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  1. El Palacio de Khudayar Khan, conocido como la Perla de Kokand, fue el palacio del último gobernante del Kanato de Kokand, Khudayar Khan. Es la atracción turística más visitada del valle de Ferganá en Uzbekistán.

    • Prelude to Rule
    • Rise to Power
    • Rule of Kokand and Legacy

    In 1845, Shir Ali Khan was killed during the uprising. His son Murad Beg Khan was declared the khan briefly, however, he was soon overthrown and eventually executed by the supporters of Shir Ali Khan, since he was considered to be a puppet of the Emir of Bukhara. The main political figure in the Khanate was Mingbashi Musulmonqul, a military command...

    In 1862, Muhammad Malla Beg Khan was assassinated, and his nephew, Shah Murad Khan, became the khan. The ruler of Tashkent, Kanaat, allied with Khudayar, and Shah Murad besieged Tashkent. At the same time, Muzaffar, the Emir of Bukhara, advanced to Kokand. As the result, the Kokand army disappeared, the siege of Tashkent was lifted, and Khudayar mo...

    In the 1850s, the Russian Empire advanced to the Central Asia with the final goal of controlling the whole area. In 1865, Russian troops took Tashkent, and Alimqul, who opposed them, was killed in action. In Kokand, Kipchaks declared Hudaykul Bey the khan, however, after a fortnight he flew to Kashgar. Subsequently, Khudayar Khan entered Kokand wit...

  2. The Palace of Khudayar Khan, known as the Pearl of Kokand, was the palace of the last ruler of the Kokand Khanate, Khudayar Khan. It is the most visited tourism attraction in Uzbekistan’s Fergana Valley .

  3. The real pearl of Kokand and one of the main historical attractions of the city is the palace of Khudoyar Khan, also popularly called "Kokand Urda". By history is known, for a century and a half in the Kokand Khanate, more than 29 khans were replaced, but the most powerful and most memorable was Khudoyarkhan, who ascended the throne in 1845 at ...

  4. Nasruddin Khan, or Nasruddin Beg (Uzbek: Nasriddin Bek), was the last ruler of Khanate of Kokand, then a protectorate of the Russian empire. He rose to power in 1875 when his father Khudayar fled uprisings in the Ferghana Valley. The Khanate of Kokand was abolished on 19 February 1876, and the region annexed to Ferghana Oblast. See also

  5. At the tail end of the 19th century, just before the Russians put paid to his architectural (and political) ambition, Khudyar Khan indulgently commissioned a sumptuous palace with 113 rooms set around seven courtyards. His mother lived in one of these courtyards, housed in her very own yurt.

  6. The real pearl of Kokand and one of the main historical attractions of the city is the palace of Khudoyar Khan, also popularly called "Kokand Urda".