History of Tashkent The Tashkent oasis lies
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Bog'liqHistory of Tashkent
fragrant city", where "cherries ripen by the 1st of May, and
strawberries are seven copecks a pound", yet colonialism had its downside: With the coming of the Russians, the angel of death has breathed on all that was once the grandeur of the Orient at Tashkent... as the fine Russian streets were laid down, and the large shops opened, and the cathedrals were built, and the gardens laid out, the old uphill-and-down dale labyrinth of the Eastern city changed to a curiosity and an anachronism. It faded before the eyes. . . Poor old Tashkent, slipping into the sere and yellow leaf, passing away even as one looked, always decreasing whilst the new town is always increasing-there is much pathos in its destiny ... Now Turkestan and Russian Central Asia are extremely loyal, peaceful and happy colonies. Like most travellers, Graham was shielded both from Muslim anger at the neglect of Islam and the encroachment of Russian infidels, as well as from the seeds of revolution growing among the latter. The railway workers whose sweat had done so much to establish the Tsarist regime were among the first to respond to the Bolshevik clarion in November 1917. The provisional government was overthrown and Muslim opposition crushed! In April 1918, Tashkent became the capital of the Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, yet Soviet suzerainty remained under threat from White Russians and Muslim basmachi. In January 1919, Bolshevik commissar Ossipov shot his fellow commissars and declared for the counter-revolution, but drunkenness and poor organization gave him but a single day in power. Four thousand executions followed and pools of blood lay frozen on the winter streets. At this time, Britain's last Great Game player was hiding in the Chimgan mountains outside Tashkent. Colonel F.M. Bailey had been closely watched ever since his arrival from Kashgar in August 1918. The feared Cheka (secret police) even set spies on his dog Zep and Bailey only escaped death and fled to Persia by his mastery of disguise and remarkable nerve. At one point the Bolsheviks assumed him dead for he had left his toothbrush behind, as no Englishman would (in fact he had two). During Bailey's stay, the city reverted from farce-"an Englishman passed through with a troupe of performing elephants he was taking to Kashgar"-to terror-"one man who had his piano nationalized lost his temper and broke up the piano with an axe. He was taken to gaol and shot." The face of the city suffered too: "You were given a coupon for fuel on your ration card. When you asked for your share of fuel you were shown a tree standing in the street and told to take it. Fortunes in paper money were made by the lucky owners of saws and axes." In time the trees were replanted, but architecture was less lucky: city walls and gates were demolished along with countless mosques, madrassah and mausoleums. In 1930, the city won from Samarkand the capitalship of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic. Russian settlers, institutions andindustries flooded in, particularly during the waryears (1941-45), when evacuees from European Russia doubled the population to a million. As a Soviet capital, huge sums of money were invested into Tashkent's growth and industrialisation, a process which rapidly increased with the relocation of factories away from the Nazi advance in western Russia during World War II. The city's population swelled with migrant workers, evacuees and exiles: Tashkent would ultimately become the fourth-largest city in the Soviet Union, and more than half of its population was of Russian or Ukrainian origin. Physically, Tashkent was changed forever on 25 April 1966, when a massive earthquake levelled vast areas of the town and left 300,000 people homeless. "Like living on the back of a beserk camel" was how one journalist described the earthquake (7.5 on the Richter scale) and over 1,000 subsequent tremors that devastated Tashkent. Casualties were relatively low, but 300,000 were left homeless. The whole Union rushed to the task of reconstruction and the result is today's Tashkent, both the concrete grandeur of Moscow's 'beacon of socialism in the East', and the old quarter to the west, alive with Uzbek tradition. As new construction gathers pace, its citizens brave the challenges and seize the chances born of capitalism and independence, while their mayor promises to rebuild those 12 city gates, symbols that this ancient caravan town is open for business once more. Since independence in 1991, the face of Tashkent has continued to change. The demographics of the city have shifted notably with the mass exodus of ethnic Russians, Ukrainians, Germans and Poles, and an influx of Tajiks and Afghans Hi ring their respective civil wars. President Karimov has actively encouraged ambitious building schemes, and Soviet symbols and statuary, notably what was nine the world's largest statue of Lenin, have been slowly replaced with images more closely aligned with the identity of the modern, independent republic Download 311.59 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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