manuel cohen

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Khiva

Detail of mosaic tiling, in a room in the Harem of Tash Khauli Palace, 1830-38, Khiva, Uzbekistan, Khiva, Uzbekistan, pictured on July 6, 2010, in the morning. Commissioned by Allah Kuli Khan the Tash Kauli palace is a huge complex containing 163 rooms which took its architects, Tajiddin and Kalandar, 10 years to build. The harem, occupying about half of the palace has 5 aiwan terraces, with delicately carved wooden pillars, behind which were the quarters for the khan and his wives. Khiva, ancient and remote, is the most intact Silk Road city. Ichan Kala, its old town, was the first site in Uzbekistan to become a World Heritage Site(1991). Picture by Manuel Cohen.

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Filename
LC_UZBEKISTAN_0710_MC184.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
5616x3684 / 6.3MB
www.manuelcohen.com
19th century Abdullah aiwan Allah Kuli Khan Allah Quli Khan architectural architecture Asia Asian ayvan Central Asia Central Asian ceramics city color color image colour colour image courtroom day detail harem historical history horizontal Ichan Kala Ichan Khala image indoors inside interior Islam Islamic iwan Kalandar Khan Khanate Khiva majolica morning Muslim no people nobody old city palace photograph photography Silk Road Tajiddin Tash Hauli Tash Khauli Palace tile tiled tiles tourism tourist attraction travel Turkic Unesco World Heritage Site Uzbek Uzbekistan world heritage
Contained in galleries
Uzbekistan, Central Asia
Detail of mosaic tiling, in a room in the Harem of Tash Khauli Palace, 1830-38, Khiva, Uzbekistan, Khiva, Uzbekistan, pictured on July 6, 2010, in the morning. Commissioned by Allah Kuli Khan the Tash Kauli palace is a huge complex containing 163 rooms which took its architects, Tajiddin and Kalandar, 10 years to build. The harem, occupying about half of the palace has 5 aiwan terraces, with delicately carved wooden pillars,  behind which were the quarters for the khan and his wives. Khiva, ancient and remote, is the most intact Silk Road city. Ichan Kala, its old town, was the first site in Uzbekistan to become a World Heritage Site(1991). Picture by Manuel Cohen.