Uzbekistan

Aral Sea time lapse 1989 2014, for article on Aral Sea afforestation

Uzbekistan plants millions of acres of forest where the Aral Sea once lay

Aral Sea afforestation has covered 1.7 million hectares of dried lakebed with saxaul trees and other desert-tolerant plants over the past five years, transforming what was once the world’s fourth-largest lake into a slowly recovering landscape. The work is led on the ground by Karakalpak communities, where women gather seeds each autumn and men join planting crews through the winter. A single mature saxaul shrub can hold back several tons of moving sand, shielding nearby towns from the toxic dust storms that have driven respiratory illness for decades. It’s an imperfect, weather-dependent effort — but a hopeful model for how nature-based restoration can heal landscapes that seemed beyond saving.

Flag of Uzbekistan, for article on Uzbekistan independence

Uzbekistan declares independence from the Soviet Union

Uzbekistan’s independence arrived on August 31, 1991, when the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic stepped out from seven decades of Soviet rule to become one of 15 nations born from the USSR’s collapse. The declaration came days after a failed Moscow coup cracked central authority. For a land shaped by Samarkand, Bukhara, and Silk Road trade, it was a return of an old name to its own people.

image for article on Seljuk Empire founding

Tughril and Chaghri Beg establish the Seljuk Empire across Central Asia

Seljuk Empire founders Tughril and Chaghri Beg, two brothers from a nomadic Turkic clan near the Aral Sea, captured Merv and Nishapur in 1037 C.E. and built a state that eventually stretched from the Aegean to the Hindu Kush. Rather than dismantle Persian civilization, they governed through it — a pattern of cultural fusion that echoed across later Islamic empires.

Map of the Scythian kingdom in Western Asia at its maximum extent, for article on Scythian kingdom

Scythian kingdom unifies the Pontic steppe under nomadic rule

The Scythians rose across the Pontic steppe around 650 B.C.E., consolidating a horse-powered kingdom that stretched from the Don to the Danube. Organized entirely around mounted life, they frustrated empires — famously outlasting Darius I’s invasion in 513 B.C.E. by simply refusing to stand still. Their kurgans and gold animal-style art still shape how we understand steppe civilization.