Bukharan Jews are from what is now Uzbekistan. However, the term Uzbek is an ethnic term and a national term. Bukharan Jews are not ethnic Uzbeks and only Bukharan Jews who still live in Uzbekistan (<1% of the current Bukharan Jewish community) have Uzbek citizenship, but otherwise, they are predominantly Israeli and American citizens.
Theodore Craig Levin has written: 'The hundred thousand fools of God' -- subject(s): Bukharan Jews, Ethnomusicology, History and criticism, Jews, Bukharan, Music, Social aspects, Social aspects of Music
Bukharan tenga ended in 1920.
Bukharan People's Soviet Republic was created in 1920.
Bukharan People's Soviet Republic ended in 1924.
Uzbek refers to both a culture and a language. Uzbek culture encompasses traditions, customs, arts, and cuisine of the Uzbek people, while the Uzbek language is the official language of Uzbekistan and is spoken by the majority of its population.
Uzbek League was created in 1992.
Edward Allworth has written: 'Uzbek literary politics' -- subject(s): Political aspects of Language and languages, Political aspects, Uzbek literature, Language and languages, History and criticism 'The preoccupations of Abdalrauf Fitrat, Bukharan nonconformist' 'The modern Uzbeks' -- subject(s): History 'Nation-building in the Post-Soviet Borderlands' 'Central Asian publishing and the rise of nationalism' -- subject(s): Publishers and publishing, Bibliography 'The nationality question in Soviet Central Asia' -- subject(s): Ethnology, Minorities
THE coolest Uzbek in US is JAVDAT SATTAROV 1996
Viktor Uzbek was born on 1990-02-22.
Persian-Uzbek Wars happened in 1510.
Allegedly, Gafur Rakhimov is the Ukbek syndicate boss.
Uzbek women's football championship was created in 1996.