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Kalan Minaret – Bukhara's Death Tower
Kalan Minaret towers as Bukhara's most iconic landmark, a 47-meter baked-brick giant built in 1127 by Qarakhanid ruler Arslan Khan and architect Usto Bako. From the moment you stand at Po-i-Kalyan's heart opposite Kalan Mosque, its 12 belts of geometric patterns and Kufic inscriptions dominate the skyline, once a lighthouse for Silk Road caravans and execution platform—earning its grim "Tower of Death" nickname.
You can circle everything here: octagonal base sunk 13m with camel's milk mortar, first-ever blue tile bands foreshadowing Timurid style, muqarnas cornice gallery, lantern arches for the muezzin, and views over Mir-Arab Madrasah—surviving Genghis Khan's 1220 wrath when he spared it, awed by its scale.
One of the most dramatic angles is from Kalan Mosque's courtyard, framing the tower between turquoise domes. Shadows reveal hidden stars in the brickwork.
Visiting Kalan Minaret is not just photography—it's vertical history.
As a travel expert in Central Asia, I highly recommend this unyielding sentinel.