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Kashkadarya provinceEstablished: 1943. Area: 28,6 thousand sq. km. Population: 2215,8 thousand. ![]() As for its territory, Kashkadarya is one of the
largest provinces in Uzbekistan. Its convenient geographical location
differentiates if from other provinces in the country. Kashkadarya is located in southeast of the country, in the
Kashkadarya River Basin and on the western edges of the Pamir-Alai Mountain
Range. There are 14 rural districts in the province: Bakhoriston, Guzar, Dekhqonobod, Kamashi, Karshi, Koson, Kasby, Kitob, Muborak, Nisbon, Umon-Yusupov, Chirokchi,
Sbakhrisabz, and Yakkabog; 12 towns: Beshkent, Guzar, Kamashi, Karshi, Koson, Kitob, Muborak, Tolimarjon, Sbakhrisabz, Chirokchi, Yakkabog and Yangi Nisbon; 4 town-type settlements: Dekhkonobod,
Karashina, Kashkadarya, and Yakkabogh; and 145 villages. The city of Karshi is the administrative center of the
province (558 km away from Tashkent, population 200,9 thousand). Agriculture: grain crops, cotton, vegetables and
cocoon production. Industry: mining and processing of oil,
natural gas, sulfur, zinc, marble and salt, as well as textile and food
industry. The Karshi Desert covers the north
and northwestern part of the province. The Nishon Desert covers the south
whereas the Sundukly sands - the southwestern parts. The eastern part of
the province consists of the Kitob-Kamashi foothills. The climate is continental, partly
subtropical and dry. The mountain ranges that have semicirded the
province from northwest, east and south prevent the penetration of cold weather
and create a convenient atmosphere for the condensation of the western
humidity. Winters are warm and summers are hot and long. The main river is the Kashkadarya
River with its numerous streams coming from the mountains. Dams and canals make up the arable
land oasis of Kitob-Shakhrisabz, Guzar-Kamashi, and the biggest oasis, Karshi. The most developed branches of
economy are natural gas and oil mining and processing, cotton production and
processing, consumer oil extraction, construction materials production,
knitting and food industries. The largest enterprises are the
Muborak Gas Reprocessing Plant, the Shurtan Gas and Chemical Corporation, the
Koson Consumer Oil Extraction Plant, the Shakhrisabz Canning Factory, Silk
Rolling Factory, the Karshi Knitting Factory, and others. There are 14 joint ventures, 124
SME, and 24 cooperative enterprises. Companies such as "Asia
Trading", Uzinterbusiness", "Karimpex" are among them. The leading agricultural activities
are cotton, grain and cocoon production, and livestock farming. The agricultural input of the
province makes slightly more than 10 percent of the Uzbekistan's total
agricultural production. Livestock farming and sheep keeping
are well developed in the mountainous areas. The total length of railroads is
380,1 km, the length of automobile roads is 11,5 thousand km, 9,7 thousand km
of which is covered with asphalt. The total length of the pipelines is
2,106 km. The main pipelines are the Korakhitoi-Karshi, the Shurtan-Muborak,
and the Shurtan-Bukhara-Gazly-Tashkent pipelines. There are 470,000 students study
attend about 1000 general secondary schools in the province. The
educational system is built on kindergartens, lyceums, specialized musical and
sport schools, the Karshi State University, branches of the Tashkent Technical
University and the Bukhara Technological Institute of Food and Textile
Industry. The cultural life of the province is
maintained through musical and opera theaters, 500 libraries, and more than 270
clubs and other cultural establishments. More than 5,000 doctors and another
nearly 20,000 medical personnel are responsible for the public health in the
province. Karshi is the biggest city located
in the Kashkadarya River Basin. It was established in early 14th century
at the heart of oasis, at the foothills of the Kungurtau highlands. It is just
at the crossroads of the caravan roads leading from Samarkand and Bukhara to
Afghanistan and India. It was called Nasaf city and was given its current name
a little later. Karshi was famous among eastern Bukhara cities for its karakul
pelts, fur products, dried fruits, and handcrafted goods in ancient times. Contemporary Karshi is a modern city
with wide and decorated streets. Also, it is a major industrial center.
The industrial enterprises of the city focus on processing agricultural
products, There are cotton processing plants,
oil extraction as well as meat and milk processing plants in the city. The
construction industry makes materials for factory and housing construction, The city of Muborak, the major gas
industry center is located in the southwest of the Karshi Desert. There
is a unique gas processing plant that cleans gas from hydrogen sulphide. The city is well planned and
there are many tall, modern buildings. The Kitab-Shakhrisabz oasis, the
most densely populated part of the Kashkadarya Valley, is located in the upper
streams of the Kashkadarya River between the
Ghyssar, Yakkabogh and Zarafshon cliffs. This area has a mild climate
with warm winters and moderately hot summers with a high rainfall. The unique
feature of this place is the broad cotton plantations surrounded by mulberry
trees. The major city of this oasis is
Shakhrisabz. It is the hometown of the great Amir Temur. In 1998 the
city was awarded with the Amir Temur medal. During the period of Amir Temur and
his descendants, the city prospered as the center of science, attracting many
scientists from all around the world, The most remarkable architectural
building is the Qksaroy. Modern Shakhrisabz has retained the image of eastern
cities. There are cotton-processing plants, winemaking and fruit and vegetable
canning plants in the city. The town of Kitob, located near
Shakhrisabz, is famous for its latitude observatory; it is one of five such
observatories in the world. The five observatories located on the same latitude
are Carloforte in Italy, Yukai and Gaithersburg in the US, and Mizusawa, Japan. |