KHIVA
/ KHIV
Itchan
Kala
Alla
Kouli Khan Madrasa
Pakhlavan
Makhmoud Mausoleum
Islam
Hoja Minaret
Muhammad
Amin Khan Madrasa and Kalta Minor
Location
in Uzbekistan
Coordinates
: 41°23' N 60°22' E
Country : Uzbekistan
Region : Xorazm Region
Khiva
(Uzbek: Xiva; Persian: Xiveh; alternative or historical names include
Kheeva, Khorasam, Khoresm, Khwarezm, Khwarizm, Khwarazm, Chorezm)
is a city of approximately 90,000 people located in Xorazm Region,
Uzbekistan. According to archaeological data, the city was established
around 1500 years ago. It is the former capital of Khwarezmia and
the Khanate of Khiva. Itchan Kala in Khiva was the first site in
Uzbekistan to be inscribed in the World Heritage List (1991). The
astronomer, historian and polymath, Al-Biruni (973-1048 CE) was
born in either Khiva or the nearby city of Kath.
Etymology
:
The
origin of the name Khiva is unknown, but many contradictory stories
have been told to explain it.
A
traditional story attributes the name to one of the sons of Prophet
Noah (AS): "It is said that Shem (AS) [from whence the word
Semitic is derived], 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 outlines in the form of a ship mapped out according
to the placement of the torches, about which he had dreamt. Then
Sim dug 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."
Another
story relates that travellers passing through the city, upon drinking
the excellent water, would exclaim "Khey vakh!" ("What
a pleasure!") and hence the city became known as Kheyvakh,
whence Khiva.
A
third proposal is that the name comes from the word Khwarezm, altered
by borrowing into Turkic as Khivarezem, then shortened to Khiva.
History
:
The painter Vasily Vereshchagin was present at the taking
of Khiva by Russian forces
In the early part of its history, the inhabitants of the area
came from Iranian stock and spoke an Eastern Iranian language called
Khwarezmian. Turks replaced the Iranian ruling-class in the 10th
century A.D., and the region gradually turned into an area with
a majority of Turkic speakers.
The
earliest records of the city of Khiva appear in Muslim travel accounts
from the 10th century [citation needed], although archaeological
evidence indicates habitation in the 6th century. By the early 17th
century, Khiva had become the capital of the Khanate of Khiva, ruled
by a branch of the Astrakhans, a Genghisid dynasty.
2014 Image of Palvan Gate Of Khiva, built early 19th Century, known
to have hosted large slave market and a center of punishments and
executions
In the 17th century Khiva began to develop as a slave market.
During the first half of the 19th century, around one million Persians
and an unknown number of Russians, were enslaved there before being
sold. A large part of them were involved in the construction
of buildings in the walled Ichan-Kala.
Campaigns
:
In the course of the Russian conquest of Central Asia, in 1873 the
Russian General Konstantin von Kaufman launched an attack on the
city of Khiva, which fell on 28 May 1873. Although the Russian Empire
now controlled the Khanate, it allowed Khiva to remain as a nominally
quasi-independent protectorate.
Following
the Bolshevik seizure of power in Russia after the October Revolution
of 1917, a short-lived (1920-1925) Khorezm People's Soviet Republic
formed out of the territory of the old Khanate of Khiva before its
incorporation into the USSR in 1925. The city of Khiva became part
of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic.
Sights
:
Panoramic view of Khiva (Uzbekistan)
City
wall
Khiva is split into two parts. The outer town, called Dichan Kala,
was formerly protected by a wall with 11 gates. The inner town,
or Itchan Kala, is encircled by brick walls, whose foundations are
believed to have been laid in the 10th century. Present-day crenellated
walls date back to the late 17th century and attain the height of
10 meters.
Kalta
Minor, the large blue tower in the central city square, was supposed
to be a minaret, but the Khan died and the succeeding Khan did not
complete it.
The
old town retains more than 50 historic monuments and 250 old houses,
mostly dating from the 18th or the 19th centuries. Djuma Mosque,
for instance, was established in the 10th century and rebuilt in
1788–89, although its celebrated hypostyle hall still retains
112 columns taken from ancient structures.
Sister
cities :
Iran Nishapur, Iran
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Khiva