Turkmenistan Travel Destinations
Turkmenistan is important to world energy markets because it contains the world’s third largest reserves of natural gas, with estimates of the country’s total gas resource base ranging as high as 535 trillion cubic feet.
Turkmenistan was once part of the ancient Persian Empire. The Turkmen people were originally pastoral nomads and some of them continued this way of life up into the 20th century, living in transportable dome-shaped felt tents. The territory was ruled by the Seljuk Turks in the 11th century. The Mongols of Ghenghis Khan conquered the land in the 13th century; they dominated the area for the next two centuries until they were deposed in the late 15th century by invading Uzbeks.
The most curious of the Central Asian republics, Turkmenistan resembles an Arab Gulf state without the money. It’s the second largest Central Asian country, but four-fifths of it consist of an inhospitable lunar-like desert called the Karakum which conceals unexploited oil and gas deposits.
