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• South Kazakhstan is a focus of Central Asian history and culture and there are many famous monuments in the region. It is a scenically diverse region in which all four seasons can be experienced in the space of a day, as the snow-capped peaks, lakes and glaciers of the Tien Shan range give way to steppe and desert land which stretches for thousands of kilometres. The desert is home to the Singing Barkhan – a sand dune 80m (260ft) high and 3km (2 miles) long, which, as it crumbles and shifts, produces a peculiar sound reminiscent of loud singing.
• Almaty is a city of modern architecture, wide streets, cool fountains, parks and squares and spectacular mountain views. Attractions in the city include the Panfilov Park, which is dominated by one of the world’s tallest wooden buildings, built at the turn of the 20th century without using a single nail, and the Zenkov Cathedral. This served in Soviet times as a concert and exhibition hall, but is currently standing empty, whilst the Christians of Almaty worship at St Nicholas Cathedral. Other sights include New Square, which is usually the location for national ceremonies and parades and is overlooked by the City Hall (the president’s official residence) and the Obelisk of Independence. Almaty boasts several fine museums including the Museum of Kazakh National Instruments, the Central State Museum and the State Art Museum which has, among its exhibits, traditional Kazakh rugs, jewellery and clothing. The Arasan Baths, in the western area of Panfilov Park, have Eastern, Finnish and Russian saunas.
• See a ballet or orchestral performance at the recently redesigned Almaty Ballet Theatre.
• 160km (100 miles) from Chimkent is the 14th-century Kodja Ahmed Yasavi Mausoleum in Turkestan; built under Tamerlane, this mausoleum has the largest dome in Central Asia. Dzhambul, too, is an industrial city in the region with some reproductions of ancient remains from when it was known as Taraz – these are housed in the Karakhan and the Daudbek Shahmansur Mausoleums. The nearby village of Golovachovka, 18km (11 miles) to the west, has authentic remains from Taraz, including the 11th-century Babadzi-Khatun Mausoleum and the 12th-century Mausoleum Aisha Bibi. Another ancient historical centre is Taldikorgan. Much of this region was crossed by the Great Silk Road.
• Central Kazakhstan has one of the largest lakes in the world. The unique Lake Balkhash is half saline, half fresh water. Some archaeological and ethnographic sites have been preserved in central Kazakhstan. There are Bronze Age and Early Iron Age sites and New Stone Age and Bronze Age settlements in the Karkarala Oasis. The Bayan-Aul National Park has rock drawings, stone sculptures, clean, sparkling lakes and pines clinging to the rocks. The Baikonur Cosmodrome, located 5km (3 miles) from the garrison city of Leninsk and 230km (143 miles) from Kzil-Orda, is the Central Asian answer to Cape Canaveral – tours are available, during which visitors can witness space launches. It was from here, on 12 April 1961, that Yuri Gagarin, the world’s first cosmonaut, took off, and it is still a point of departure for space launches.
• West Kazakhstan marks the southern convergence of Europe and Asia in the basin of the Caspian Sea. The region’s Karagie Depression, 132m (433ft) below sea level, is the lowest point in the world after the Dead Sea in Sinai. There are many architectural heritage sites in this region, including the subterranean cross-shaped Shakpak-Ata Mosque (12th-14th century) which is hewn out of rock.
• Astana was made Kazakhstan’s new capital in 1997, as its location was thought to be more accessible to the Russian Federation and less earthquake-prone than Almaty (the former capital), where foreign embassies and consulates are still based. Although a small and friendly town and an important centre for the production of grain, it has little else to recommend it. The nature reserve of Kurgaldjino in the north of Kazakhstan houses the most northerly settlement of pink flamingos in the world, while another nature reserve, Naurzum, offers a rich landscape of geographical contrasts – salt lakes ringed by forests, the remains of ancient pines strewn amongst sand dunes, pine forests growing out of salt-marsh beds, vast meadows, and rare animals such as hisser swans and grave eagles.
