From ancient Caucasian Albania to the modern republic — the history that shapes what you'll see on your trip
Long before modern Azerbaijan, the region was home to Caucasian Albania (unrelated to the Balkan Albania), an ancient kingdom whose traces survive in sites like Gabala's archaeological ruins and the early Christian church at Kish near Sheki, believed to date to the 1st century AD.
From roughly the 8th to 18th centuries, Azerbaijan sat on major Silk Road trade routes, with Sheki emerging as a significant caravanserai stop and Baku's Old City taking shape under the Shirvanshah dynasty, whose 15th-century palace remains the Old City's UNESCO-listed centrepiece.
Azerbaijan was incorporated into the Russian Empire in the early 19th century. Baku's oil boom, beginning in the 1870s, transformed the city almost overnight into one of the world's major oil-producing centres, funding the elegant European-style boulevards and mansions still visible around the city today.
Azerbaijan became a Soviet republic in 1920, remaining part of the USSR until 1991. This period left a distinct architectural and infrastructural layer still visible in Baku's metro system and mid-century public buildings.
Azerbaijan declared independence in 1991. The following decades saw significant oil-and-gas-funded development, particularly visible in Baku's modern architectural landmarks — the Flame Towers, Heydar Aliyev Center, and Crystal Hall — built from the 2000s onward.