The main streets of Dishan Kala (Hazorasp, Bogi Shamol, Shohimardon, Qosh) have preserved many monuments such as Nurullaboy Palace, Sayidboy Madrasah and Mosque, Sayid Mohi Rui Jahan, Toʻrt Shabboz, Abdolbobo Complexes.
[1][2][3] Allahquli Khan built an outer defensive fortress in 1842 to protect Khiva from the attacks of the Yomuts (one of the Turkmen tribes).
The soil for the construction was dug out two kilometers north of the city, in an area called Govukkol.
The fortress had ten gates named Hazorasp (Sheep), Pishkanik, Bogi Shamol, Shaykhs, Tozabog, Shohimardon, Doshoyoq, Qosh, Gadoylar and Gandumiyon (Only Hazorasp and Qosh gates have survived).
[4] The walls and several gates of the fortress were destroyed in 1873 when the Russian troops led by General von Kaufmann captured it.
In 2005, the northern part of the fortress, 80 meters long, was restored to its original state by the UNESCO office in Uzbekistan.
It was named after the nearby village where the Gandimyan Treaty was signed in 1873, which annexed the Khanate of Khiva to the Russian Empire.
It was rebuilt of baked bricks in 1842 by the order of Allahquli Khan during the construction of the walls of Dishan Kala.
The gate consists of two large observation towers on the sides of the wide passage along the Yangiaryk road.