Fabrics in medieval Uzbekistan were very valuable and expensive.
Thanks to their beauty and high quality, they were also appreciated outside the region, making up a significant part of the trade on the Silk Road.
This is confirmed by a work dedicated to Bukhara by the medieval historian Muhammad Narshahi (899-959): "In Bukhara, between the fortress and the city, next to the mosque, there was a large workshop where carpets, curtains, yazdi fabrics, pillows, prayer mats (joynamaz) and cloths to cover the floors in the residence of the caliph were made. Each of these items was so costly that the profit from the sale of only one curtain could cover the entire land tax in Bukhara."
According to Narshahi, local textiles in the 10th century were exported to Baghdad, Khorasan, Syria, Egypt, Iran and India.
Even more facts about traditional textiles in Uzbekistan can be learnt from in the book-album Collections of the Czech Republic from the Cultural Legacy of Uzbekistan in the World Collections series.
The general sponsor of the project "Cultural legacy of Uzbekistan in the world collections" is the oilfield services company Eriell Group.