'Mazar of Khoja Ahmed Yasawi' is an
unfinished mausoleum in the city of Türkistan (or
Hazrat-e Turkestan), south
Kazakhstan. In
2002, it became the first Kazakh patrimony to be recognized by
UNESCO as a
World Heritage Site.

A close-up of a dome on the mausoleum.
The present structure was commissioned in
1389 by
Timur to replace a smaller 12th-century mausoleum of a famous
Sufi master,
Khwaja Ahmad Yasavi (1103–66). Master builders from
Persia, led by Khwaja Hosein Shirazi
[1], erected a 39-meter-high rectangular building in ''ganch'', i.e., fired brick mixed with
mortar and
clay, and crowned it with the largest
dome ever built in
Central Asia. This double dome, decorated with green and golden tiles, measures 18.2 metres in diameter and 28 metres in height.
The building, one of the largest for its time, was left unfinished when Tamerlane died in
1405. As subsequent rulers paid little attention to it, the mausoleum has come down to us as one of the best preserved of all
Timurid constructions. It contains some burials from the time of the
Kazakh Khanate, notably the tomb of
Ablai Khan.
References
1. ''Mimaran-i Iran'', by Zohreh Bozorg-nia, 2004. ISBN 964-7483-39-2, p.140
External links
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Detailed information on the town and mausoleum