Buxoro Region is divided into 11 administrative districts and two district-level cities. The capital is Bukhara, with a population of around 284,100 (as of 2021).[3] Other major towns include Olot, Qorakoʻl (Karakul), Galaosiyo, Gazli, Gʻijduvon (pop. ~40,600, as of late 2005), Kogon (pop. ~62,300, as of 2021),[3]Romitan, Shofirkon, and Vobkent.
The old city of Bukhara is a UNESCO World Heritage Site, famous as a "living museum" and a center for international tourism. There are numerous historical and architectural monuments in and around the city and adjacent districts.
Ulugbek Madrasah is a memorial to Abdul Khaliq Ghijduwani, located in the city of Gijduvon in the Bukhara region of Uzbekistan. It is one of the ancient and renowned madrasas of Bukhara, also known as the "Fayziya Madrasah." Presently, it is also referred to as the Mirzo Ulugbek Madrasa.[8][9]
This prestigious educational institution was built in the Hijri year 836 (corresponding to 1432/33 in the Gregorian calendar) beside the grave of Shaykh Abdul Khaliq Ghijduwani, with a two-story structure made of baked bricks.[10][11] The Ulugbek Madrasah, established by Ulugh Beg, is the third and last madrasa he founded, relatively smaller and simpler compared to the Ulugbek Madrasah in Bukhara and Samarkand.[12][13][14]
^Goodman, Peter. "Bukharian Jews find homes on Long Island", Newsday, September 2004.
^Finke, Peter, and Meltem Sancak. “To Be an Uzbek or Not to Be a Tajik? Ethnicity and Locality in the Bukhara Oasis.” Zeitschrift Für Ethnologie 137, no. 1 (2012): 47–70. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23333538.
^Jumanazar, Abdusattor (2022). Qoratosh [Karatash] (in Uzbek). Tashkent: Akademnashr. ISBN978-9943-8188-7-3.
^Jumanazar, Abdusattor (2017). Buxoro taʼlim tizimi tarixi [History of Bukhara education system] (in Uzbek). Tashkent: Akademnashr. ISBN978-9943-4728-2-2.
^Movarounnahr ilmiy markazlari [Transoxiana scientific centers] (in Uzbek). Tashkent: Oʻzbekiston xalqaro islom akademiyasi. 2022. ISBN978-9943-7559-5-6.