UZBEKISTAN
Quick Facts:
Official Name: Republic of Uzbekistan
Local Name: Ozbekiston Respublikasi
Population: 27,307,134 (July 2006 est.)
Capital C ity : Tashkent ( Toshkent)
Languages: Uzbek, Russian, Tajik
Official Currency: Uzbekistani soum
Ethnic Groups: Uzbek, Russian, Tajik, Kazakh, Karakalpak, Tatar, other
Religions: Muslim (mostly Sunnis), Eastern Orthodox
Flag
Three equal horizontal bands of blue (top), white, and green separated by red fimbriations with a white crescent moon and 12 white stars in the upper hoist-side quadrant.
The flag features a new moon symbol and one white star for every month of the year. The blue is representative of water and sky; white represents peace; green represents the fertile land, and the two red stripes are symbolic of the people.
Central Asia has a rich history to which numerous tribes and nationalities have contributed over at least 2,500 years. A vital factor in the history of the southern part of the region was its location astride the most direct trade route between China and Europe, the so-called Silk Route, which began to develop in the heyday of the Roman Empire (see fig. 3). Cities such as Samarqand ( Samarkand) and Bukhoro ( Bukhara), founded by Iranians, became powerful cultural and commercial centers as East-West trade increased. That prosperity made part or all of the region the object of many conquests (including those by the Arabs in the eighth century A.D., several Turkic groups beginning in the ninth century, and the Mongols in the early thirteenth century). The Arabs and the Turks brought Islam to much of Central Asia. Meanwhile, the northern part of the region was inhabited by nomadic herding peoples, including the Turkic predecessors of the Kazaks and Kyrgyz, who also fell under the control of the Mongols.
Uzbekistan is the third-largest of the Central Asian republics in area and the first in population (estimated at 23 million in 1994 and growing at the fastest rate in Central Asia). Uzbekistan is completely landlocked between Kazakstan to the north, Turkmenistan to the south, and Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to the east. It shares the Aral Sea, and hence the environmental problems of that area, with Kazakstan. The territory of modern Uzbekistan was at the center of the rich cultural and commercial developments that occurred in Central Asia over a period of two millennia, especially along the axis defined by the Silk Route between Europe and China. Included in Uzbekistan are the three chief Silk Route outposts of Bukhoro ( Bukhara), Khiva, and Samarqand ( Samarkand).
As with ethnic patterns and boundaries of post-Soviet Uzbekistan, the dominant native language, Uzbek, is in many ways a creation of the Soviet state. Indeed, until the beginning of the Soviet period, the languages spoken among the native population presented a colorful and diverse mosaic. Under Soviet rule, officially at least, this mosaic was replaced by Uzbek, which almost overnight became the official language of the Turkic population of the republic. But Russian, which at the same time was declared the "international language" of Uzbekistan, was favored above even Uzbek in official usage. Many Russian words made their way into Uzbek because Russian was the language of higher education, government, and economic activity throughout the Soviet era. In the 1980s, Uzbeks began a strong effort to eliminate the recent Russian borrowings from the language. The Latin alphabet was introduced to begin a gradual process of replacing the Cyrillic alphabet. But in the mid-1990s Russian still was widely used in official and economic circles.
Information and maps above taken from Library of Congress Country Studies and the CIA World Fact Book. Unless otherwise specified, images sourced from Wikimedia Commons.
Uzbekistan Internet Resources
This page contains convenient starting points for exploring web sites related to Uzbekistan. To make this page easier to load and use, we generally have limited the list to those sites which contain substantial collections of links to information on these subjects. The views reflected on any web site linked below do not necessarily reflect the views of the Inner Asian and Uralic National Resource Center. We provide these links as a service to the public.
- Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan, in English, describes the organizations, its projects, publications, upcoming events and international partners.
- Advantour, in English, provides information on Uzbekistan, including maps, city guides, and hotels.
- BBC Uzbek Service provides links to information on the country and the BBC's daily programming in Uzbek and Russian.
- Center for Economic Research (Uzbekistan) established in January 1998 as a joint project of the government of Uzbekistan and United Nations Development Program, researches social and economic processes, prepares proposals to deepen the economic reforms conducted in the republic and uses international experience and programs of technical assistance provided by international organizations. In English and Russian.
- CIA World Factbook: Uzbekistan provides a general country overview and statistical data from the CIA.
- Pulitzer prize winning journalist Eric Freedman was a Fulbright scholar in Uzbekistan in 2002. Click here to read his reports on life in Uzbekistan.
- The Government of Uzbekistan's official web site.
- Human Rights Watch: Uzbekistan discusses human rights developments and the international community's role.
- Law Library of Congress' Guide to Law Online: Uzbekistan, prepared by the U.S.Law Library of Congress for the Global Legal Information Network (GLIN), is an annotated hypertext guide to sources of information worldwide on government and law available online without charge.
- The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Uzbekistan maintains a webpage (in Russian and in English) that provides information about Uzbekistan's government (including information about its embassies), news, and general information about Uzbekistan and its foreign relations.
- Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty's News and Features, Uzbekistan is a digest of latest news from and about Uzbekistan, links to RFE/RL Reports, Weekday Magazine, Newsline and external reports related to Uzbekistan in English. Includes a link to RFE/RL's Uzbek language reporting.
- University of Texas Austin's Russian and East European Network Information Center's Uzbekistan page lists links by subject.
- US State Department Human Rights Reports 2006: Uzbekistan analyzes human rights situation from a variety of issues: media, political prisoners, human rights-related legislation.
- The Uzbekistan National News Agency has a webpage in English, Russian and Uzbek which contains current news stories relevant to Uzbekistan and Central Asia.
- Uzbekistan Travel Guide - InfoHub's collection of travel-related and other resources.
- Uzreport.com is a business-oriented independent group committed to delivering general news and analysis on Uzbekistan and Central Asia.
- Zangari Kema is an online Uzbek-English dictionary. Another Uzbek-English glossary is available online here.

.jpg)
