Back to the palace

Hands that built the palace

Architects, carvers, painters and curators — the people whose work the palace still carries.

Architects

Mirzo Ustomiddin Sarkor
Chief architect of the palace

Oversaw the construction of the whole Sitorai Mohi Xosa under Amir Sayyid Olim-khan, including the Banquet Hall, the Chess Room and the throne hall. His name signs the structural decisions visible in every doorway.

Usto Ostonqul Hafizov
Designer of the palace project under Muzaffar-khan

Drew up the project of the palace during 1860–1885. Tried to braid Eastern tradition with European modernity — a hybrid the building still wears in every cornice and ayvan.

Usto Hoji Hafiz
Designer of early phases

Worked the initial designs of the gardens and courtyards before the main palace took shape. The geometry of the rose garden and the outer hovli still follows his proportions.

Vinogradov
1937
Architect-restorer, drew the palace sheet by sheet

An academician of architecture. In 1937 he documented every wall, niche and ceiling of the palace — single-storey and double-storey walls, the deep ayvans, the carved ganch above and the parquet below. His blueprints became the reference document for every restoration that followed.

Masters of decoration

Usto Shirin Muradov
Master of the White Hall

Carved the White Hall in two years (1912–1914) with thirty assistants — ganch laid over mirror so that one candle multiplied to forty reflections. He was once imprisoned for blasphemy under Abdulahad-Khan, sent to military service in Karmana, then pardoned to decorate the throne room. After 1920 he refused to flee to Afghanistan with Sayyid Olim-Khan. In 1946–48 he built the Bukhara Hall of the Navoi Theatre in Tashkent — a State Prize.

Hasanjon Umarov
Painter of the Waiting Hall

Filled the Waiting Hall with painted vases in every size, from floor-to-ceiling pieces to small alcove blooms. Made his own pigments from egg yolk, camel milk, apricot-tree resin, plant dye and gold dust, and sealed them under a pistachio-and-almond varnish that has held the colour for over a century.

Abdulla G‘afurov
Wood carver of the Banquet Hall

With Qori Cho‘bin produced the figured ceiling and the wall panels of the Banquet Hall in the «guldor jimjimador» style — densely floral carving that runs through the palace like a signature.

Qori Cho‘bin
Wood carver of the Banquet Hall (with G‘afurov)

G‘afurov’s partner on the ceiling carving. Their dense floral grammar repeats in the doors and panels of the Mirzo-xona and the corridor to the Bathroom.

Abdurahim Turdi
1913
Sculptor of the marble lions

A sangtarosh (stone-master) from the Nurota workshops. Carved the two marble lions at the entrance in 1913 — each from a single block of Nurata marble. The lions, symbols of justice and power across the Bukharan emirate, still face every visitor.

Museum directors and researchers

Fayzulla Xoʻjayev
1920
Saved the palace from looting

Head of the Bukhara People’s Republic. After the Red Army takes the palace in September 1920 and the gardens are trampled, the gateway portal shot at, Fayzulla Xoʻjayev makes the palace the official government residence — a single bureaucratic stroke that stops the mass looting and saves the building for what becomes its museum decade.

Muso Saidjonov
1920s
Founder of professional museum work in Bukhara

Minister of Education and Secretary of the Bukhara Central Executive Committee. With Abdurauf Fitrat and Abdulvohid Burhonov he sets up the first systematic inventory of Bukharan monuments — including a photo archive — and pushes through the «Sredazkomstaris» committee’s proposal to open a museum here. His memoranda to the Uzbek government argue the palace should become «something like Peterhof or Tsarskoe Selo». The 1927 branch museum that follows is his idea made law.

Abdurauf Fitrat
1920s
Writer and reformer; infrastructure for the palace road

One of the founding intellectuals of modern Uzbek literature. Worked with Saidjonov on the monuments inventory; his particular contribution to the palace was the repair of the road that led to it from Bukhara — without which curators, scholars and the first visitors could not have reached the building in the 1920s.

Karim Kamolov
2020
Mayor of Bukhara who stopped a botched restoration

Late mayor of Bukhara. In 2019–2020 a contractor without restoration expertise damages ancient tiles and patterns on the staircases and ayvans and replaces the original windows with cheap wood. Kamolov, together with the Regional Cultural Heritage Department, demands a halt. After warnings, formal letters and a referral to the prosecutor’s office, the works are finally stopped in March 2020. The case becomes a textbook example in Uzbekistan of why heritage restoration needs scientific oversight.

P. A. Goncharova
1930s
Co-author of the modern museum’s scientific programme

A graduate of the Eastern Languages Institute at the Central Asian State University, Goncharova arrived in Bukhara in the early 1930s and, with the art historian L. I. Rempel, carried out the first systematic ethnographic and curatorial fieldwork at the palace. Their proposals turned the museum from a display of confiscated objects into an academic institution — and led directly to the 1937–38 «Chinese Porcelain» exhibition that became the country’s first scientifically catalogued ethnographic display.

L. I. Rempel
1930s
Art historian; co-designer of the first scientific exhibition

Co-worker of Goncharova on the museum’s 1930s research programme. Rempel’s art-historical lens — provenance, attribution, decorative grammar — turned the palace inventory into a curatorial scheme that European ethnographic museums of the period would recognise. The 320-piece Chinese Porcelain catalogue prepared by the Uzbek Republican Art Museum was the visible result of his method.

P. E. Kornilov
1930s
Director, Bukhara Local-History Museum

An expert in local-history museum work. Under his leadership in the 1930s the Bukhara museum became a centre of regional academic life — collections were systematised, scientifically catalogued, and put on public display for the first time. The model of museum work in Bukhara today still runs on the foundations he laid.

R. V. Almeyev
1985 →
Director, Bukhara State Museum-Reserve

On his appointment in 1985 many objects that the Soviet authorities had quietly transferred to other regional collections were brought back to Bukhara. Under him new branches opened, several monuments themselves became museums, and ethnographic field expeditions reached Romitan, Peshku, Shafirkan, Qiziltepa, Vobkent and Gijduvon to enrich the holdings.

Sh. K. Ro‘ziqulova
2026
Researcher of the museification process

Author of the master’s dissertation «Processes of museification of Sitorai Mohi Xossa (XX–XXI cc.)» (K. Behzod National Institute of Painting and Design, 2026). This site’s halls, biographies and timeline are drawn directly from her work — names, dates, attributions and pigment recipes that would otherwise live only in the archive.

Source: master’s dissertation by Sh.K. Roziqulova, K. Behzod NRDI, Tashkent, 2026.