Video
Next to Turquoise Domes: Excavating the City of Bukhara
Abstract
The city of Bukhara was once a key node along the fabled “Silk Roads.” Yet, compared to other Central Asian cities of comparable importance, the systematic archaeological investigation of Bukhara lacks considerably behind. This is now rapidly changing thanks to excavations conducted since 2020 by the Uzbek-American Expedition to Bukhara, co-directed by Jamal K. Mirzaakhmedov and the presenter in a recently cleared area of ca. 0.8 ha next to the city’s ancient citadel and its main congregational mosque. Six extensive seasons of archaeological fieldwork have yielded a veritable treasure trove of new information about Bukhara’s long and complex history. This presentation will introduce new data derived from finds and observations made at a series of fortifications, various kinds of dwellings, workshops, as well as burial contexts – all encountered in the excavation area. They speak to a wide range of historical phenomena and problems, such as the potential existence of a Seleucid military colony in the area of the later city during the 3rd century BCE, the roots and stages of Bukhara’s urban growth as an important node within the Sogdiana trading networks during Late Antiquity (3rd to 8th centuries CE), transcontinental connections during the city’s hey-day under the Samanid dynasty during the 10th century, and the health status of the urban populace at the eve of the Mongol invasion (late 12th/early 13th century).
Citation
Stark, Sören. "Next to Turquoise Domes: Excavating the City of Bukhara," Pourdavoud Lecture Series (May 8, 2026).