Neither Europe nor Asia, Azerbaijan is an incredible tangle of contradictions and contrasts.
  Refusing someone offering you tea is a strong indicator you don’t like  that person. When receiving a gift, you’re supposed to refuse a few  times before actually taking it. If you’re offering a present, insist by  all means. Remove your shoes upon entering and don’t display the soles  of your feet. Don’t even think about crossing your legs! Avoid chewing  gum, pointing fingers and randomly touching people. They don’t  appreciate it. Also, never, ever, mention Armenians. You can’t possibly  imagine the reactions you’ll get.
It’s a fascinating  nexus of ancient historical empires. Yet it’s also a new nation finding  its feet as it emerges from a war-torn post-Soviet chrysalis on a  petroleum-funded gust of optimism. Surrounded by semi-desert on the  oil-rich Caspian Sea, the nation’s cosmopolitan capital Baku is a  dynamic boomtown, where flashy limousines and mushrooming skyscrapers  sweep around a picturesque Unesco-listed ancient core. Yet barely three  hours’ drive away lies an entirely different world: 
Timeless villages  clad in lush orchards from which shepherd tracks lead into the soaring  high Caucasus mountains. Where Baku is multilingual and go-ahead, the  provinces shuffle to the gently paced click of nard (backgammon)  on tree-shaded teahouse terraces: women stay home, herds of cattle  wander aimlessly across highways, and potbellied bureaucrats scratch  their heads in confusion on finding that an outsider has wandered into  their territory.










 
 
 
 
 
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