Postage Stamps as witness of Uzbekistan history

 

Postage Stamps as witness of Uzbekistan historyPostage Stamps as witness of Uzbekistan history

The land that is now Uzbekistan was once at the heart of the ancient Silk Road trade route connecting China with the Middle East and Rome. The country came under Russian control in the 19th Century, and emerged as an independent state when Soviet rule ended in 1991.

Under authoritarian President Islam Karimov, who ruled from 1989 until his death in 2016, Uzbekistan was reliant on exports of cotton, gas and gold to maintain its rigid, state-controlled economy. His successor, Shavkat Mirziyoyev, has made efforts to break Uzbekistan out of its international isolation and economic stagnation, but has yet to initiate any serious political liberalisation.

Some key dates in Uzbekistan’s history:

  • 1st century BC – Central Asia, including present-day Uzbekistan, forms an important part of the overland Great Silk Road trade route linking China with the Middle East and imperial Rome.
  • 7th-8th Centuries – Arabs conquer the area and convert its inhabitants to Islam.
  • 9th-10th Centuries – Persian Samanid dynasty becomes dominant and develops Bukhara as important centre of Islamic culture. As it declines, Turkic polities compete to fill the vacuum.
  • 13th-14th Centuries – Central Asia is conquered by Genghis Khan and becomes part of the Mongol empire.
  • 14th Century – Mongol-Turkic ruler Tamerlane establishes empire with Samarkand as its capital.
  • 18th-19th Centuries – Rise of independent Uzbek states of Bukhara, Kokand and Samarkand.
  • 18th-20th Centuries – Russia takes over vast areas of Central Asia, and the Soviet Union retains control of the region.
  • 1865-76 – Russians take Tashkent and make it the capital of its Turkestan Province, incorporating vast areas of Central Asia. They also make Bukhara and Khiva protectorates and annex Kokand.
  • 1917-1920 – Bolsheviks gradually conquer Turkestan, Bukhara and Khiva.
  • 1918-22 – New Communist rulers close down mosques and persecute Muslim clergy as part of secularisation campaign.
  • 1921-24 – Reorganisation of Soviet member-states results in the creation of Uzbekistan and its neighbours.
  • 1950s-80s – Cotton production boosted by major irrigation projects which, however, contribute to the drying up of the Aral Sea.
  • 1966 – Devastating earthquake destroys much of capital Tashkent.
  • 1970s-1980s – Uzbek Communist chief Sharaf Rashidov ensures the promotion of ethnic Uzbek over Russian officials. He falsifies cotton harvest figures in scandal exposed under Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s policy of glasnost.
  • 1989 – Islam Karimov becomes leader of the Uzbek Communist Party, and remains in power beyond independence in 1991.
  • 2001- Uzbekistan, China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan launch Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) to tackle ethnic and Islamic extremism and promote trade and investment.
  • 2005 – Troops open fire on demonstrators in the city of Andijan, killing hundreds of people.
  • 2016 – Islam Karimov dies in office. Successor Shavkat Mirziyoyev eases relations with neighbouring states, and promotes economic liberalisation.