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Bukhara and ),
* The Ark ( fortress ), a fortress in Bukhara, Uzbekistan
Ibn Sina ( 980 – 1037 ), known by the Latin name Avicenna, was a medical researcher from Bukhara, Uzbekistan responsible for important contributions to the disciplines of physics, optics, philosophy and medicine.
Fauna include: the Bukhara Deer ( a local species of Cervus elaphus ), Wild Boar ( Sus scrofa ), Common Pheasant ( Phasianus colchicus ), Golden Eagle ( Aquila chrysaetus ) etc.
Another reserve ( or eco-centre ), " Djeyran ", is located 40 km to the south of Bukhara.
Arguably the first recorded travel through the region is the involuntary journey of the slave Filipp Efremov ( an ethnic Russian ), who escaped from slavery in Bukhara.
Bukhara (; Buxoro ; Russian: Бухара Bukhara ), from the Soghdian βuxārak (" lucky place "), is the capital of the Bukhara Province ( viloyat ) of Uzbekistan.
Nasr, the conqueror of Transoxiana, held the large central area of Transoxiana ( Samarkand and Bukhara ), Fergana ( Uzgen ) and other areas, although after his death his appanage was further divided.
In 1207, the citizens of Bukhara revolted against the sadrs ( leaders of the religious classes ), which the Khwarezm-Shah ' Ala ' ad-Din Muhammad used as a pretext for invading and taking Bukhara.
** Bukharan People's Soviet Republic ( October 1920 – September 1924 ), established by Bolshevik communists on the territory of the Emirate of Bukhara.
Bukhari ( بخاري ), also spelled as Bokhari, Bukhary and Bukhori, is a common surname in Central and Western Asia, meaning " from Bukhara " ( in today Uzbekistan ).
It was bounded by the provinces of Syr-darya on the N. and N. W., Samarkand on the W., and Zhetysu on the N. E., by Chinese Turkestan ( Kashgaria ) on the E., and by Bukhara and Afghanistan on the S. Its southern limits, on the Pamirs, were fixed by an Anglo-Russian commission in 1885, from Zorkul ( Victoria Lake ) to the Chinese frontier ; and Khignan, Roshan and Wakhan were assigned to Afghanistan in exchange for part of Darvaz ( on the left bank of the Panj ), which was given to Bokhara.
Ishan Imlo, according to the source, he died in 1162 AH ( 1748-1749 ), the mausoleum ( Mazar ) is a saint in Bukhara on the same cemetery.
Part of the Khanate of Bukhara since the 16th century ( the Emirate of Bukhara since the 18th century ), the city changed its name from Khatlon to Kulob in 1750.
He examined collections of A. Leman, a doctor and naturalist who was sent on a Russian political mission to Khiva and Bukhara ( nearly unstudied at that time ), and who died on the way back from Central Asia.
According to ` Abd al-Qadir Bada ' uni, one of the few contemporary historians to mention its construction, the architect of the tomb was the Persian architect, Mirak Mirza Ghiyas ( also referred to as Mirak Ghiyathuddin ) who was brought from Herat ( northwest Afghanistan ), and had previously designed several buildings in Herat, Bukhara ( now Uzbekistan ), and others elsewhere in India.
Moreover, unlike other ethnic borders of the former Russian Empire, which were delimited during the Tsarist days ( e. g. Transcaucasia lost its feudal administration by the mid-19th century ), the Soviet authorities inherited two provinces that were de jure never part of Russia proper, the Emirate of Bukhara and the Khanate of Khiva.
Muhammad Shayabak Khan Uzbek (, ), known in later centuries as Abul-Fath Shaybani Khan ( c. 1451 – 2 December 1510 ), was an Uzbek Khan who consolidated various Uzbek tribes and laid the foundations for their ascendance in Transoxiana and the establishment of the Khanate of Bukhara.

Bukhara and Tbilisi
* link = European route E60-: Brest – Lorient – Vannes – Nantes – Angers – Tours – Orléans – Montargis – Auxerre – Beaune – Dole – Besançon – Belfort – Mulhouse – Basel – Zürich – Winterthur – St. Gallen – St. Margrethen – Bregenz – Feldkirch – Landeck – Telfs – Innsbruck – Lauterach – Feldkirch – Imst – Innsbruck – Wörgl – Rosenheim – Bad Reichenhall – Salzburg – Sattledt – Linz – Sankt Pölten – Vienna – Nickelsdorf – Mosonmagyaróvár – Budapest – Szolnok – Püspökladány – Oradea – Cluj-Napoca – Turda – Târgu Mureş – Braşov – Ploieşti – Bucharest – Urziceni – Slobozia – Hârşova – Constanţa-Agigea … Poti – Senaki-Samtredia-Kutaisi – Khashuri – Gori – Tbilisi – Rustavi – Ganja – Yevlakh – Baku … Türkmenbaşy – Gyzylarbat – Ashgabat – Tejen – Mary – Türkmenabat – Alat – Bukhara – Karshi – Guzar – Sherobod – Termez – Dushanbe – Jirgatal – Sary Tash – Irkeshtam

Bukhara and 1956
In Russia Nasreddin is known mostly because of the novel " Tale of Hodja Nasreddin " written by Leonid Solovyov ( English translations: " The Beggar in the Harem: Impudent Adventures in Old Bukhara ," 1956, and " The Tale of Hodja Nasreddin: Disturber of the Peace ," 2009 ).

