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October
28, 1999
EDITOR'S PICK The treasures of Samarkand
Current readers should be quite familiar by now with Assistant Professor
of Anthropology Frederik Hieberts expeditions that have revealed
the richness of the ancient Silk Road civilizations of central Asia (Current,
Jan. 14 and Sept.
16). Now, the rest of the world will have a chance to see those riches
up close. The artifacts on display include objects from the ancient Bactrian civilization of the Bronze and Iron ages, fabrics, manuscripts and objects from the 12th-century Silk Road culture, and ethnographic materials from the Uzbek khanate of the 16th through 19th centuries, such as this 1860s photo of an Uzbek woman and her child in full wedding regalia. The exhibit opens with a celebration of Uzbek culture on Nov. 8. Sodyq Safaev, the Uzbek ambassador to the United States, and a delegation of Uzbek government and cultural ministers will officially open the exhibit at a reception at 5:30 p.m. that day, followed by a performance of traditional Uzbek songs and dances by members of the Lazgi and Bakhor dance ensembles and the Uzbekistan National Orchestra at 7:30 p.m. --S.S.
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