Nukus

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Nukus
The Savitsky Karakalpakstan Art Museum at Nukus
The Savitsky Karakalpakstan Art Museum at Nukus
Nukus (Uzbekistan)
Nukus
Nukus
Location in Uzbekistan
Coordinates: 42°28′N 59°36′E / 42.467, 59.6
Country Uzbekistan
Province Karakalpakstan
Population (1999)
 - Total 199,000

Nukus [1] (Karakalpak: No‘kis, formerly Нөкис) is the sixth-largest city in Uzbekistan, and the capital of the autonomous Karakalpakstan Republic. It has a population of 199,000 (1999 census estimate). The Amu Darya river passes west of the town.

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[edit] History

Nukus developed from a small settlement in 1932 into a pleasant, modern Soviet city with broad avenues and big public buildings; however, the city's isolation made it host to the Red Army's Chemical Research Institute, a major research and testing center for chemical warfare weapons.

[edit] Ecological concerns

With the fall of the Soviet Union and the growing ecological disaster of the Aral Sea, the city has certainly seen better times. Contamination of the surrounding area by wind-borne salt and pesticides from the dry Aral Sea bed have turned the surrounding area into a wasteland, with very high rates of respiratory disorders, cancer, birth defects and deformities.

[edit] Sights

Nukus is host to the Nukus Museum of Art (also known as the State Art Museum of the Republic of Karakalpakstan, named after Igor V. Savitsky) and State Museum. The State Museum houses the usual collection of artifacts recovered from archaeological investigations, traditional jewelry, costumes and musical instruments, but more interestingly, displays of the area's now vanished or endangered flora and fauna, and on the Aral Sea issue. The Art Museum is noted for its collection of modern Russian and Uzbek art from 1918-1935. Stalin tried his best to eliminate all non Soviet art from this period, and sent most of the artists to the gulag. Both Savitsky himself and the collection at Nukus survived because of the city's remoteness.[2]

Nukus is also home to the Progress Center, Central Asia's finest English-language institute. Housed in a former Komsomol meeting hall, the instutute has received major funding from UNICEF.[3]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Russian name.
  2. ^ Tom Bissell, Chasing the Sea, Pantheon (2003). ISBN 0375421300. p. 323–324.
  3. ^ Bissell, Chasing the Sea, p. 325–326.

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 42°28′N, 59°36′E