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Samarkand
Unique Ability

Trade City-State

1 Envoy: +4 Gold in the Capital.
3 Envoys: +4 Gold in every Commercial Hub district.
6 Envoys: Additional +4 Gold in every Commercial Hub district.

Samarkand Suzerain Bonus

Your Builders can now make Trading Dome improvements.

+2 Gold. +1 Gold for every adjacent Luxury resource. Your outgoing international Trade Routes grant +1 Gold per Trading Dome at the origin. Cannot be built next to another Trading Dome.

Historical Context
Since the Eighth Century CE, Samarkand was one of the Metropolitan Sees of Nestorian Christians. Such were the roots of Christianity in the region that Algigidai, one of Genghis Khans successors, is said to have converted and permitted Catholicism during his reign.

Samarkand was at the Silk Road’s heart, called by the writer Ibn Battuta “one of the greatest and finest of cities, and the most perfect of them in beauty.” Its history is long - Alexander the Great conquered the city in 329 BC, and the city then passed through Persian, Mongol, and Turkic hands over the centuries. While Genghis Khan destroyed the city in 1220 AD, it was to revive in the 14th century under Timur the Lame – Tamerlane, the Khan’s descendant and warrior that, in all his conquests, never faced defeat. Timur founded the Timurid Empire, a Turkic empire based in Samarkand. The Timurids in turn became the ancestors of the Mughal Empire, which dominated India before the arrival of the British.

At its height, Samarkand was a place of diverse peoples and ideas. While Islam was the religion of the Timurids, and the mosques of the city are famous worldwide, Zoroastrianism, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Manichaeism all were present in the city. Samarkand was conquered by the Russians in the 19th century and remained a part of the Russian (and, later, Soviet) empires until Uzbekistan became independent after the fall of the Soviet Union. In addition to its heritage, the city remains today as a transportation hub and a center for silk weaving.
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown

City-State Type

icon_citystate_trade
Trade
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown

City-State Type

icon_citystate_trade
Trade
Unique Ability

Trade City-State

1 Envoy: +4 Gold in the Capital.
3 Envoys: +4 Gold in every Commercial Hub district.
6 Envoys: Additional +4 Gold in every Commercial Hub district.

Samarkand Suzerain Bonus

Your Builders can now make Trading Dome improvements.

+2 Gold. +1 Gold for every adjacent Luxury resource. Your outgoing international Trade Routes grant +1 Gold per Trading Dome at the origin. Cannot be built next to another Trading Dome.

Historical Context
Since the Eighth Century CE, Samarkand was one of the Metropolitan Sees of Nestorian Christians. Such were the roots of Christianity in the region that Algigidai, one of Genghis Khans successors, is said to have converted and permitted Catholicism during his reign.

Samarkand was at the Silk Road’s heart, called by the writer Ibn Battuta “one of the greatest and finest of cities, and the most perfect of them in beauty.” Its history is long - Alexander the Great conquered the city in 329 BC, and the city then passed through Persian, Mongol, and Turkic hands over the centuries. While Genghis Khan destroyed the city in 1220 AD, it was to revive in the 14th century under Timur the Lame – Tamerlane, the Khan’s descendant and warrior that, in all his conquests, never faced defeat. Timur founded the Timurid Empire, a Turkic empire based in Samarkand. The Timurids in turn became the ancestors of the Mughal Empire, which dominated India before the arrival of the British.

At its height, Samarkand was a place of diverse peoples and ideas. While Islam was the religion of the Timurids, and the mosques of the city are famous worldwide, Zoroastrianism, Christianity, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Manichaeism all were present in the city. Samarkand was conquered by the Russians in the 19th century and remained a part of the Russian (and, later, Soviet) empires until Uzbekistan became independent after the fall of the Soviet Union. In addition to its heritage, the city remains today as a transportation hub and a center for silk weaving.
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