Shusha State Historical and Architectural Reserve

Shusha State Historical and Architectural Reserve
Şuşa Dövlət Tarix - Memarlıq Qoruğu
Location Shusha Rayon, Azerbaijan
Nearest city Shusha
Area 290 km²
Established 10 August 1977
Governing body Republic of Azerbaijan, currently under occupation by Armenian forces

Shusha State Historical and Architectural Reserve (Azerbaijani: Şuşa Dövlət Tarix - Memarlıq Qoruğu) is an Azerbaijani state reserve and is on the Azeri tentative list of future World Heritage Site located in Shusha district of Karabakh region of Azerbaijan.[1]

Contents

Historical overview

As a result of unstable political conditions in Caucasus several independent khanates and sultanates emerged. Due to potential dangers of interstate wars, building defensive strongholds were a must.[2] This served as a reason for emergence of many fortress towns throughout Azerbaijan. The ruler of newly established Karabakh khanate, Panah Ali Khan, founded the town of Panahabad later to be renamed to Shusha. His other strongholds were the Bayat Castle (1747) and Shahbulag Castle (1752). After Russian takeover of the khanate in 1805 according to Kurekchay Treaty and following Treaty of Gulistan and Treaty of Turkmenchay, khanate was abolished and its capital Shusha was turned into a provincial center in 1841. Shusha is located on the top of the mountain, sometimes called "the city on the rock" with three steep precipices and is surrounded by dense woods. The main entrance road facing north towards Ganja was the Ganja Gate. The peak altitude is 1,600 metres above sea level, the lowest part is 1,300 metres above sea level. The city has a clear view of surrounding areas which rules out any type of sudden attack by invaders.[1]

Architectural and natural attributes

Shusha as well as several other castles in Caucasus was built on the basis of natural conditions in unity of environment and architecture. Shusha was built in three stages. In the first stage was in 1753-1754 when the stronghold's walls, towers and nine districts (neighborhoods) on the lower eastern part were built. The second stage in 1756-1805 included constructions of eight districts on the upper eastern part of the city and twelve districts on the western side. After incorporation of the territory into Russian Empire, the construction continued on the western and tougher sides on the mountain. Since Shusha had limited urban construction in the 20th century, it preserved its historic architectural-planned composition. Each district of Shusha has madrasahs, mosques, natural springs and bath-houses. The mosques of the districts are right-angled like dwelling houses. The mosque buildings were built out of local white stones and minarets were built with baked bricks. Among the most well known mosques of Shusha are Yukhari Govhar Agha Mosque and Ashaghi Govhar Agha Mosque. Shusha was one of the centers of international trade and was a place rich with caravanserais such as Caravanserai of Agha Gahraman Mirsiyab. Shusha had an enriched culture of beautiful streets, squares, mosques, mausoleums, churches, springs, castle walls, museums such as Shusha Museum of History, palaces of Panah Ali Khan, Ibrahim Khalil Khan, Govhar Agha, Khurshidbanu Natavan, Gara Boyuk khanum, houses of Uzeyir Hajibeyov, Bulbul, Jabbar Garyagdioglu, etc. It is considered the center of Azerbaijani music, culture and architectural excellence of 18th-19th centuries.[1] A Stone-Age cave near Shusha also proves the area had been the residence of earlier civilizations since the ancient times. Labour tools and ceramic dishes from the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Eneolithic, and Bronze and Iron ages have been found during archeological explorations in the cave. Enriched with mineral water Shusha springs flow into the Dashalty and Halfaly Rivers’ beds in the Dashalty gorge below Shusha.[2]

On 10 August 1977, the town and surrounding area were declared the historical and architectural reserve of Azerbaijan Republic by resolution no. 280.[1][3]

Current state

Shusha was occupied by Armenian armed forces on May 8, 1992 during the Nagorno-Karabakh War.[4] The war ended with occupation of former NKAO and seven surrounding regions of Azerbaijan in May 1994.[5] Most of the architectural monuments such as Mamayi, Mardinli, Taza Mahalla mosques and madrasahs, busts of Natavan, U. Hajibeyov, Bulbul, M.P. Vagif Mausoleum were destroyed and some like Yukhari Govhar Agha, Ashaghi Govhar Agha, Saatli Mosques remain in semi-destructive state.[3][6][7] In the occupied Karabakh, Armenian forces looted 693 secondary schools, 280 kindergartens, 12 vocational schools, 862 clubs, 982 libraries, 22 museums, 4 art galleries, 4 theatres, 576 medical centres.[8]

Notable landmarks

See also

References