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Chor Minor Madrassah

Bukhara (also spelled Bokhara, Bukhoro, or Buxoro) in Uzbekistan was historically one of the great trading cities along the Silk Road. The city centre is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

In Sanskrit the word Bukhara means "abbey". Bukhara, "The city of museums", contains more than 140 architectural monuments of the Middle Ages. Such buildings as Poi - Kalan, Kosh Madras, mausoleum of Ismail Samoni, minaret of Kalyan and others were built 2,300 years ago, and today are popular with tourists. The famous poets Narshahi, Rudaki Dakiki and others have played an important role in the development of Bukhara.

Understand

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History

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Legend of Siavash

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According to the legend Bukhara was founded by King Siavash, a legendary Persian prince from the beginnings of the Persian Empire. After the treason of his stepmother Sudabeh, who accused him that he wanted to seduce her and betray his father, Siavash went into exile to Turan. Afrasiab, the King of Samarkand, married his daughter Ferganiza(Farangis) to him and granted him a vassal kingdom in the oasis of Bukhara. Later, Siavash was accused that he wanted to overthrow King Afrasiab and was executed in front of his wife. Siavash's father sent Rostam, the legendary Persian hero to Turan and Rostam brought Ferganiza (Farangis) and their son Kai Khosrow back to Persia.

Pre-Islamic times

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The history of Bukhara can be traced back to the 4th or 5th cent. AD, the date of the first coins with Sogdian writing in an alphabet derived from Aramaic. There are no reports of a city in the area of Bukhara at the time of Alexander the Great.

From the Arab invasions to the Mongols

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At the time of the Arab conquests, Bukhara was ruled by the Sogdian dynasty of the Bokar-kodats. Arab armies first appeared before Bukhara in the caliphate of Moawia, after Obayd-Allāh b. Zīād b. Abīhe crossed the Oxus (53-54/673-74). Bukhara was ruled by a woman, Katun, as regent for her infant son. She had to submit and to pay a tribute of a million dirhams and 4,000 slaves. Permanent Arab control in the city was established by Qotayba b. Moslem Baheli, who after arduous campaigns in Sogdia (87-90/706-09) overcame the resistance of the Bukharans and their Turkish allies and placed an Arab garrison in the city, forcing every home owner to share his residence with Arabs. In 94/712-13 he erected the first mosque in Bukhara within the citadel, on the site of a former Buddhist or Zoroastrian temple. In 166/782, the governor of Khorasan Fażl b. Solayman Ṭusi built walls to protect Bukhara against Turkish attacks.

In the 3rd/9th century, the notables of Bukhara asked the Samanid ruler of Samarqand and Farḡāna Nasr b.Ahmad for help, who in 260/874 sent his younger brother Ismail to the city. Bukhara enjoyed a period of prosperity lasting for 150 years and under the patronage of the Samanid amirs served as a cultural centre for Arabic learning and Persian literature. A passage by Taalebi, the famous scholar of Nisapur, praises Bukhara in the era of the Samanids as “the focus of splendour, the Kaba of the empire, the meeting-place of the unique figures of the age, the rising-place of the stars of the literary men of the world, and the forum for the outstanding per­sonages of the time”. Geographers from the Samanid period mention the division of the city in a citadel (ko­handez), the town proper (sahrestan) and a suburb (rabat). The citadel contained the palace and the original mosque of Qotayba b. Moslem. To its east, dividing it from the sahrestan, was the Registan, an open, sandy space where Amir Naṣr b. Aḥmad (301-33/914-43) built a palace and where the dīvāns of the administration were situated. In this century, an outer wall with eleven gates was built. The city had expanded, although geographers still criticize it as an unsanitary and crowded place.

In 389/999 Bukhara was occupied by the Ilak (Ilig) Nasr b. Ali. For the next 150 years it was part of the western Qarakhanid khanate, ruled by descendants of the Ilak Nasr. Under the loose, decentralized rule of the Turkish tribesmen, Bukhara lost its political importance. The reign of Arslan Khan Moḥammad b. Solayman (495-524/1102-30) brought peace to the city. He also rebuilt the citadel and city walls, and erected a new Friday mosque and two new palaces.

