Attractions
Find a golden wonder at the Registan, Samarkand's exquisite Silk Road square
UZBEKISTAN // Even in Islam's competitive repertoire of important-looking mosques and glittering medressas (Islamic schools), Samarkand's Registan square stands out. It's an ensemble of majestic, tilting medressas and mosques - a near overload of majolica, azure mosaics and vast, well-proportioned spaces - that make up the most awesome sight in Central Asia. These beleaguered treasures have been battered by time and earthquakes, but their incredible craftwork and restoration under Soviet rule have kept them standing. Lovers of symmetry will be bowled over by the exquisite edifices flanking three sides of the square, which in medieval times would have been wall-to-wall bazaar. Ulugbek Medressa, on the west, was the first finished in 1420. Opposite is Sher Dor (Lion) Medressa, finished in 1636 and decorated with roaring felines. In between is the Tilla-Kari (Gold-Covered) Medressa, completed in 1660 with a mosque decorated with gold, to symbolise Samarkand's wealth at the time it was built.