovations on my trip, so I don’t see the infamous bug pit where they were interred.

Those Great Game days might be long over, but there is still something strange and wonderful about Uzbekistan. It might not be your average holiday, but if you have a thirst for the history of adventure, this is the place to come.

Travel Facts

Cox & Kings (0845 154 8941, www.coxandkings.co.uk) offers a 12-day/10-night tour of Uzbekistan, from £1,495 per person, including flights, transfers, excursions, accommodation and breakfast.


Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-2260992/Central-Asia-tours-Uzbekistan-history-colour–plov.html#ixzz2HkeRJUwe
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook

 

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/article-2260992/Central-Asia-tours-Uzbekistan-history-colour–plov.html

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.