• Shah-i-Zinda (Uzbek: Shohizinda; Persian: شاه زنده, meaning "The Living King") is a necropolis in the north-eastern part of Samarkand, Uzbekistan.
  • Shah-i- Zinda began to assume its current form in the 14th century as Timur and later Ulugbek buried their family and favourites near the Living King.
  • Free Shah i Zinda Mausoleums in Samarkand Stock Photo. Download. ... Free Mosaic on Walls of Shai-i-Zinda in Uzbekistan Stock Photo.
  • The name Shah-i-Zinda - "The living king" is connected with the legend that Kusam ibn Abbas, the cousin of the prophet Muhammad was buried there.
  • Shah-i-Zinda adı ("Yaşayan kral" anlamına gelir) şu efsaneyle bağlantılıdır: Kusam ibn Abbas Peygamber'in kuzeni Muhammed burada gömülüdür.
  • The Shah-i-Zinda complex was formed over eight (from 11th till 19th) centuries and now includes more than twenty buildings. _H4I0857ccww.
  • The name Shah-i-Zinda (meaning "The living king") is connected with the legend that Kusam ibn Abbas, the cousin of the prophet Muhammad was buried there.
  • As legend goes, prominent Sufi scholar Bahauddin Naqshband observed a 40-day prayer service in Shah-i-Zinda. Invoking God’s name in his daily prayers, he...
  • Shah-i-Zinda in 2007. ... The Shah-i-Zinda complex was formed over eight (from 11th till 19th) centuries and now includes more than twenty buildings.
  • Symmetrical decorative ornament of entrance to the tomb and open door in Shah-I-Zinda, a memorial complex, necropolis in Samarkand, Uzbekistan Stock Photo.