• East Kazakhstan offers a colourful landscape of snow-capped mountain peaks, plunging forested canyons and picturesque cedar forests. Lake Marakol rivals Baikal in beauty. It is 35km (22 miles) long and 19km (12 miles) wide and lies 1,449m (4,754ft) above sea level. The city of Semipalatinsk, 30km (19 miles) from Siberia, was a Russian place of exile; Dostoyevsky was exiled here from 1857-1859 and his house is preserved as a museum – exhibits include notes for Crime and Punishment and The Idiot. Other museums in the city include the Abai Kununbaev Museum, commemorating the Kazakh poet, and the History Museum. The town of Ust-Kamenogorsk is a mining and smelting town and is the gateway to the Altai Mountains.
• Nature Reserves:
Aksu-Zhabagly: A UNESCO biosphere reserve in southern Kazakhstan, situated 1,000 to 4,000m (3,280 to 3,120ft) above sea level, and home to 239 species of birds, 47 species of animals and 1,400 species of plants.
Almaty: Located in the southern Tian Shan Mountains and home to snow leopards, jeirans, gazelles, arkhars and the unique Tjan-Shan fir tree.
Barsa Kelmes: Translated as ‘the land of no return’, this island, off the northwestern Aral Sea coast, is the home of the rarest hoofed animal in the world – the kulan.
The West-Altai: Situated in the Altai Mountains and home to 16 types of forest, 30 species of mammals and 120 species of birds.
Kurgaldjino: Located in central Kazakhstan, this A-class nature reserve is of international importance, and its feather-grass steppe is home to 300 types of plant and the most northerly settlement of flamingos in the world.
Marakol: Home to 232 species of bird, 59 species of animal and over 700 types of plant, the reserve is set in the southern foothills of the Altai Mountains.
Naurzum one: Located in northern Kazakhstan and home to such rare animals as white herons, jack-bustards, hisser swans and grave eagles.
Ustiurt: Situated in west Kazakhstan in the Karagie Depression, 132m (433ft) below sea level, this chalk-cliffed reserve is the largest in the country.
Bayan-Aul National Nature Park: Known as ‘the museum of nature’, the reserve is located in central Kazakhstan.
See Contact Addresses for further tourist information.
• Almaty is a city of modern architecture, wide streets, cool fountains, parks and squares and spectacular mountain views. Attractions in the city include the Panfilov Park, which is dominated by one of the world’s tallest wooden buildings, built at the turn of the 20th century without using a single nail, and the Zenkov Cathedral. This served in Soviet times as a concert and exhibition hall, but is currently standing empty, whilst the Christians of Almaty worship at St Nicholas Cathedral. Other sights include New Square, which is usually the location for national ceremonies and parades and is overlooked by the City Hall (the president’s official residence) and the Obelisk of Independence. Almaty boasts several fine museums including the Museum of Kazakh National Instruments, the Central State Museum and the State Art Museum which has, among its exhibits, traditional Kazakh rugs, jewellery and clothing. The Arasan Baths, in the western area of Panfilov Park, have Eastern, Finnish and Russian saunas.
• See a ballet or orchestral performance at the recently redesigned Almaty Ballet Theatre.
• 160km (100 miles) from Chimkent is the 14th-century Kodja Ahmed Yasavi Mausoleum in Turkestan; built under Tamerlane, this mausoleum has the largest dome in Central Asia. Dzhambul, too, is an industrial city in the region with some reproductions of ancient remains from when it was known as Taraz – these are housed in the Karakhan and the Daudbek Shahmansur Mausoleums. The nearby village of Golovachovka, 18km (11 miles) to the west, has authentic remains from Taraz, including the 11th-century Babadzi-Khatun Mausoleum and the 12th-century Mausoleum Aisha Bibi. Another ancient historical centre is Taldikorgan. Much of this region was crossed by the Great Silk Road.
