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Bukhara as center of culture and religion

Aim of the course work.Throughout history, Bukhara was periodically 
invaded, plundered and terrorized. Despite this, during the early Middle Ages, it 
became the primary center of science and enlightenment in ancient Turan. Religion 
and secular sciences (such as history, poetry, astronomy, medicine, mathematics, 
and jurisprudence)developed here. Great scientists and philosophers such as Ismail 
Bukhari, Abu AH ibn Sina, Marshakhi, Rudaki, Dakiki, Hoja Bahauddin 
Makshbandi, and many others led creative lives in Bukhara. Over the years, dozens 
of madrasas were erected for the education of thousands of students.
1
For centuries, Bukhara was famous not only for the development of science, 
culture and trade, but also as a large administrative center for Turkestan. It was the 
capital of the ancient state of Bukhara whose population was situated downstream 
from the Zarafshan (sixth to eighth centuries A.D.). It was also the capital of a 
number of other states, including the Samanid Dynasty (ninth to tenth centuries), 
the Sheybanid Empire (sixteenth century), the Ashtarkhanid Dynasty (seventeenth 
1
Heirman, A.; Bumbacher, S.P. (2007). The Spread of Buddhism. Handbook of Oriental Studies. Section 8 Uralic & 
Central Asian Studies. Brill. p. 93. ISBN 978-90-474-2006-4. Retrieved 10 Feb 2022 



to eighteenth centuries), the Bukhara Emirate (eighteenth to twentieth centuries) 
and the Bukhara People's Soviet Republic (1920 to 1924). 
Despite the fact that Bukhara is credited with many important historical 
events, there are few written records of its history. Although Bukhara is mentioned 
in some ancient sources, only the western section of ancient Soghdiana is referred 
to, not the city itself. A brief but more accurate description of the city is found in 
Chinese sources dating back to the early Middle Ages. 
There is no accurate data on the age of this ancient city, known in the 
Muslim world as "Kubbat ul-Islam" and "Bukhara-i-Sharif." Written sources that 
have been preserved do not provide the information necessary to determine the 
exact age of Bukhara. Based on legends taken from Narshakhi's History of 
Bukhara, the people of Bukhara claim that the city has been around for three 
millennia. 
Mukhammad Narshakhi's History of Bukhara, written in Arabic and 
translated into Persian in 1288 by Abu Masr Akhmad Kubavi, a courtier and 
translator from Ferghana, has been one of the most valuable sources of information 
about the city's history. Abu nasr Akhmad Kubavi asserts that Mukhammad ibn 
Djafar Narshakhi did not give credit to the chapter about the emergence of Bukhara 
which, according to Akhmad Kubavi, was taken from the Treasury of Knowledge, 
a medieval book by Abulhasan Hishapuri which has not survived. In this chapter, 
Abulhasan nishapuri elaborately describes the historic and geographic process that 
formed the Bukhara oasis along with its landscape, hydrography, flora and fauna, 
the hunting, fishing, and farming activities of the people, how the population of 
Bukhara got there, and where they came from. 

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