Gʻuzor Gʻuzor / Ғузoр | |
|---|---|
City | |
| Coordinates:38°37′15″N66°14′53″E / 38.62083°N 66.24806°E /38.62083; 66.24806 | |
| Country | |
| Region | Qashqadaryo Region |
| District | Gʻuzor District |
| Population (2016)[1] | |
• Total | 24,500 |
Gʻuzor (Uzbek:Gʻuzor;Tajik:Гузор;Russian:Гузар,romanized: Guzar;Persian:گذار) is a city inQashqadaryo Region in southernUzbekistan. It serves as the administrative center ofGʻuzor District.[2] Its population is 24,500 (2016).[1]
The town is home to a Polish war cemetery, one of many along the route thatGeneral Anders' army took during theSecond World War.
| Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
|---|---|---|
| 1979[3] | 13,033 | — |
| 1989[4] | 17,253 | +2.84% |
| 2000[1] | 21,300 | +1.93% |
| 2016[1] | 24,500 | +0.88% |
| 2022[5] | 49,700 | +12.51% |

Guzar was one of the most important cities of theKhanate of Bukhara.[6]
DuringWorld War II, in 1942, the organizational center of the PolishAnders' Army was based in Gʻuzor.[7] Many Polish soldiers and civilians died there to epidemic, and there is aPolish Military Cemetery.[8]
The status of the city was assigned in 1977 (before that - a village).
Located southeast ofKarshi on the riverGʻuzordaryo, a tributary of theKashkadarya.[6] There is a railway station of the same name in the city - a junction of railroads to Karshi,Kitob andKumkurgan.
The football club "Shurtan" is based in Guzar, and in 2005-2013 and 2015-2017 played in theUzbekistan Major League.
Processing of agricultural raw materials, construction company, chemical andagrochemical enterprises.Light industry enterprises are located in thecity.
A new sports complex with a modern football arena. Cemetery-memorial to Polish prisoners of war who were in Uzbekistan in the 1940s[9]
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