Situated in Eastern Uzbekistan’s Fergana Valley, Margilan
has long been synonymous with silk, which has been produced there at least
since the 9th century, when the city was an important stop on the
Silk Road. Uzbe...
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Situated in Eastern Uzbekistan’s Fergana Valley, Margilan
has long been synonymous with silk, which has been produced there at least
since the 9th century, when the city was an important stop on the
Silk Road. Uzbekistan is the world’s sixth-largest silk producer and Margilan
is home to the country’s largest traditional silk factory, which employs
upwards of 2,000 people. The ancient city’s inhabitants are known for being
tough, once described by Babur, the founder of the Mughal Dynsaty and Fergana
Valley native, as “feisty people, ready with their fists.” That was back in the
16th century, when powerful Margilan merchants made and enforced the
law, but the city’s scrappy reputation has lasted into modern times, and during
the Soviet era it was center of the Uzbekistan’s black market.
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