A bureaucrat in Bokhara (1910)

A bureaucrat in Bokhara (1910)
A bureaucrat poses for the camera in Bukhara, in this photograph taken by Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii circa 1910. Since the mid-1800s Bukhara had been a vassal state of the Russian Empire, but was ruled by an emir. Soviet power was formally established in Bukhara in 1920.

Between 1909 and 1912, Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii undertook a photographic survey of the Russian Empire with the support of Tsar Nicholas II. He used a specialized camera to capture three black and white images in a quick succession, using red, green and blue filters, allowing them to later be recombined and projected with filtered lanterns to show near true color images. When these photographs were taken, neither the Russian Revolution nor World War I had yet begun.

The lands where he photographed Muslim worshippers and scholars were the centre of Islamic learning and scholarship in the past, in which the likes of Imam Bukhari and Imam Tirmidhi had once lived.
The photos were made available by the Library of Congress, which had purchased the original glass plates in 1948.