Худжанд: Нури маърифат. 2007. 104 p.
The book by the Tajik researcher L. E. Ismoilov examines the peculiarities of religious life in the 16th century. Transoxiana, a region of Central Asia located between the Amu Darya and Syr Darya, which covers most of Uzbekistan, western Tajikistan, eastern Turkmenistan,and some southern Kazakhstan. 1 The author took the lives of famous Muslim Sufis of the XVI century as the main sources for studying his topic.
In the first introductory chapter, L. E. Ismoilov gives a certain idea of the social life of Transoxiana. To a large extent, the content of the chapter is based on the classic source of that era - "Babur-nam" ("Notes of Babur"), the memoirs of Zahir ad-din Muhammad Babur (1483-1530) - the founder of the Mughal Empire and a direct descendant of Timur (1336-1405). This vivid document of the epoch, of course, deserves the closest attention, and the reader would have the right to expect a thoughtful analysis of Babur-nameh from the author, but L. E. Ismoilov confines himself to giving a relatively small number of examples describing the moral corruption and hypocrisy of Transoxiana society at that time (see, for example, pp. 7-8). However, at the very beginning of the chapter, the author rightly draws attention to
1 Name of Transoxiana (Arabic) - "District", Europe. - Transoxiana-appeared during the Arab conquest of Central Asia in the VII-VIII centuries. and initially spread to the regions along the right bank of the Amu Darya.
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the presence of a serious interethnic conflict between the Turkic nomads and the Iranian-speaking inhabitants of Transoxiana. When in 1500-1501. Babur took Samarkand for the second time, and the townspeople began to offer prayers of thanksgiving. "Our people and townspeople were filled with an extraordinary joy and excitement; they killed Uzbeks in the streets with stones and sticks," Babur noted (p.6).
The second chapter is devoted to the analysis of the social consciousness of Transoxiana in ...
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