This is a list of wars involving the Republic of Uzbekistan and its predecessors.
Victory Defeat Stalemate
| Conflict | Combatant 1 | Combatant 2 | Results | Casualties |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karakhanid-Samanid war | Victory | Unknown | ||
| Battle of Bukhara (999) | victory | Unknown | ||
| Battle of Isfahan (1227) | Khwarazmian Empire | Mongol Empire | Victory
|
bigger 5.000> |
| Battle of Belh | Timurid Empire | Chagatai Khanate | Inconclusive | ? |
| Battle of Tashkent | Timurid Empire | Chagatai Khanate | Defeat | Heavy |
| Siege of Balkh (1370) | Timurid Empire | Amir Husayn | Victory | ? |
| Timur's invasions of Georgia | Timurid Empire | Kingdom of Georgia | Victory | ? |
| Conquest of Persia 1380-1384 | Sarbadars Muzaffarid dynasty Kart dynasty |
Timurid Empire | Victory
|
? |
| Siege of Tbilisi (1386) | Kingdom of Georgia | Timurid Empire | Victory | Heavy |
| Siege of Multan (1398) | Timurid Empire | Delhi Sultanate | Victory | ? |
| Sack of Bhatner fort (1398) | Timurid Empire | Delhi Sultanate | Victory | ? |
| Sack of Delhi (1398) | Timurid Empire | Delhi Sultanate | Victory | ? |
| Timur's South Georgia Campaign | Kingdom of Georgia | Timurid Empire | Victory | Heavy |
| Siege of Isfahan (1387) | Muzaffarids (Iran)civilian defenders | Timurid Empire | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Capakhchur | Timurid Empire | Qara Qoyunlu | Victory | ? |
| Battle of the Kondurcha River | Timurid Empire | Golden Horde | Victory | ? |
| Timur's raids of Armenian lands | Timurid Empire | Armenians Ottoman Empire | Victory | ? |
| Resistance in Amaras Monastery(1387) | Timurid Empire | Armenias | Victory | ? |
| Siege of Van (1394) | Timurid Empire | Armenians | Victory | |
| Battle of the Terek River | Timurid Empire | Golden HordeSimsir | Victory | 100,000 |
| Battle of Qara-Derrah Pass | Qara Qoyunlu | Timurid Empire | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Jammu (1399) | Kingdom of Jammu | Timurid Empire | Victory | Heavy |
| Sack of Aleppo (1400) | Timurid Empire | Mamluk Sultanate | Victory | ? |
| Siege of Damascus (1400) | Timurid Empire | Mamluk Sultanate | Victory | ? |
| Sivas Resistance (1400) | Timurid Empire | Armenias | Victory | ? |
| Invasion of Armenia and Georgia (1400) | Timurid Empire | Armenias | Victory | ? |
| Truce of Shamkor | Timurid Empire | Kingdom of Georgia | Successful truce | ? |
| Siege of Ankara | Timurid Empire | Ottoman Empire | Inconclusive | ? |
| Battle of Ankara | Timurid EmpireAq QoyunluGermiyanids | Ottoman EmpirePrincipality of KastriotiMoravian SerbiaDistrict of BrankovićAnatolian beyliksQarai Turks | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Algami Canal | Qara Qoyunlu | Timurid Empire | Victory | ? |
| Siege of Birtvisi (1403) | Timurid EmpireShirvanshah | Kingdom of Georgia | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Astrakhan (1447) | Uzbek Khanate | Golden Horde | Victory
|
4500 |
| battle for Tashkent and Zhetysu (1487-1488) | Timurids of Transoxiana Timurids of Fergana |
Kazakh Khanate Oirats |
Victory
|
? |
| Siege of Samarkand(1497) | Khanate of BukharaTimurids of Samarkand | Timurids of Ferghana | Defeat | ? |
| Persian–Uzbek Wars(1502–1510) | Shaybanid Dynasty | Defeat | ? | |
| Battle of Akhsi | Khanate of Bukhara | Moghulistan | Victory | ? |
| Siege of Kabul (1504) | Timurid Empire | Arghun dynasty | Victory | ? |
| Babur's First Indian Expedition | Timurids of Kabul | Afghans | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Qalat | Timurids of Kabul | Arghun faction | Victory | ? |
| Second Invasion of the Kazakh Khanate(1509) | Khanate of Bukhara | Kazakh Khanate | Defeat | ? |
| battle for Urgench (1512) | Khanate of Khiva | Safavid Iran | Victory
|
? |
| Battle of Tashkent (1513) | Khanate of Bukhara | Kazakh Khanate | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Ghazdewan | Safavid Iran | Khanate of Bukhara | Victory | <30,000 |
| Bajaur massacre | Timurid Empire | Pashtuns | Victory | Low |
| Uzbeks raids against Safavids (1616-1617)[1] | Khanate of Bukhara | Safavids | victory | Unknown |
| Uzbeks campaign against Kazakhs(1612) | Khanate of Bukhara | Kazakh Khanate | victory | small |
| Battle of Orbulaq | Khanate of Bukhara | Dzungar Khanate | victory
|
small |
| Khiva campaign of 1717 | Khanate of Khiva | Russian state | Victory
