The 1966 Tashkent Earthquake: Rebuilding an Uzbek City cover art

The 1966 Tashkent Earthquake: Rebuilding an Uzbek City

The 1966 Tashkent Earthquake: Rebuilding an Uzbek City

Listen for free

View show details
On April 26, 1966, a 7.5 magnitude earthquake flattened much of Tashkent, killing hundreds and leaving 300,000 homeless. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the disaster's aftermath: how the Soviet Union used the rebuilding as a showcase for centralized planning, importing architects from across the USSR to design a new 'ideal socialist city' of broad avenues and prefabricated housing. They discuss the controversial demolition of historic mahalla neighborhoods, the influx of tens of thousands of workers from other Soviet republics that forever changed Tashkent's demographics, and the long-term environmental and social costs—including the city's subsequent water crisis. The conversation also touches on the 1966 Tashkent Declaration between India and Pakistan, signed in the rebuilt capital. Along the way, they reflect on how the disaster reshaped Uzbek national identity, from the loss of traditional urban fabric to the emergence of a distinct post-earthquake architectural style. A vivid portrait of a city remade by catastrophe and ideology. #TashkentEarthquake #1966 #USSR #Uzbekistan #SovietArchitecture #Mahalla #PrefabHousing #TashkentDeclaration #AlexeiKosygin #CentralAsia #DisasterPolitics #UrbanPlanning #SovietModernism #DemographicShift #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #Earthquake Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
No reviews yet