Turkmenbashi

Turkmenbashi, formerly known as Krasnovodsk, is in Balkan Province, Turkmenistan.

Understand

In 1717, Russian Prince Alexander Bekovich-Cherkassky landed and established a secret fortified settlement on this location, where the dry bed of a former mouth of the Amu-Darya River once emptied into the Caspian Sea. His intent was to march an army up this dry riverbed and conquer the Khanate of Khiva. The expedition failed, and the Russians abandoned the settlement for over 150 years.

In 1869, the Russians made a second and latest attempt. They named their fort Krasnovodsk (Красноводск), which is the Russian version of the original name, Kyzyl-Su (Red Water). Krasnovodsk was Imperial Russia's base of operations against Khiva and Bukhara, and the nomadic Turkmen tribes. It fell to the Red Army in February 1920.

In 1993 Krasnovodsk was renamed "Turkmenbashi" Many would assume that the city was renamed on behalf of Niyazov's self-proclaimed title "Turkmenbashi" meaning "The leader of Turkmens" yet the rationale behind renaming is to denote that Turkmenbashi is the place from where Turkmens spring. Turkmen meaning the Turkmen and bashi - the start, spring.

Get in

By plane

Turkmenbashi is connected by Turkmenistan Airlines flights to Ashgabat, capital of Turkmenistan.

By train

Turkmenbashi is the western extent of the Trans-Caspian Railway. Turkmendemiryollari (Turkmenistan Zeleznice) runs trains from Ashgabat to Turkmenbashi. Train 606 leaves Ashgabat at 20:10 daily, arriving at Turkmenbashi next morning at 09:15. Train 24 leaves Ashgabat at 20:40 every second day, arriving at Turkmenbashi next morning at 06:55.

By car

From Kazakhstan

It is a two hours' drive from Zhanaozen to the Turkmenistan border and another 40 minutes drive from the border on a dirt road to the city of Karabogas (formerly Bekdash) (approx. US$50 per car). From Karabogas there is a good road to Turkmenbashi with fine views on the Caspian Sea. About 60 km south of Karabogas the road crosses a bridge over the channel connecting the Caspian Sea with the inland gulf.

Within Turkmenistan

Turkmenbashi is about 560 km from Ashgabat.

By bus

By boat

There are boats across the Caspian Sea to Baku, Azerbaijan. The journey takes 12 to 18 hours and a seat costs about US$50. There are several boats weekly, but there is no fixed timetable. Consider that ships might be delayed and that your visa could expire in this time. Bring along you own food and water. See warnng on the Turkmenistan page!

Get around

The local bus station is at Balkan köcesi, about 500 meters west of the Museum of Regional History. Taxi drives within the town cost about 3000 manat and 5000 manat to Awaza (10 km north of Turkmenbashi).

See

  • Museum of Regional History, Rylov köcesi. Tu-Su 09:00-18:00. exhibits of the nomadic life of the Turkmen people US$0.10.
  • 🌍 Church of Archangel Michael, 28 Orazova St.
  • Japanese Memorial (near the airport). Memorial for thousands of Japanese prisoners of war who constructed roads and buildings here during the Second World War

Do

  • swimming at Awaza (8 km north of the city).
  • Awaza Resort, Awaza (Awaza). Awaza is resort place which hosts tens of hotels and sea beaches. In the evenings laser shows are held to entertain the populations and guests.

Buy

  • Bagtygul Bazaar, Magtymguly sayoli. Buy caviar for US$ 22 per half kilo

Eat

Budget

  • Deniz Patisserie Cafe, Azadi köcesi, +993 243 14254, +993 243 25653. 08:00-22:00. Turkish cafe, about 1.5 km from the Hotel Hazar. US$1-2.
  • Altyn Asir Kafe, Gahryman Atamurat Niyazov köcesi, +993 243 20752. 12:00-23:00. Russian restaurant. US$1-2.
  • Altyn Balik Restaurant, Bahri-Hazar köcesi, +993 243 77405. 12:00-23:00. US$1-2.

Mid-range

Splurge

Drink

Sleep

Budget

Mid-range

  • 🌍 Hotel Turkmenbashi, Hazar köcesi (2 km west of the railway station), +993 243 2130104, fax: +993 243 21317. Higher rates from Jun to Sep. US$50-75.

Splurge

Connect

Turkenistan Airlines office, Rylov köcesi, near Hotel Hazar, phone 75474 or 75804.

Stay safe

Cope

Go next

By plane

Turkmenbashi is connected by Turkmenistan Airlines flights to Ashgabat, capital of Turkmenistan. The airport is 8 km out of town. Flights to Ashgabat and Dashoguz cost US$11-12.

By train

Turkmenbashi is the western terminal of the Trans-Caspian Railway. Turkmendemiryollari (Turkmenistan Zeleznice) runs trains from Turkmenbashi to Ashgabat. Train 605 leaves Turkmenbashi at 16:05 daily, arriving in Ashgabat next morning at 05:50. Train 23 leaves Turkmenbashi at 19:30 every second day, arriving in Ashgabat next morning at 05:20. A seat (second class, kupe) costs US$1.20. Rail service information has phone 99462.

By car

To Khazakhstan

Go north from Turkmenbashi to Karabogas on a good road with fine views on the Caspian Sea. The last part is a 40-minute drive from the border on a dirt road to the city of Karabogas (formerly Bekdash). From the Turkmenistan border it is a two-hour drive to Zhanaozen in Kazakhstan.

within Turkmenistan

Turkmenbashi is about 560 km from Ashgabat.

By bus

Shared taxis to Ashgabat and Balkanabat leave in front of the railway station, Atamurat Noyazov köcesi. The trip to Ashgabat takes 6 hours and costs about US$8 per seat or US$25 for the whole car.

Shared taxis go north to the Kazakhstan border. They stop at Zhanaozen (Novy Uzen). The trip takes 7 hours and costs approx. US$40 per car.

By boat

There are boats across the Caspian Sea to Baku, Azerbaijan. The journey takes 12 to 18 hours and a seat costs about US$50. There are several boats daily, but there is no fixed timetable. Consider that ships might be delayed and that your visa could expire in this time. Bring along your own food and water.

gollark: `One element that influences the maximum sessions metric is the amount of installed memory in the platforms`
gollark: To give you a summary of its contents, here's a random sentence: `Table 5 gives information about HQoS performance by platform.`.
gollark: And is also less likely to include licensy nonsense and excessive data gathering.
gollark: Down with cloud-y management! Local stuff is generally better!
gollark: I'm sure they know that you won't actually use anywhere near all that bandwidth 99.9% of the time.
This article is issued from Wikivoyage. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.