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Travel
the ancient Silk Road and meet descendants of Alexander
the Great, Genghis Khan and Tamerlane. Retrace the
paths taken by caravans of camels carrying silks, spices,
papers and gunpowder. Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan
still boast some of the world's key resources, especially
oil, as pipeline diplomacy is dictating Central
Asia's role in today's version of the Great Game. |
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For
the past 2000 years, this area has been at the crossroads
of civilization and the greatest trade route in history.
Take the "Golden Road to Samarkand," brilliant
with its magnificent mosques, towering minarets built during
the brutal regime of Tamerlane. Move on to medieval
Bukhara and its massive citadel, home of the 10th
century Persian renaissance. Here you can enjoy the
teahouses and gatherings of revered elders, with long white
beards, playing backgammon and swapping stories. Wander
through tiny walled Khiva, now perfectly preserved as a
living museum town and a favorite for wedding festivals.
The
dazzling bazaars represent centuries of tradition and you
can almost taste the succulent apricots, grapes and melons.
Or , hear bawling, moaning camels when you stop at dawn
in Ashkabad’s Sunday livestock market trading in camels
and goats and displaying the famous woven rugs.
From
nomads to farmers and traders, everyone exchanged religious,
intellectual and artistic ideas, while scholars, astronomers
and musicians connected the cultural centers of the world.
Take your photographic journey on the Silk Road, an ancient
information highway!
| "The
very erudite commentary, the choice of scenery, people,
objects all make up for a very good, finished work.
It is as if each and everyone is made for the National
Geographic." |
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