After the Mongol invasion

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Bukhara was con­quered by Gengiz Khan in 616/1220. All inhabitants were driven out and the city was burned., but in the time of Ögedey Qaan (626-39/1229-41) the city was prosperous again. Ögedey placed the administration of all the settled regions of Central Asia in the hands of a Muslim merchant trusted by the Mongols, who resided in Ḵojand and reported directly to the supreme khan. The revival of prosperity of Bukhara may have been due to his efforts. He was succeeded at Bukhara by his son Masud Beg, who remained in authority until his death in 688/1289, despite feuds among the Mongol successor states and repeated shifts in their borders within Central Asia. Masud Beg was buried in the madrasa that he had built at Bukhara. The skilled craftsmen inhabiting Bukhara were apportioned among the four divi­sions of the Mongol empire, each belonging to one of Genghis Khan’s sons and his descendants; each division was entitled to revenues from the portion of the population where they were assigned.

The Khanate of Bukhara

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The Khanate of Bukhara came into existence after the conquest of Samarkand and Bukhara by Muhammad Shaybani. The Shaybanid Dynasty ruled the khanate from 1506 until 1598. Under their rule Bukhara became a center of arts and literature. Bukhara attracted skilled craftsmen of calligraphy and miniature painting, poets and theologians. Abd al-Aziz Jhan (1533-1550) established a library "having no equal". The khanate of Bukhara reached its greatest influence under Abdullah Khan II, who reigned from 1577 to 1598.

The Khanate of Bukhara was governed by the Janid Dynasty (Astrakhanids) in the 17th and 18th cent. It was conquered by Nadir Shah of Iran in 1740. After his death the khanate was controlled by descendants of the Uzbek emir Khudayar Bi through the position of "ataliq" (prime minister). The khanate became the Emirate of Bukhara in 1785.

In the early 19th century the Scottish soldier, explorer, diplomat and spy Alexander Burnes reached Bukhara from India, travelling in native grab via Afghanistan. His book Travels into Bokhara, was a bestseller when it was published in 1835. Today it is available at Project Gutenberg.

Get in

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By plane

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1 Bukhara International Airport (BHK  IATA), +998 65 780 1067. This has several flights a day from Tashkent, and daily from Urgench, Moscow and Istanbul. It's a small place with limited facilities. Only 4 km to town centre so a taxi is cheap enough, and you could walk it in 40 min. Bukhara International Airport (Q978200) on Wikidata Bukhara International Airport on Wikipedia

By train

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2 Bukhara Railway Station, sometimes shown as Bukhara 1, has four or five trains a day from Tashkent via Samarkand and Navoi. "Afrosiyob", the fastest, takes only four hours. One overnight train plods on west to Urgench and Khiva, and once a week via Nukus and Atyrau to Volgograd.

These trains may sell out. You can only use the Uzbek railway booking system if you have an Uzbek phone number, eg by buying a local sim card. Otherwise use a western agency such as Bookaway.

The station is reasonably clean. It's in the suburb of Kagan 9 km southeast of the city, walk out to the Avtostantsiya where Marshrutkas 268 and 378 go to Lyab-i Hauz in Old Town centre, and the 378 continues to the Ark. In 2024 the fare was 2000 som; no timetables or other signage so ask around. Taxis also fight for your custom but are overpriced.

You might have time to look at the Emir's Palace 200 m up the road, see below. Bukhara 2 is also shown on timetables but is just a freight depot.

By bus

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3 Bukhara Bus Station has hourly buses from Tashkent (11 hours) and Samarkand (5 hours). But set off early, as these do sell out. Shared taxis also arrive here, covering the route in half the time for twice the fare.

Buses from Urgench and Khiva take about 5 hours. Outbound they may have started from Tashkent and be full already.

Shared taxis run from Karshi (90 min), Shakhrisabz (4 hours), Termiz on the Afghan border (6 hours) and Denau (6 hours).

Shared taxis from Olot take 40 min. Change there coming from Turkmenabat in Turkmenistan.

The station is 4 km north of city centre, linked by frequent marshrutka, and you may be able to find a direct service from the railway station.

