Harman Patil (Editor)

Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia

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Country
  
Uzbek SSR, USSR

Subject
  
General

Media type
  
14 volumes (hardbound)

Genre
  
Reference work

Language
  
Uzbek

Publication date
  
1971-1980

Originally published
  
1971

Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia httpsd1k5w7mbrh6vq5cloudfrontnetimagescache

Publisher
  
Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia Publishing House

Countries
  
Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union

Reference work books
  
Great Russian Encyclopedia, Practical Management of Pain, Encyclopédie, The Complete Guide to, The Xfm Top 1000 Songs of

The Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia (Uzbek: Oʻzbek sovet ensikopediyasi, OʻzSE in Latin script, Ўзбек совет энциклопедияси, ЎзСЭ in Cyrillic script; Russian: Узбекская советская энциклопедия, УзСЭ) is the largest and most comprehensive encyclopedia in the Uzbek language, comprising 14 volumes. It is the first general-knowledge encyclopedia in Uzbek.

Contents

The Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia was printed in the Cyrillic script. Although the encyclopedia contained some articles translated from the Russian-language Great Soviet Encyclopedia, its coverage of topics skewed towards Uzbek interests.

History

The Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia was published in Tashkent from 1971 to 1980 by the Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia Publishing House. Doctor Ibrohim Moʻminov, a member of the Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan, was the chief editor of volumes one through nine. Komiljon Zufarov was the chief editor of volumes ten through fourteen. The Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia was not available in Russian.

Content

Despite the Marxist bias, the Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia is a very comprehensive source of knowledge in social and economic studies and in the applied sciences. A major value of the encyclopedia is its comprehensive information about the USSR in general and the Uzbek SSR in particular. Every aspect of life in Soviet Uzbekistan is systematically presented, including history, economy, science, art, and culture. There are comprehensive biographies of prominent Uzbek cultural and scientific figures who are not as well-known outside of Uzbekistan.

The Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia contains extensive writings on Sufism, and generally positive coverage of Uzbek Sufi philosophers such as Khoja Akhmet Yassawi. The encyclopedia initially criticized anti-Soviet writers such as Abdulrauf Fitrat and Choʻlpon as bourgeois nationalists, but these figures were rehabilitated during glasnost.

References

Uzbek Soviet Encyclopedia Wikipedia