• Central Kazakhstan has one of the largest lakes in the world. The unique Lake Balkhash is half saline, half fresh water. Some archaeological and ethnographic sites have been preserved in central Kazakhstan. There are Bronze Age and Early Iron Age sites and New Stone Age and Bronze Age settlements in the Karkarala Oasis. The Bayan-Aul National Park has rock drawings, stone sculptures, clean, sparkling lakes and pines clinging to the rocks. The Baikonur Cosmodrome, located 5km (3 miles) from the garrison city of Leninsk and 230km (143 miles) from Kzil-Orda, is the Central Asian answer to Cape Canaveral – tours are available, during which visitors can witness space launches. It was from here, on 12 April 1961, that Yuri Gagarin, the world’s first cosmonaut, took off, and it is still a point of departure for space launches.
• West Kazakhstan marks the southern convergence of Europe and Asia in the basin of the Caspian Sea. The region’s Karagie Depression, 132m (433ft) below sea level, is the lowest point in the world after the Dead Sea in Sinai. There are many architectural heritage sites in this region, including the subterranean cross-shaped Shakpak-Ata Mosque (12th-14th century) which is hewn out of rock.
• Astana was made Kazakhstan’s new capital in 1997, as its location was thought to be more accessible to the Russian Federation and less earthquake-prone than Almaty (the former capital), where foreign embassies and consulates are still based. Although a small and friendly town and an important centre for the production of grain, it has little else to recommend it. The nature reserve of Kurgaldjino in the north of Kazakhstan houses the most northerly settlement of pink flamingos in the world, while another nature reserve, Naurzum, offers a rich landscape of geographical contrasts – salt lakes ringed by forests, the remains of ancient pines strewn amongst sand dunes, pine forests growing out of salt-marsh beds, vast meadows, and rare animals such as hisser swans and grave eagles.
• East Kazakhstan offers a colourful landscape of snow-capped mountain peaks, plunging forested canyons and picturesque cedar forests. Lake Marakol rivals Baikal in beauty. It is 35km (22 miles) long and 19km (12 miles) wide and lies 1,449m (4,754ft) above sea level. The city of Semipalatinsk, 30km (19 miles) from Siberia, was a Russian place of exile; Dostoyevsky was exiled here from 1857-1859 and his house is preserved as a museum – exhibits include notes for Crime and Punishment and The Idiot. Other museums in the city include the Abai Kununbaev Museum, commemorating the Kazakh poet, and the History Museum. The town of Ust-Kamenogorsk is a mining and smelting town and is the gateway to the Altai Mountains.
• Nature Reserves:
Aksu-Zhabagly: A UNESCO biosphere reserve in southern Kazakhstan, situated 1,000 to 4,000m (3,280 to 3,120ft) above sea level, and home to 239 species of birds, 47 species of animals and 1,400 species of plants.
Almaty: Located in the southern Tian Shan Mountains and home to snow leopards, jeirans, gazelles, arkhars and the unique Tjan-Shan fir tree.
Barsa Kelmes: Translated as ‘the land of no return’, this island, off the northwestern Aral Sea coast, is the home of the rarest hoofed animal in the world – the kulan.
The West-Altai: Situated in the Altai Mountains and home to 16 types of forest, 30 species of mammals and 120 species of birds.
Kurgaldjino: Located in central Kazakhstan, this A-class nature reserve is of international importance, and its feather-grass steppe is home to 300 types of plant and the most northerly settlement of flamingos in the world.
Marakol: Home to 232 species of bird, 59 species of animal and over 700 types of plant, the reserve is set in the southern foothills of the Altai Mountains.
Naurzum one: Located in northern Kazakhstan and home to such rare animals as white herons, jack-bustards, hisser swans and grave eagles.
Ustiurt: Situated in west Kazakhstan in the Karagie Depression, 132m (433ft) below sea level, this chalk-cliffed reserve is the largest in the country.
Bayan-Aul National Nature Park: Known as ‘the museum of nature’, the reserve is located in central Kazakhstan.
See Contact Addresses for further tourist information.
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