By road

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Bukhara is 560 km from Tashkent. Follow M39 southwest via Jizzah and Samarkand: this crosses a corner of Kazakhstan, which is treated as a no-man's-land with no passport checks but keep yours handy. Continue west on M37 via Navoi into Bukhara.

Get around

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Lyab-i-Hauz bus stop is where marshrutkas bring you from the railway station and all quarters of the city. It's 50 m east of the Lyab-i-Hauz complex.

Old Town is compact, so walking is the best way to explore.

Taxis often try to rip off tourists. Order through your accommodation, or via an app such as Yandex, to get a reliable ride.

Talk

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The main language of Bukhara is the Tajik dialect of Persian. Russian is the second language and Uzbek is used but to a lesser extent. Bukhara, along with Samarqand and other cities in Central and Southern Uzbekistan, has been historically populated by ethnic Tajiks and Bukharian Jews who spoke Tajik along with their own dialects which today include some Uzbek and a lot of Russian loan words.

See

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Kalyan Minaret
  • 1 Lyab-i Hauz is the grand plaza and pool at the heart of the Old City, laid out in the 16th century, in legend after a dispute between the khan and the Jewish widow landowner. "Hauz" means a pool, and the city had several for its water supply. They degenerated into cesspools and the Soviets filled them in during the 1920s/30s, but this one survived. Ranged around it are:
    • Kukeldash Madrassah is north side, built in 1568 and in its day the largest in the Islamic world. It's now a hotel.
    • Nadir Devan-begi Madrassah is east side, built in 1622 as a caravansarai, but hurriedly converted into a Madrassah when the local grandee deemed it so.
    • Nadir Devan-begi Khanaka west side was built in 1620. A khanaka was lodging for itinerant Sufi priests.
  • 2 Synagogue, Sarrafon. Su-F 09:00-18:00. There's been a substantial Jewish community in Bukhara since the 8th century. This synagogue was built around 1640, in legend as part of the peace deal with the widow who owned the Lyab-i Hauz site. It was closed down by the Soviets in 1940. Eventually it was returned, but the Jews had emigrated to Israel and the US so it was never again in use. It's now a small museum. Donation.
  • 3 Magok-i-Attari Mosque, Mehtar Ambar 55. M-Sa 09:00-17:00. The oldest surviving mosque building in Central Asia, dating back to the 800s, reconstructed in the 1500s and now a carpet museum. "Magoki" means a pit, and it was in a dip in the ground when built over a former Zoroastrian temple, and has sunk further. It's now 6 metres below ground level, and its domes barely reach the street. "Attar" means perfume as there once was a perfume market nearby. The 12th century main facade is very impressive. Magok-i-Attari Mosque (Q4274143) on Wikidata Magok-i-Attari Mosque on Wikipedia
  • Toqi Sarrafon a short block south of the mosque is a "trading dome" covering a bazaar. Traditionally this one hosted the moneychangers but it now has a mix, and given its position is a bit touristy. The dome is open 24 hours, individual traders follow their own hours.
  • 4 Khoja Gaukushan complex. Closed. A complex similar to Lyab-i Hauz built in 1570, with a mosque, medressah and hauz. The name means "killing bulls" as the site was previously a cattle market and slaughter house. It's closed for restoration, though you can see the exterior. Khoja Gaukushan Ensemble (Q4066908) on Wikidata Khoja Gaukushan Ensemble on Wikipedia
  • 5 Toqi Telpak Furushon is another trading dome. This one was the bazaar of the cap-makers.
  • 6 Po-i-Kalyan is a magnificent religious complex laid out in the 16th century.
    • Kalyan Minaret was built in 1127, the only survivor of an earlier complex wrecked by Genghis Khan. It's baked brick, 45.6 m tall and as late as 1920 was used to hurl criminals to their deaths.
    • Kalan Mosque, completed in 1515, is around a large courtyard, with a blue dome over the grand mihrab.
    • Mir-i Arab Madrassah, built in 1535, has remarkable blue tilework.
  • Hoja Zayniddin Mosque is 200 m west of Kalan Mosque. It's from 1550 but in disrepair.
  • 7 Ulugbek Madrassah was built in 1417 and is a rare survival from the Timurid dynasty.
  • Abdulaziz Khan Madrassah immediately south was built at the same time as a twin. It's now a craft market.
  • Toqi Zaragon just west of Ulugbek Madrassah was another trading dome, traditionally for the jewellers.
  • 8 Chor Minor (Madrasah of Khalif Niyaz-kul), Mehtar Ambar 90. M-Sa 08:00-20:00. The name means "four minarets" and this building of 1807 was once part of a religious complex that has disappeared. Although it remains a mosque, the four towers are not minarets. One tower collapsed in 1995 but was re-constructed. Chor Minor (Q4517198) on Wikidata Chor Minor on Wikipedia
