Uzbekistan
Uzbekistan travel guide, perfect for independent travellers. Expert advice and holiday tips on Tashkent architecture and hotels, Silk Road history, Islamic art, museums and culture. Includes detailed maps, trekking routes, touring by bike, public transport, archaeological sites in Samarkand, Bukhara and Khiva; Fergana Valley; and Kyzylkum Desert.
Edition: 4
Number of pages: 344
About this book
Written by Central Asian expert and experienced travel writer Sophie Ibbotson, who is Uzbekistan’s Tourism Ambassador to the UK, this new, fully updated fourth edition of Bradt’s Uzbekistan remains the definitive practical travel guide to an increasingly liberal destination – Central Asia’s most populous country and the heart of the Silk Road – offering more detail for independent travellers than any other guidebook, sharing first-hand descriptions of everything from UNESCO World Heritage sites and the world’s best collection of Soviet avant-garde art, to riding across deserts by camel and cooking plov (lamb pilaf).
A perfect spring or autumn destination, Uzbekistan is unexpectedly packed with diverse experiences, from the Silk Road cities of Bukhara and Khiva to glorious Islamic architecture. Explore the Kyzylkum Desert by camel, ski amid the western Tian Shan mountains, overnight by the Aral Sea to search for the bizarre saiga antelope, visit 50 ancient Khorezm fortresses in Karakalpakstan, or gawp at Registan’s unmissable sound and light show. Stroll through Bukhara’s old town then take tea at chaikhana teahouse or shop in the Chorsu bazaar, trade’s beating heart in Tashkent. Or marvel at medieval tiled tombs in Shah-I Zinda and the magnificent 19th-century palace of Kokand ruler Khudayar Khan.
It has never been easier to explore this fascinating country. Over the past decade, Uzbekistan’s new reformist government has been strengthening its tourism offer, including improving infrastructure and reducing bureaucracy, culminating in it hosting a World Tourist Organisation conference in 2023 and initiating a new $300 million tourism strategy for 2030. Complemented by the author’s 2023 Bradt guide to Karakalpakstan, this new edition reflects post-COVID 19 investments in tourism infrastructure, and provides more detailed economic and political insights. Entirely new elements include Amirsoy resort, Zarafshan nature reserve, Lower Amudarya Biosphere Reserve and Shirin ecovillage, while there is expanded coverage of Tashkent hotels, museums and shopping; Navoi tour operators; and new hotels in Khiva.
Whether you’re interested in culture, trekking, historical sites, archaeology and architecture, seeing endless deserts or majestic mountainscapes, or fascinated by the Golden Road to Samarkand and Silk Road cities, Bradt’s Uzbekistan is your ideal travel companion.
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About the Author
Sophie Ibbotson (maximumexposure.co) read Oriental Studies at Clare College, Cambridge, and has a particular interest in Central Asia and Afghanistan, where she has worked since 2008 when her auto-rickshaw got snowed in en route from India to London. Overwintering unexpectedly, she fell in love with the region and became excited by the opportunities it offered. She has travelled extensively in Uzbekistan and is the country’s Tourism Ambassador to the UK. An experienced travel writer, Ibbotson has authored or co-authored six Bradt guides, including three others to Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Karakalpakstan), and has written for The Financial Times, The Economist and The Telegraph. Ibbotson is the founder of Maximum Exposure Ltd (which provides tourism and culture consultancy, and PR services), the co-founder and managing editor of Panorama: The Journal of Intelligent Travel, a consultant for the World Bank, and a council member of the Royal Society for Asian Affairs.
Aidan McMahon (aidanmcmahon.com) studied History and Hispanic Studies at Trinity College Dublin before living in Spain, Poland and, for many years, in Turkey. Here he developed an interest in the Turkic world and its languages (which include Uzbek), prompting him to travel extensively in the Balkans, the Caucasus and Central Asia. Travelling widely across Uzbekistan has given him a deep fondness for the country and a desire to communicate its attractions for travellers, which has culminated in him updating this new, fourth edition of Bradt’s Uzbekistan. McMahon has also written and contributed to guidebooks covering his native Ireland, Morocco and western Turkey. He complements his writing with travel photography (which can be seen on his website), and additionally has more than a decade of publishing experience, focusing on web content and digital media covering global trade and travel.
Additional Information
Table of ContentsChapter 1 Background Information
Chapter 2 Practical Information
Chapter 3 Tashkent
Chapter 4 Fergana Valley and the East
Chapter 5 Samarkand and Dzhizak Provinces
Chapter 6 Qashqa Darya and Surkhan Darya Provinces
Chapter 7 Navoi Province
Chapter 8 Bukhara Province
Chapter 9 Khorezm Province
Chapter 10 Republic of Karakalpakstan
Appendix 1 Language
Appendix 2 Glossary
Appendix 3 Further Information
Index