• The Bukhara Mosque (Uzbek: Buxoro namozgoh; other names: Namozgoh Mosque) is a historical monument in Bukhara.
  • The Baland Mosque is a typical manifestation of innovation in the architecture of Bukhara at the end of the Navoi era and in the first decades of the Uzbek Khanate.
  • Another incredible mosque in Bukhara. Not much to see from the outside, but inside it is absolutely incedible.
  • The clue to this mosque’s subterranean character lies in its name: Magok-i means “in the hole” or “in the subsoil.” Bolo Haouz Mosque, Bukhara.
  • The Magok-i-Attari Mosque is the oldest mosque in Bukhara. It is located at the western end Mekhtar Anbar Street at # 55.
  • On holidays, precious carpets were spread across the entire square, from Ark Fortress to Bolo Hauz, as the Emir made his way to the famous Bukhara mosque.
  • The fact that governor of Bukhara in 1514 built such grand mosque, which could rival with the symbol of royal Samakand - the Bibi-khonim Mosque...
  • However, under Ulughbek, the powerful clergy of Bukhara initiated the construction of a new Djuma Mosque on the site of the old one.
  • Mosques started to be built in Bukhara soon after the Arab invasion in 709. The first mosque was built in 712, on the territory of the Ark citadel.
  • One of the most interesting places in the history of Bukhara - Magoki-Attari Mosque – is located in the central part of Bukhara.