Dishan Kala

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TypeFortress
LocationKhiva, Uzbekistan
Coordinates41°22′40″N 60°21′40″E / 41.37778°N 60.36111°E / 41.37778; 60.36111
Area240 ha
Dishan Kala
Native name
Dishan Qal'a (Uzbek)
The wall of Dishan Kala
Interactive map of Dishan Kala
TypeFortress
LocationKhiva, Uzbekistan
Coordinates41°22′40″N 60°21′40″E / 41.37778°N 60.36111°E / 41.37778; 60.36111
Area240 ha
Built1842
Architectural styleIslamic
Governing bodyMinistry of Culture and Sports of Uzbekistan

The Dishan Kala (translation: Outer Fortress, Uzbek: Dishan Qal’a) is a part of the citadel of Khiva. It was built by Khiva khan Allahquli Khan in 1842 to protect Khiva from external attacks. The construction involved a lot of people and the fortress was completed in 6 weeks. The wall (length 6250 meters, height 7–8 meters, wall thickness 5–6 meters) surrounded the fortress. Dishan Kala had 10 gates.
The main streets of Dishan Kala (Hazorasp, Bogi Shamol, Shohimardon, Qosh) have preserved many monuments such as Nurullaboy Palace, Sayidboy Madrasah and Mosque, Sayid Mohi Rui Jahan, Toʻrt Shabboz, Abdolbobo Complexes. Dishan Kala now has administrative and residential buildings, courtyards.[1][2][3]

Allahquli Khan built an outer defensive fortress in 1842 to protect Khiva from the attacks of the Yomuts (one of the Turkmen tribes). According to the poet and translator Ogahi, Allahquli Khan forced all his servants to work for free for 12 days a year and built the walls of Dishan Kala in 3 years. More than 200 thousand people participated in the construction of the wall. The soil for the construction was dug out two kilometers north of the city, in an area called Govukkol. There is now a large lake there.[2]

Architecture

Gates of Dishan Kala

References

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