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Abdolbobo Mausoleum

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Abdolbobo Mausoleum
Front view of Abdolbobo Mausoleum
Map
General information
TypeMausoleum
Architectural styleBukhara style
LocationKhiva city, Khorazm region, Uzbekistan
AddressPolvon Qoriy street, 21-house
Town or cityKhiva
CountryUzbekistan
Named forAbdolbobo
Year(s) built18th-19th centuries
DesignationsNational Register of Immovable Cultural Heritage Objects

The Abdolbobo Mausoleum (or Abdol bobo mausoleum) is an architectural monument in Khiva city, Khorazm region, Uzbekistan. The mausoleum dates back to the 18th-19th centuries and is located in the “Qumyasqa” neighborhood, Polvon Qoriy street, 21-house, outside the eastern gate of Itchan Kala. Abdolbobo mausoleum was included in the National Register of Immovable Cultural Heritage Objects by the decree of the Cabinet of Ministers of the Republic of Uzbekistan on October 4, 2019 and was taken under state protection.[1] Currently, it is considered as state property on the basis of the operational management right of the Khorazm region cultural heritage administration and is entrusted to the “Vaqf” charity foundation on the basis of a free use agreement.[2]

History

Abdolbobo mausoleum is located in the eastern part of Dishan Kala, south of Abdulla Nosfurush madrasa, east of Polvonqori madrasa. The mausoleum was built in honor of Abdolbobo, whose original name was Polvon Ahmad Zamchi, in the 18th-19th centuries. After the Arab invasion, Abdolbobo became one of the followers of Islam in Khiva. After his death, his burial place was surrounded by winter and summer mosques, Abdolbobo minaret, and a pool. Abdolbobo mausoleum was built in Bukhara style. Abdolbobo was originally from Zamchi village near Bukhara and was one of the distant descendants of prophet Muhammad.

Architecture

Abdolbobo mausoleum is surrounded by a complex consisting of a minaret, a mosque, and a pool. The complex was built in the place where the roads of Polvon Gate and Qo’shdarvoza met. Abdolbobo complex is not very large and extends to the cemetery outside the city. There was a slave market next to it.[3]

The complex also includes a large neighborhood mosque with a minaret and a pool, built in the 19th century. The minaret is slender, its appearance is elegant, the green brick base rises to the top narrowing. The decorated cornice on the top is separated. The height of the minaret in the complex is 10 m, the diameter of the base is 3.2 m.[4]

The mausoleum is a square-shaped room (external 5.7×5.4 m, internal 3.4×3.4 m) with a dome. The arches under the dome are decorated with two rows of muqarnas. The portal is connected to the mausoleum. Two rows of wooden cornices are carved on its top. The mosque (17.2×8 m) is four-columned, with two side and opposite ayvans, double-domed, the top of the minaret (base diameter 3.45 m, height 10 m) is mezzanine, the body is decorated with green glazed belts. The edge of the pool (14.6×13 m) is tiled.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Тарихий, бадиий ёки ўзга маданий қимматлилиги туфайли гаров ва ипотека қўлланилиши мумкин бўлмаган объектлар рўйхати (ЎзР ВМ 05.12.2014 й. 335-сон қарорига илова) | Majburiyatlar va shartnomalar toʻgʻrisidagi umumiy qoidalar | Oʻz kuchini yoʻqotgan hujjatlar | Fuqarolik va oila qonunchiligi | OʻzR KonunchiligiMaʼlumotlar tizimi „Tarixiy, badiiy yoki oʻzga madaniy qimmatliligi tufayli garov va ipoteka qoʻllanilishi mumkin boʻlmagan obʼektlar roʻyxati (OʻzR VM 05.12.2014 y. 335-son qaroriga ilova)" | NRM.uz". nrm.uz. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
  2. ^ "MODDIY MADANIY MEROSNING KO'CHMAS MULK OBYEKTLARI MILLIY RO'YXATINI TASDIQLASH TO'G'RISIDA". Archived from the original on 2023-10-13. Retrieved 2023-10-28.
  3. ^ "Abdolbobo majmuasi va minorasi". Retrieved 2023-09-30.
  4. ^ "Abdol bobo maqbarasi". Retrieved 2023-10-30.
  5. ^ National Encyclopedia of Uzbekistan. Volume 1. Tashkent, 2000