In Islamic literature and discussions, Samarkand has taken on a semi-mythological status and is often cited as an ideal of Islamic philosophy and society, a place of justice, fairness, and righteous moderation.
Nigerian writer Wole Soyinka, winner of the 1986 Nobel Prize in Literature, explores the metaphysical significance of the marketplace in a volume of poetry entitled Samarkand and Other Markets I Have Known, 2002.
Samarkand has a large featuring in the originally Russian film Day Watch, originally written by Sergei Lukyanenko as part of a Trilogy. Samarkand is the place where the fictional battle for the "Chalk of fate" takes place.
The American musical Once Upon a Mattress features a character known as the Nightingale of Samarkand. The bird supposedly sings people to sleep.
Non-fiction
Ibn Battuta, the Muslim 14th century traveler, spent time in Samarkand in the 1330s
Murder in Samarkand by Craig Murray is a book about the UK Ambassador to Uzbekistan's experiences in this role, until he resigned over human rights abuses in the country in October 2004.
In her 2010 memoir The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them Elif Batuman writes three chapters about her experiences studying the Uzbek language as a graduate exchange student in Samarkand.
Music
In 1972, Swedish composer Thorstein Bergman wrote "Om du nĂ¥gonsin kommer fram till
Embassy Locator | Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | My Bookings
© 2012-2023 Traveltill.com. All rights reserved.