When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Demographics of Uzbekistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Uzbekistan

    Uzbekistan is Central Asia's most populous country. Its 36.8 million people (as of January 2024 [5]) comprise nearly half the region's total population. The population of Uzbekistan is very young: 30.1% of its people are younger than 14. [6] According to official sources, Uzbeks comprise a majority (84.4%) of the total population.

  3. Culture of Uzbekistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Uzbekistan

    The culture of Uzbekistan has a wide mix of ethnic groups and cultures, with the Uzbeks being the majority group. In 1995, about 71.5% of Uzbekistan's population was Uzbek. . The chief minority groups were Russians (8.4%), Tajiks (officially 5%, but believed 10%), Kazaks (4.1%), Tatars (2.4%), and Karakalpaks (2.1%), and other minority groups include Armenians and Koryo-sar

  4. Uzbekistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbekistan

    Uzbekistan, [a] officially the Republic of Uzbekistan, [b] is a doubly landlocked country located in Central Asia.It is surrounded by five countries: Kazakhstan to the north, Kyrgyzstan to the northeast, Tajikistan to the southeast, Afghanistan to the south, and Turkmenistan to the southwest, making it one of only two doubly landlocked countries on Earth, the other being Liechtenstein.

  5. Uzbeks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbeks

    After the independence of Uzbekistan from the former Soviet Union, the government decided to replace the Cyrillic script with a modified Latin alphabet, specifically for Turkic languages. Historically, the nomadic Uzbeks who founded the Uzbek Khanate and its other successor states spoke various dialects of Turkic language.

  6. Uzbek cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uzbek_cuisine

    The most popular meat is mutton. Beef is common, and goat is eaten only rarely. Horse meat is used as well; there are sausages made of horse meat, as is the case with many other Turkic peoples. [3] Karakul sheep provide meat [5] but also fat, particularly the fat from the tail end, called qurdiuq. [3]

  7. Music of Uzbekistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Music_of_Uzbekistan

    Many forms of popular music, including folk music, pop, and rock music, have particularly flourished in Uzbekistan since the early 1990s. Uzbek pop music is well developed, and enjoys mainstream success via pop music media and various radio stations .

  8. History of Uzbekistan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Uzbekistan

    The Chinese in particular sought the Heavenly Horses from the region, going so far as to wage a siege war against Dayuan, an urbanized civilization in the Fergana Valley in 104 BC to obtain the horses. Fayaz Tepe, Standing Buddha Uzbekistan. In the same centuries, however, the region also was an important center of intellectual life and religion.

  9. Portal:Uzbekistan/Intro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Uzbekistan/Intro

    Most of Uzbekistan’s population today belong to the Uzbek ethnic group and speak the Uzbek language, one of the family of Turkic languages. Uzbekistan was incorporated into the Russian Empire in the 19th century and in 1924 became a constituent republic of the Soviet Union, known as the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic . It has been an ...