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All China Hotan Hotan Sunday Market

Hotan Sunday Market

This weekly market in the remote oasis city of Hotan still has the atmosphere of the old Silk Road.

Hotan, China

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Max Cortesi
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General milling about   Colegota on Wikipedia
Market stalls   Colegota on Wikipedia
All kinda fabrics   Colegota on Wikipedia
Silk scarves and baby tees   Colegota on Wikipedia
Scoping out some sheep   Colegota on Wikipedia
Metal in various forms   Colegota on Wikipedia
Stoves’n’Things   Colegota on Wikipedia
Motorcycle show   Colegota on Wikipedia
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Hotan market is a VHS collector’s dream   Colegota on Wikipedia
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About

Kashgar Bazaar too played out for you? Then you should go further down the road and check out the Sunday market in Hotan.

Situated on the southwestern edge of the Taklamakan Desert, Hotan — by virtue of its advantageous location — was destined to become a major center of trade. An oasis town near two major rivers and located at a natural regional crossroads, Hotan quickly became one of the principal market towns on the southern branch of the Silk Road, and stood at the junction where southern commercial traffic from Tibet and India joined that famous continental trade route.

Hotan’s market continues to bear witness to the city’s history as a hub of exchange. Though less famous and not as popular with tourists as the bazaar in (relatively, by Central Asian standards) nearby Kashgar, the weekly Sunday market in Hotan is larger, has a wider variety of goods on offer, and still exists primarily to serve the needs of the residents of the city that includes Uyghurs, Tajiks, Uzbeks, Kyrgyz, and Chinese.

Decentralized and chaotic, visitors to the Sunday market can find an astonishing array of items on offer: carpet, silk, clothing, doppi (Uzbeki hats), pigments, yarn, cotton, wool, lumber, knives, vegetables, furniture, medicines, spices, horse bridles, stoves, bikes, motorcycles, scrap metal, rebar, cows, horses, donkeys, sheep, goats, and, of course, delicious food.

Highly prized local goods available include Hotan-made carpets (which savvy buyers know are identifiable by their vase and pomegranate designs) and white or “mutton fat” jade, historically collected from the nearby, aptly-named White Jade River. Tourists are cautioned against buying a doppi and wearing it around the market like some Central Asian version of a Swede in a Stetson. Sunday is the big day (as the “Sunday market” moniker would suggest), but the market is active in a lesser capacity every day of the week.

Related Tags

Markets Oasis Silk Road

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Added By

Max Cortesi

Edited By

RHyzer

  • RHyzer

Published

December 16, 2015

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Sources
  • http://www.xinjiangtravel.com/attractions/hotan-attractions/hotan-sunday-market
  • http://www.bazaarplanet.com/china/silk_road/14_hotan_xinjiang_china.html
  • http://www.terranomada.com/china/hotan_market/hotan_market.html
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hotan
  • http://wikitravel.org/en/Khotan
Hotan Sunday Market
Hotan
China
37.1, 80.016667

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of China

China

Asia

Places 218
Stories 77

Explore the Destination Guide

Photo of China

China

Asia

Places 218
Stories 77

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