Motorcycle Explorer June 2015 Issue 6 | Page 36

TOWARDS SAMARCANDA I left the monumental Bukhara and rode towards Samarkand. The trip seemed endless due to my anxiety to arrive. As my tiredness was getting overwhelming, I am welcomed by a huge sign that reads Samarkand. I jumped for joy. The city is magical, beautiful, amazing. Unlike its Kazakh neighbors who are nomad shepherds that never built anything more stable than a yurt (traditional circular tent of the steppe), Tajik farmers founded the fertile valleys filled with cities that embraced blue mosques, high Minarets and immense monuments. And also founded a mighty kingdom. The Timorese kingdom, the Great Tamerlane, who in less than ten years conquered Iran, Iraq, Syria and East Turkey. After a breakfast of unleavened bread and cucumber, I went outside the Registan, a square located opposite of the Grand Mosque. The atmosphere is of quiet and peaceful retreat. The buildings are of spectacular beauty, so astonishing that almost hurts. Just a few backpackers dispersed around it. You can even hear the murmur of the fountains and the chirping of birds. A young man approached me and started conversation. I was not in a hurry so we chatted for a while. I shared with him my scarce interest on historical lessons of the Great Court and its monuments. I told him I was only interested in one thing, and if he knew about it and there was any trace left, I will hire him as a guide to show it to me. -All right-, he accepts. - I am seeking the traces of a Spanish ambassador who came here in the fifteenth century – I reply. I am convinced that he has no idea of the visit of the Castilian and Spaniard Ruiz González de Clavijo in those early days. Once again, I felt that my proposition to him was made too fast, too in a hurry. However, the kid's eyes light up. He ensures me enthusiastically that he does know. I believed him. I felt there was something more than just financial interest in his joy. I felt behind it lied scholar pride. He told me that there was hardly anything left, barely a street with a strange name, but he knew where it was and also knew the history behind it. He remarked that he also ran by chance one day into that street, around five years ago. He then became interested in the reason of such a strange name. He sought information in books. We started walking towards the Mausoleum of Gur Emir, where is buried Timor the Great. The street plate is still there. It is true! Clavijo - Klavixo for Uzbeks- has a street in Samarkand. There is a piece of Spain in Uzbekistan. In 1403, Rui Gonzalez de Clavijo was sent to Central Asia by Henry III, king of Castile (Spain). His goal was to close up a partnership with Tamerlane to fight against the Turks. He crossed by Rhodes and Constantinople (now Istanbul) before entering the Black Sea and disembarked in Trabzon (Trabzon). From there he continued overland through Iran and Iraq to reach Samarkand on a journey that, even today, still intimidates by its risk and hardness. When that unexpected traveler appeared in Timor’s court, he was received with delight and a big ceremony. But after Timor’s death, a period of instability began as Timor’s heirs divided the empire among themselves. Clavijo’s embassy could be labeled as a diplomatic failure. However, the success was the journey itself. Such a huge feat will survive Clavijo’s goal. His book, Embassy to Tamerlane, is a landmark of medieval travel literature. I owe to Clavijo existence my own adventure. He gave all of us a portrait of a time and place that no one knew before. His existence is in my mind again. He represents the reason why I should continue traveling. The great journeys exist because there are chroniclers. People that share with us their travel stories. Without them, it would only be left a cloud of dust.