|
900-1000 |
| Raids of Kazakh villages (1820) | Khanate of Khiva | Junior zhuz | Victory
|
small |
| Battle in the heights of Naryn (1831) | Kara-Kyrgyz | Khanate of Kokand | Victory | ? |
| Khivan campaign of 1839 | Khanate of Khiva | Russian Empire | Victory | Low |
| Battle in the Bylkyldama October 1852 | Khanate of Kokand Kipchak feudal of Tashkent |
Musulmankul Andijan Kyrgyz |
Victory
|
minimal |
| Battle Of Issyk Kul 1864 | Khanate of Kokand | Qing empire | Victory | ? |
| Battle of Shimkent 1864 | Khanate of Kokand Kyrgyz-Kipchak tribes |
Russian Empire | Victory
|
Low |
| First capture of Tashkent 1864 | Khanate of Kokand Alimqul's army |
Russian Empire | Victory
|
Low |
| Battle of Ikan 1864 | Khanate of Kokand Alimqul's army |
Russian Empire | Victory
|
500 killed |
| Capture of Ikan 1864 | Khanate of Kokand Alimqul's army |
Russian Empire | Victory
|
Unknown |
| Vose uprising 1888 | Bukhara Emirate | Vose Tajik farmers |
Victory
|
Unknown |
| Basmachi Movement(1916–1934) | (1917) (from December 30, 1922) |
(1918–20) (1919–20)[2] (1920) (1929)[3] |
Defeat | ? |
| Malleson mission | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic | British RajTranscaspian GovernmentTurkestan Army (Armed Forces of South Russia) | Inconclusive
|
At least 1,000 Bolsheviks died at the Battle of Dushak, at least 299 Brits and Turkestan troops were dead or wounded |
| Muslim guerillas in Central Asia | MuslimsBasmachi movementEmirate of Bukhara | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist RepublicRussian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic | Defeat | At least thousands died. Most were found in the Basmachi movement but some died during the Bukhara operation (1920). |
| Bukhara operation (1920) | Russian Soviet Federative Socialist RepublicYoung Bukharans | Emirate of Bukhara | Defeat
|
? |
| Battle of Khiva (1918) | Soviet Union | Basmachi | Victory for Basmachi | Heavy |
| Occupation of Jalalabat | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic | Basmachi movement | Victory for Basmachi | ? |
| Capture of Osh | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic | Basmachi movement | Victory for Basmachi | ? |
| Surroundings of Andijan | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic | Basmachi movement | Victory for Basmachi | |
| Battle of Taxtako'pir | Basmachi | Turkestan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic | Victory for Basmachi | |
| Battle of Karshi (1921) | Basmachi | Soviet Union | Victory for Basmachi | ? |
| Battle of Dushanbe (1921) | Basmachi | Soviet Union | Victory for Basmachi | 5000 Bolsheviks Tajiks were killed |
| Soviet–Afghan War (1979-1989) | Soviet Union | Afghan mujahideen | Inconclusive
|
15,052 dead,
53,753 Soviet wounded |
| Osh riots (1990) | Uzbeks | Kyrgyz people | Inconclusive | 300-600 Kyrgyz killed |
| Uzbek-Kyrgyz clashes in Uzgen | Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic | Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic | Victory | ? |
| Kyrgyz-Uzbek clashes in Uzbekistan | Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic | Kirghiz Soviet Socialist Republic | Victory | ? |
| Tajikistani Civil War(1992–1997) |
|
United Tajik Opposition
Supported by: |
stalemate | ? |
| 2022 Karakalpak protests | Karakalpakstan | Uzbekistan | Victory | 21 |
| Nukus protest | Karakalpakstan | Uzbekistan | Victory | ? |
| 2023 Karakalpak protesters | Karakalpaks | Uzbekistan | Success | 516 |
References
- ↑ Audrey Burton The Bukharans: A Dynastic, Diplomatic and Commercial History 1550-1702 p.144
- ↑ In Union with him and Bey Madamin counter-revolutionary robber bands with July 10, 1919, to January 1920.
- ↑ Supporters of Habibullah had fought in alliance with such films only in northern Afghanistan
- ↑ "Tajikistan: President Meets With Popular Front Commanders". Radio Liberty Archives. 9 July 1997.
- ↑ "Ethnic Factors and Local Self-Government in Tajikistan". Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. Retrieved June 18, 2010.
- ↑ Jonson, Lena (2006-08-25). Tajikistan in the New Central Asia. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 9781845112936. Retrieved 17 December 2014.
- ↑ Inside Al Qaeda: global network of terror, by Rohan Gunaratna, pg. 169
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