fivemack: (iguana)
Tom Womack ([personal profile] fivemack) wrote2014-09-09 06:30 am

The Kyrgyz dalek project was plagued by the opposite error to Spiñal Tap's



This is actually the Burana Tower, which is the bottom half of the giant minaret of the now-vanished giant mosque of the now-vanished late-ninth-century Karakhanid city of Balasagan. The Karakhanids have also now vanished.

You can climb it by a spectacularly claustrophobic staircase

[identity profile] huskyteer.livejournal.com 2014-09-09 06:45 am (UTC)(link)
Hahaha! (And 'yikes' to those stairs.)

[identity profile] pseudomonas.livejournal.com 2014-09-09 12:47 pm (UTC)(link)
How does an entire city manage to disappear leaving empty plains, without this tower also disappearing?

[identity profile] fivemack.livejournal.com 2014-09-10 07:17 am (UTC)(link)
The city didn't quite leave empty plains; the yellow ridge in the grass visible just above the base of the monument traces the mud-brick walls, and there is one mighty-civic-building-shaped chunk of weathered mud-brick still reasonably visible from the top of the tower:

Image

Soviet archaeologists rebuilt the tower thoroughly in 1974; before restoration it looked rather like one of Obelix's menhirs (see picture at bottom of http://www.topasia.kg/en/kyrgyzstan/history).

I can't find details of what happened to the city; apparently it survived the Mongols and then dropped out of use in the 15th century.

[identity profile] rwl.livejournal.com 2014-09-10 04:02 am (UTC)(link)
The stairs look really no more claustrophobic than the ones in the dome of St. Peter's in Vatican City. And there probably fewer of them.