  • 9 Ark Citadel, Registan. Daily 09:00-18:00. Citadel or kremlin that contained palaces, temples, barracks, offices, the mint, warehouses, workshops, stables, an arsenal; everything a ruler might want for his comfort, and for the misery of his captives. It's a heptagonal enclosure (said to be patterned on the constellation of Ursa Major) with earth brick walls up to 20 m tall. It was built and re-built for millennia, taking its present form under the Shaybhanid dynasty around 1500. You enter through the grand west gate and see the museum, throne room, royal courts and mosque. The eastern half has not been restored. The Ark (Q4069358) on Wikidata Ark of Bukhara on Wikipedia
  • Shukov Tower just west of the Ark Citadel was built in 1929 as the city water tank, to replace those stinking hauzes. The basket-weave appearance is not artwork, but what remained after the cladding burnt off. It's been fitted with a restaurant and observation deck, both over-priced tourist traps.
  • 10 Bolo Hauz Mosque (opposite Ark Citadel). The mosque was built in 1712, with a free-standing minaret and painted wooden pillars added in 1917. In front is a small hauz. Free. Bolo Haouz Mosque (Q4090820) on Wikidata Bolo Haouz Mosque on Wikipedia
  • 11 Chashma-Ayub Mausoleum. Daily 09:00-20:00. The name means "spring of Ayub" - Job - who in legend struck the ground with his staff and out gushed a spring. Bukhara was one of several cities where he performed this feat and was subsequently buried; the oldest authenticated burial here was of Khwaja Hafiz Gunjari in 1022 AD. The entrance portal is from 1208, but the mausoleum is from 1380 in the reign of Timur, with a Khwarazm-style conical dome. The site was extended in the 15th century and has a small museum about the Sunni Islamic scholar Muhammad al-Bukhari (810-870), whose tomb is in Samarkand. Chashma-Ayub Mausoleum (Q4273796) on Wikidata Chashma-Ayub Mausoleum on Wikipedia
  • Bukhara Zoo 200 m west of Chashma-Ayub Mausoleum is a sad, cramped, dirty place recalling how ancient rulers kept their captives.
  • Talipach Gate 200 m west of the zoo was one of the medieval gates in the city walls. The area is grubby and tumbledown.
  • 12 Ismail Samani Mausoleum, Samonids Recreation Park. Daily 08:00-18:00. The Samanids were a Persian dynasty in power 819-945. In 892 Ismail Samani united its four petty kingdoms, broke from Abbasid influence, and moved the capital from Samarkand to Bukhara. He built this mausoleum for his father and lay here himself from 907. It's the oldest Muslim monument in Bukhara, with elements of Zoroastrian design such as the sun motif.
  • 13 Qosh Madrassah, Mirdustim. Daily 08:00-20:00. The name means "double madrassah", the Modari Khan and the larger Abdullah Khan, built together in 1566. They look neglected. Free.
  • 14 Baland Mosque. Built in the 16th century, with beautiful interior decorations, but you'll be lucky to find it open. Worshippers now use the modern mosque next to it. Baland Mosque (Q4292325) on Wikidata Baland Mosque on Wikipedia
  • 15 Fayzulla Xoʻjayev House, Tukai Alley 70, +998 65 224 4188. M-Sa 09:00-17:00. Xoʻjayev (1896-1938) was from a wealthy Bukhara family. He sought to free his country from both hidebound clerical tradition and Czarist rule, which pleased the Soviets, and he was leader of Uzbekistan from 1924. However he opposed the heavy-handed excesses of Stalin, such as cotton monoculture, so he was purged, given a show trial and shot. He has a mixed reputation today and this museum, his father's house, depicts life of a merchant family but says little about the man. Fayzullo Xojayev house (Q27926723) on Wikidata Fayzulla Xoʻjayev house museum on Wikipedia
  • 16 Namozgoh Mosque. M-Sa 08:00-19:00. Built from 1119, with modifications through the 16th century. It's richly decorated within. Namazgoh Mosque (Q13668326) on Wikidata Bukhara Mosque on Wikipedia
  • 17 Mausoleum of Saif ed-Din Bokharzi & Bayan-Quli Khan. Sayf al-Din was a 13th century poet, sheik and mystical theologian who settled in Bukhara as a tutor. He died in 1261 and his tomb became a Sufi shrine. Bayan Qulï was a local ruler much influenced by Sayf al-Din and was buried alongside in 1358. Mausoleums were then built to both, and a large religious complex developed, in what was then the separate village of Fathabad. The rest of the complex has disappeared. Saif ed-Din Bokharzi & Bayan-Quli Khan Mausoleums (Q4273783) on Wikidata Saif ed-Din Bokharzi & Bayan-Quli Khan Mausoleums on Wikipedia
  • 18 Khanaka of Faizabad. This was built 1588/9 and is still used as a mosque. (Q4480568) on Wikidata

