Construction Construction began in 1879 of a
narrow-gauge railway to
Gyzylarbat in connection with the
Russian conquest of
Transcaspia under General
Mikhail Skobelev. It was rapidly
altered to the standard Russian gauge of , and construction through to
Ashkabad and Merv (modern
Mary) was completed under
General Michael Nicolaivitch Annenkoff in 1886. Originally the line began from
Uzun-Ada on the
Caspian Sea, but the terminus was later shifted north to the harbour at
Krasnovodsk. The Railway reached
Samarkand via
Bukhara in 1888, where it halted for ten years until extended to
Tashkent and
Andijan in 1898. The permanent bridge over the
Oxus (Amu-Darya) was not completed until 1901, and until then trains ran over a rickety wooden construction that was often damaged by floods. As early as 1905, there was a
train ferry across the
Caspian Sea from Krasnovodsk to
Baku in
Azerbaijan. The
Tashkent Railway connecting the Transcaspian Military Railway with the network of other Russian and European railways was completed in 1906.
Economic impact The railway permitted a massive increase in the amount of cotton exported from the region. This increased from 873,092
pudy in 1888 to 3,588,025 in 1893. Also sugar,
kerosene, wood, iron and construction material were imported into the area. These rising trade figures were used by Governor-General
Nikolai Rozenbakh to argue for the extension to Tashkent, while the merchant N. I. Reshetnikov offered private funds for the same purpose.
Revolution and Civil War The railway was the most important means of communication in the area, and workers on the railway became key activists during the
Russian revolution. It was thirty-five railway workers who founded the
Tashkent Soviet on 2 March 1917. They decreed that the administration of the railway should be transferred away from Ashkhabad and sent
Commissar Frolov to that city, a move that proved unpopular. In turn, railway workers along the western end of the railway initiated a break away from
Bolshevik-oriented Tashkent, setting up the
Ashkhabad Executive Committee on 14 July 1918. Both railway and workers played an important role in the
Russian Civil War. Troops of the
British Indian Army participated in some of the battles along the railway line.
Tashkent was an important bastion for the
Red Army.
Under the Soviet Union During the Soviet period and beyond, the railway was administered from
Tashkent. ==Route==