NEW INTAKE IN-PERSON & ONLINE (BISHKEK)

September 11, 2022

TOP-23 facts about Kyrgyzstan and Grand Opening of MINIBOSS & BIGBOSS Business Schools


Today was the 1st Grand Opening of the new branches of MiniBoss Bishkek Business School, BigBoss Bishkek Business School, Royal British School in Bishkek, Leonardo Art School Bishkek in Bishkek Kyrgyzstan!

World-Class Business Education for children and youth has arrived here as a unique game method and a global level program with 8 theory courses and 12 types of practice, with forums and startup championships!

All this wealth of the latest knowledge and training methods will be available to Kyrgyz youth from next Saturday!


Congratulations to the owner of the multi-franchise network Grigory Gurbanov and top-management ruled by Jamilia Kerimova, Cholpon Asanakunova, Nargiza Kydykova!
You are a super team of world education heroes!

22 interesting facts about Kyrgyzstan...

Facts about Kyrgyzstan





Kyrgyzstan is a small state in Central Asia.

1. In 1926, the capital of the state, Bishkek, was renamed in honor of the revolutionary Mikhail Frunze. The authors of this idea did not take into account that there is no “f” sound in the Kyrgyz language, and therefore the locals called the city “Prunze”.

2. On the territory of Kyrgyzstan there are the largest fruit and nut forests in the world - they cover more than 600 thousand hectares in the valley of the Arslanbob River. Legend has it that Alexander the Great, returning from a military campaign, set up camp in these forests, and then took with him the fruits and nuts that grew there. The army brought some of this provisions with them to Greece, and now these nuts are known as "walnuts".



3. Aigul flower (or, in scientific terminology, "Eduardo's Fritillary") grows in the mountains of Kyrgyzstan and is not found anywhere else in the world. "Moon Flower" (as this name is translated) for this reason, back in 1978, it was listed in the Red Book.

4. Between the mountain ranges of Sarydzhaz and Tengri-Tag, Lake Merzbacher appears and disappears every year. Scientists still cannot understand why and how this happens.

5. In Kyrgyzstan, there is another interesting body of water - Issyk-Kul. This is the second largest salt lake in the world after the Caspian Sea (which is also a lake), and in terms of transparency it is second only to Baikal. Scientists have proven that Issyk-Kul is part of the Pacific Ocean, with which the lake connects many underground rivers. On the shore of Issyk-Kul is a villa that once belonged to the legendary Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

6. On the territory of the country there is the northernmost "seven-thousander" on Earth - this is the highest point of the Tien Shan, which is called Victory Peak. With a height of 7,439 meters, this mountain ranks 78th among the highest peaks in the world.

7. Kyrgyzstan is a place of pilgrimage for Buddhists from all over the world thanks to the Tamga-Tash stones with prayers carved on them and Tibetan inscriptions, which are located on the southern coast of Issyk-Kul. Archaeologists date the sacred stone blocks to the 8th-9th centuries.

8. In the city of Karakol there is a unique Dungan mosque, which looks very much like a Buddhist temple and was built without a single nail at the end of the 19th century.

9. On one of the glaciers, scientists discovered wooden arrows that were made by hunters several thousand years before our era. Thanks to the ice surrounding them, the arrows are perfectly preserved.

10. In the past, 2 branches of the Great Silk Road passed through the territory of Kyrgyzstan - the Ferghana and the Northern branches.

11. Residents of Kyrgyzstan, especially shepherds, still often live in yurts - "mobile homes" of nomadic peoples.


12. Mountains occupy more than 3/4 of the territory of the state. At the same time, 4% of Kyrgyzstan is covered with ice that never melts.

13. At Kumtor, while drilling wells, the mummified remains of the royal family were discovered, which date back to the 7th century BC.

14. Under the Ala-Too square in the center of Bishkek is a huge underground bunker that was dug in Soviet times for the leadership of the republic. Nowadays, exhibitions are sometimes held in this room.

15. Currency of Kyrgyzstan - som. Special cotton paper for the Kyrgyz som (local currency) is made in France and the UK, and banknotes are printed in Malta.

16. Bishkek is the only city in the world named after a wooden household appliance (this word translates as “koumiss stick” or “churn”).

17. In the center of the city of Osh is Mount Suleiman (the biblical King Solomon), standing on which, according to legend, the prophet spoke with God, leaving prints of his knees and forehead on the stone.

18. In Jalal-Abad, according to legend, there was a source of Chashma-Ayub, the water from which the prophet Ayub (Job in the Bible) drank.

19. The national Kyrgyz drink is kymyz (koumiss), which is made from mare's milk taken at a strictly defined time.

20. In the southeastern part of the Botanical Garden of Bishkek there is an “anomalous square” where its own microclimate has been established - asters, tulips and other heat-loving flowers bloom there in winter.

21. The population of Bishkek is over one million people.

22. Bishkek is the only capital of the Central Asian countries where a large monument to the leader of the October Revolution, Vladimir Lenin, has been preserved. The monument weighing about 17 tons was installed on the central square in 1984. In 2003, it was moved to the Old Square in front of the government building.

23. From now MiniBoss & BigBoss Business Schools is Bishkek!