Further out

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  • 19 Sitorai Mohi Hosa (Star and Moon Garden, Summer Palace) (6 km north of Bukhara). W-M 09:00-17:00, Tu 09:00-14:00. Summer palace of the last emir of Bukhara. Built from 1911-1920. To get there, take marshrutka 37 from Vokzal bus stop, northbound. (Updated Oct 2018) 40,000 som.
  • 20 Baha ud deen Naqshband Mausoleum (2 km east of Bukhara). 08:00-19:00. Tomb of Bakhautdin Naqshband (14th century), the founder of the most influential Sufi order in Central Asia. One of the most important Sufi shrines. free.
  • 21 Chor-Bakr (6 km west of Bukhara). 09:00-20:00. Necropolis from the 16th century; heavily restored. The burial place of Shih Jubaeri family.

Do

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  • Hammam Borzi Kord, Mehtar Ambar 55 (within Toqi Telpak Furushon), +998 94 859 1616. Daily 06:00-23:00. Traditional bath house, mornings only for local men then after 14:00 for tourists of mixed gender.
  • Hammom Kunjak, Nurobobod (100 m west of Kalan Mosque), +998 97 234 3233. Daily 09:00-21:00. The women's bathhouse. Most reckon it's an overpriced tourist trap.
  • Football: FC Bukhara were relegated in 2023 and now play soccer in the Pro League, the second tier. Their home ground Buxoro Arena (capacity 22.700) is 2 km south of city centre. The playing season is March-Nov.

Buy

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A Bokhara carpet

Bukhara is famous for rugs. Historically, rugs woven by nomadic or village Turkomans were called "Bokhara carpets" because the city was a centre for trading them. Today the city itself also produces many rugs.

  • Tim Abdulla Khan, Hagigat (near Taqi-Telpaq Furushon Bazaar). 09:00-18:00. silk and carpets
  • Unesco Carpet Weaving Shop, Eshoni Pir 57. M-Sa 09:00-17:00.
  • Bukhara Artisan Development Centre, Bakhautdin Naqshband.
  • Original Bukhara Scissors, Touristville (Lyobi Khauz).

