Büzmeýin, Turkmenistan
file:2018 01 06 ashgabat etrapy separation 24784.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Map of districts of the city of Ashgabat. Büzmeýin District is shown in green, with the Büzmeýin neighbourhood shown on the northwest border with Bagtyýarlyk District.
Büzmeýin is the name of both a borough, Büzmeýin District, and a neighborhood of Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan. Formerly a separate city in Ahal Province, in 2013 the city was incorporated into Ashgabat as part of a program that expanded the capital's area by about 15%.
The municipality was founded as a "town of urban type" but granted the status of a city in 1963. It bore the name Büzmeýin until October 2002, when its name was changed to Abadan by President Saparmurat Niyazov. In January 2018, the original name was restored. The traditional Russian form of the name is Bezmein.
Etymology
According to the Turkmen Academy of Sciences, "Büzmeýin" is derived from medieval Arabic "buza" plus Persian "mayim", a reference to the area's historic use for wine grape production and wine warehousing, dating back to when Nisa was capital of the Parthian Empire.Niyazov claimed Büzmeýin to be a meaningless word, and in late 2002 the new name became Abadan — a billboard at the town-entrance even features an eponymous poem by him.