The Tilakari Madrasa (from ; ) is a 17th-century madrasa (Islamic school) located on the Registan in the historic center of Samarkand, a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Uzbekistan.
The Tilakari Madrasa is the youngest monument in the monumental ensemble of Registan, which is formed by the Ulugh Beg Madrasa, the Sherdar Madrasa and the Tilakari Madrasa. It was built between 1646 and 1660, ten years after the Sherdar Madrasa. The madrasa was not only used for the education of students but was also one of the most important mosques for a long time.
The Tilakari Madrasa is widely regarded as a masterpiece of Timurid architecture, a tradition deeply rooted in the Persianate architectural and artistic legacy that dominated Central Asia during the 14thâÂÂ17th centuries. Rather than belonging to a generalized category of âÂÂTurkic architecture,â the madrasa reflects the refined aesthetics developed in Iran, Khurasan, and Transoxiana, where Persian cultural and artistic norms shaped the visual identity of the Timurid Empire.
Scholars such as Lisa Golombek, Donald Wilber, Sheila Blair, Jonathan Bloom, and Bernard OâÂÂKane identify Timurid architecture as the culmination of the Persian architectural tradition, characterized by monumental pishtaq façades, intricate mosaic and glazed tilework, muqarnas vaulting, and richly ornamented interiors.
UNESCO likewise describes the Registan complexâÂÂincluding the Tilakari MadrasaâÂÂas part of the broader Persian-influenced cultural landscape of Samarkand, shaped by craftsmen brought from cities like Shiraz, Tabriz and Isfahan.
The lavish interior of the Tilakari Madrasa, covered with gilded surfaces and a dense program of floral and geometric patterns, exemplifies the Timurid mastery of decorative arts. Its tilework, calligraphy, and structural composition closely parallel those of major Iranian and Khurasani monuments, reflecting shared workshops, technologies, and artistic conventions across the region. The madrasa's harmonious proportions, turquoise-and-gold palette, and synthesis of spatial and ornamental design make it one of the finest surviving examples of the Persianate Timurid architectural style, rather than a representative of a pan-Turkic artistic category.