Eat

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  • BoloXauz Teahouse. Decent restaurant not far from the Boloxauz mosque.
  • Doston House, 5 K. Kalon Str. Uzbek guesthouse in the old part of Bukhara, built by a Bukharian Jew in the end of the 19th century. In the courtyard, lepeshka (bread) and samsas are prepared on a tandoor oven. lunch, dinner US$8, folklore show $35.
  • Guest House of Rustam Saidjanov (100 metres from Lyabi Hauz). Built at the second half of the 19th century by a merchant-moneychanger (sarrof) belonging to the middle class, this guest house is now run by the grandson of the archaeologist Musa Saidjanov. Guests might sit upon kurpacha, a thin mattress, with velvet cushions at the dastarhan (low table).
  • Lyab-i Hauz Hotel north side of the main square has a decent restaurant, see Sleep.
  • Minzifa. 11:0023:00. Terrace restaurant near Lyabi Hauz in the Old Town. Great food and service by English speaking staff. Live music and nice view. Prices are a bit higher than average. Mains: 70008000 som (2011).
  • Siyavush. 08:0021:00. Mains: 5000 som (2011).
  • Central Market. If you want to mingle with locals, go to the central market and try one of the small eateries in a huge building located across the street from the main entrance. Serves just shashlyk
  • Food Market, in front of Lyabi-Hauz square. This mini-market with the big sign "Food Market" sometimes overcharges 30-60%.

Drink

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  • Silk Road Tea House, Khakikat (south side of Po-i-Kaylan), +998 93 383 4034. Daily 10:00-18:00. Shop and cafe serving spice and herbal tea, saffron and ginger tea, coffee with cardamom, green and black tea as well as sweets including halva, qandalat and nabat.
  • Nughay Caravanserai Wine Tasting, Bakhautdin Naqshband 78. 11:00-21:00. A wine shop and tasting rooms in an 18th-century caravanserai.

Sleep

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All hotels charge tourist tax on non-citizens, equivalent to US$4 per person per night in 2024. It's usually extra to the quoted price.
  • Lyab-i House Hotel, Khusainov 7, +998 65 220 2244. Atmospheric hotel right on Lyab-i Hauz in the former Kukeldash Madrasa, with a good restaurant. B&B double US$100.
  • Amelia Hotel, Bozor Hodja St 1 (100 m east of Lyab-i Hauz), +998 65 224 1263. Small friendly hotel in a 19th century Jewish merchant's house. Rooms are modern but the air-con struggles and there are lots of steps. B&B double US$90.
  • Alexia Suite is a similar restored merchant house run by Amelia Hotel at Chitbofon 3, just south of Lyab-i Hauz bus stop.
  • Hotel Grand Nodirbek, Sarafon Street 10 (south side of Lyab-i Hauz), +998 89 396 87877. Tranquil clean hotel in a 19th century merchant house, ranged around a courtyard. B&B double US$60.
  • Hotel Malika-Bukhara, Gavkushon Rd 25, +998 65 224 6256. Pleasant place just west of Lyab-i Hauz, often accommodates tour groups. B&B double US$140.
  • Rustam & Zukhra, Nakshbandi 110 (next to Lyab-i Hauz), +998 90 511 0550. Pleasant friendly central place around a courtyard. B&B double $80.
  • 1 Hotel Amulet, 73 Nakshbandi St, +998 90 511 2500, . Small hotel just east of Lyab-i Hauz, built in the early 19th century as a madrasah. Rooms are small and catering limited. B&B double US$100, cash only.
  • 2 Komil Hotel, Arabon 40, +998 90 715 0305. Charming place with 8 richly decorated double rooms. B&B double US$80.
  • 3 Wyndham Bukhara, Alisher Navoi 8, +998 55 305 0000. Boxy efficient modern hotel 1 km south of Lyab-i Hauz. Small rooms and tiny bathrooms, air-con erratic. B&B double US$150.
  • Grand Bukhara is next to the Wyndham at Ibrokhim Muminov 8, similar architecture, price and quality.
  • 4 Mercure Bukhara Old Town, Samarkand St 206, +998 55 305 0707. Clean modern Accor chain hotel 1.5 km north of old centre. B&B double US$100.

Connect

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Bukhara and its approach highways have 4G from all Uzbek carriers. As of Sep 2024, 5G has not reached town.

  • 1 OVIR (Office for Visas and Registration), Murtazaev 10/3, +998 65 2238868.

Go next

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Most travellers head from Bukhara to the other two silk road cities of Samarkand (3h by train) or Khiva (5 hr by shared taxi).

You can get to Termez (6 hr by shared taxi, usually more). 150,000 som. You have to get first to Karchi (2 hr), then wait for passengers to Termez (4 hr). You might end up paying up more as the taxi is not sure to get full.

This city travel guide to Bukhara is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.