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[2] [3] During the period of Niyazov's rule when Ashgabat streets were assigned four-digit numbers, Magtymguly was given the number 2033. [ 3 ] In 1971, a monument designed by architects V. Vysotin and V. Kutumov to the 16th century Turkmen poet Magtymguly Pyragy (who would later become the avenue's namesake), was installed on the avenue on the ...
Monument to the Constitution: Ashgabat: 185 m (607 ft) [2] 2011: Monument: Independence Monument: Ashgabat: 118 m (387 ft) 2001: Monument: Yyldyz Hotel: Ashgabat: 107 m (351 ft) [3] 2013: Hotel: The Ministry of Oil and Mineral Resources of Turkmenistan: Ashgabat: 103 m (338 ft) 2003: Ministry: The Ministry of Trade and Foreign Economic ...
Monument to the Turkmenistan Constitution (Turkmen: TürkmenistanyĆ Konstitusiýa binasy) is a monument located in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. Its height of 185 meters makes it the second-tallest building in Turkmenistan. The monument is decorated with marble.
Independence Monument (Turkmenistan) Institute of Telecommunications and Informatics of Turkmenistan; International Oil and Gas University; International Passenger Bus Terminal of Ashgabat; International Turkmen-Turkish University
Galkynysh Square (Square of Revival) is a square in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. It sits at the intersection of Turkmenbashi and Galkynysh Avenues. [2] Landmarks on or near the square include: Palace of Congresses; Oguzkhan Presidential Palace; Nusai Hotel [3] Monument to the Constitution
The complex includes a monument erected in honour of the victory in the Great Patriotic War (1941–1945), [10] and the memorial perpetuating the memory of the heroes who died during the battle near Geok Depe and the casualties of the 1948 Ashgabat earthquake. [11] Also built in the memorial is a museum. There are buildings for the Muslim rite ...
[10] [11] While there was no National Park Service in the United States until 1916, battlefields of the Civil War were designated and managed by the War Department: Chickamauga and Chattanooga (created 1890), Antietam (1890), Shiloh (1894), Gettysburg (1895), Vicksburg (1899), and Chalmette (1907). [12] [13]
The State Museum of Turkmenistan (Turkmen: TürkmenistanyĆ Döwlet Muzeýi), also known as the Saparmurat Turkmenbashi Museum, is a museum in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan. [1] [2] The museum was opened on 12 November 1998. [3] The museum has seven permanent galleries incorporating history, present day culture, and ethnography. [3]