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Encyclopedia > Kokhand

Kokand (or Khokand or Kokhand or Quqon) is a city in eastern Uzbekistan, at the southwestern edge of the Fergana Valley. Population: 180,000.

Contents

Administration

Kokand is part of the Fergana province.


History

Kokand has existed since at least the 10th century, when it was known as Khavakend and was located on a caravan route between India and China. It was destroyed by the Mongols in the 13th century. From 1571-1626, the khanate was part of the emirate of Bukhara until it became independent in the middle of the 18th century and flowered in the 1820s and 1830s.


The present city began as a fort in 1732 on the site of another older fortress called Eski-Kurgan. In 1740 it became the capital of an Uzbek khanate (the khanate of Kokand) that reached as far as Qyzylorda to the west and Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, to the northeast. Kokand was the major religious center of the Fergana Valley under the khans. At one time it had more than 300 mosques.


In 1876, Kokand was taken by the Russians under Gen. Skobelev. The tsar dissolved the khanate of Kokand, while allowing the khanates of Khiva and the emirate to remain as direct protectorates. In the same year, Kokand became part of Russian Turkistan. From 1917 to 1918, it was the capital of the anti-Bolshevik autonomous government of Turkistan.


Sights

The ruined palace of the last khan, Khudayar Khan (1871) sits in the center of the city. The city also features mosques and royal mausoleums.


Geography

Kokand is 228 km southeast of Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, 115 km west of Andijan, and 88 km west of the city of Fergana.


Economy

Kokand is a center for the manufacture of fertilizers, chemicals, machinery, and cotton and food products.


Transportation

Kokand sits at the junction of two main routes into the Fergana Valley, one leading northwest over the mountains to Tashkent, and the other west through Khujand (Tajikistan). As a result, Kokand is the main transportation junction in the Fergana Valley.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Kyrgyzstan in 1997 (1330 words)
I had no problem getting here, it was just a 5 hour bus ride from Almaty and a short city bus hop from the bus station to the city center where Lenin was trying to hail a taxi on Ala Too Square.
After the fall of the Djungarian Empire to the Manchu, Central Asia was divided between the three feuding Khanates of Khiva, Bukhara and Kokhand.
The Kyrgyz tribes occupying the Tian Shan plateau resisted Kokhand's domination but their tribes were not united and submitted one by one to the advancing Russians in the mid 19th century and were incorporated in the provinces of Ferghana and Semireche.
The School of Russian and Asian Studies: Regions & Cities: Central Asia: Bishkek (605 words)
Although a small settlement there had long been of marginal importance to Silk Road travelers as a last resting point before crossing the Tien Shan Mountains into China, its history as a city only really began in 1864.
In 1825, the Kahn of Kokhand had built a small mud fortress where the city now stands.
However, by the time Russia invaded in 1862, the Kahn’s army had been so weakened from wars with other Kahns that the Russians easily demolished it.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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