A standout amongst the most amazing medieval landmarks from the post-Mongol period is Kirk-Kiz. Situated outside the dividers of medieval Termez, it was most likely the invigorated living arrangement of a respectable family. This noteworthy in place structure of the gth century, with a square design, with every side being 54 meters in length, distinctively reminds you a fortress with solid turrets. Nonetheless, the round and hollow turrets have no embrasures, and they are not associated with whatever remains of the château. The high dividers, splendidly adjusted to the four cardinal purposes of the compass, have thin windows at the level of the second floor. These windows look more like embrasures. The doors are in four profound corners, with curved embrasures above them. Within Kirk-Kiz is isolated by sections into four sections. An elbowed passageway from focal lobby or the yard prompted each of the parts; from the hallway it was conceivable to enter five substantial rooms. Every one of them were made of adobe blocks; their vaulted roofs were of various outlines - angled, domed,or torispherical. The designers who fabricated the building were extremely imaginative; they went a long ways past the compositional types of their time. They built up a complex arrangement of pendentives to bolster vaulted roofs. Their numerous vaulted lobby with arches was a striking case of the compositional customs of the fifth - eighth hundreds of years. In all likelihood, this structure was at first utilized as a nation living arrangement of the neighborhood ruler. It was all around invigorated to oppose adversary assaults. Be that as it may, later it was reproduced and turned into a hanaka on one of the Great Silk Roads. Here dealers and different explorers could discover cover from awful climate and scoundrels and also helpfully stow their products and oblige their oack creatures. It is fascinating that neighborhood individuals call the region of Kirk-Kiz and the close-by towns 'Shakhri Saman' which signifies 'The Samans' Town'.