Bukhara and pp
* Markovits, Claude The Global World of Indian Merchants 1750-1947 Traders of Sind from Bukhara to Panama, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2004, pp. 65-217.

Bukhara and .
* 1920 – The congress of the Communist Party of Bukhara opens.
At the beginning of the 19th century they belonged to Bukhara ; but under the emir Dost Mahommed the Afghans recovered Balkh and Tashkurgan in 1850, Akcha and the four western khanates in 1855, and Kunduz in 1859.
The sovereignty over Andkhui, Shibarghan, Saripul and Maimana was in dispute between Bukhara and Kabul until settled by the Anglo-Russian agreement of 1873 in favour of the Afghan claim.
Although his father, Afzal Khan, who had none of these qualities, came to terms with the Amir Sher Ali, the son's behavior in the northern province soon excited the Amir's suspicion, and Abdur Rahman, when he was summoned to Kabul, fled across the Oxus into Bukhara.
During the end of the 9th century, the Samanids extended its rule from Bukhara to as far south as the Indus River and west into most of Persia.
During the end of the 9th century, the Samanids extended its rule from Bukhara to as far south as the Indus River and west into most of Persia.
There were rebellions in the north in the region of Bukhara.
Ahmad Shah also faced other rebellions in the north, and eventually he and the Uzbek Emir of Bukhara agreed that the Amu Darya would mark the division of their lands.
The British viewed Russia's absorption of the Caucasus, the Kyrgyz and Turkmen lands, the Khanate of Khiva, and the Emirate of Bukhara with equal suspicion as a threat to their interests in the Asian subcontinent.
Unrest continued in the Second Fitna, but Muslim rule was extended under Muawiyah to Rhodes, Crete, Kabul, Bukhara, and Samarkand, and expanded in North Africa.
The north was ruled by the Khanate of Bukhara, the west was under the rule of the Shi ' a Safavids, and the east belonged to the Sunni Mughals of India.
Thereafter he continued past the Caspian and Aral Seas to Bukhara and Samarkand.
The region around Mazar-e-Sharif has been historically part of Greater Khorasan and was controlled by the Tahirids followed by the Saffarids, Samanids, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Ilkhanates, Timurids, and Khanate of Bukhara until the mid-18th century when it became part of the Durrani Empire after an agreement was signed between Amir Murad Beg and Amir Ahmad Shah Durrani.
The region around Mazza-i-Sharif has been historically part of Greater Khorasan and was controlled by the Tahirids followed by the Saffarids, Samanids, Ghaznavids, Ghurids, Ilkhanates, Timurids, and Khanate of Bukhara.
For Uzbek people, Nasreddin is one of their own, and was born and lived in Bukhara.
In 1943, the Soviet film Nasreddin in Bukhara was directed by Yakov Protazanov based on Solovyov's book, followed in 1947 by a film called The Adventures of Nasreddin, directed by Nabi Ganiyev and also set in the Uzbekistan SSR.
* The " Asiatic Flu ", 1889 – 1890, was first reported in May 1889 in Bukhara, Uzbekistan.
The Basmachi had taken refuge in Afghanistan earlier in the decade after they were expelled from Soviet Central Asia by the Soviet military and they swore allegiance to the Emir of Bukhara, who lived in exile in Kabul.
In the early 1840s, the population of the Uzbek states of Bukhara and Khiva included about 900, 000 slaves.
After a friendship treaty in 1750 between Ahmad Shah Durrani of Afghanistan and Mohammad Murad Beg of Bukhara, the Amu Darya ( Oxus River ) became the official border of Afghanistan.
At this time, cities such as Bukhoro ( Bukhara ) and Samarqand ( Samarkand ) began to appear as centers of government and culture.
* The Mongols first invade the Abbasid Caliphate ; Bukhara and Samarkand are taken.
He also build the Ulugh Beg Madrasah ( 1417 – 1420 ) in Samarkand and Bukhara, transforming the cities into cultural center of learning in Central Asia.
There is a Kyzyl Kum nature reserve in Bukhara Province, founded in 1971.

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