Monument to the three great biys – Tole bi, Kazybek bi, and Aiteke bi.
Tole bi Alibekuly (1663, born in the Zhaysan pasture in the Shu region of the Zhambyl region – 1756, Akburkhan-orda, now the Tole bi district of the South Kazakhstan region) – a great Kazakh biy, biy of the Senior Zhuz, a prominent public figure.
Kazybek Keldibekuly (Kaz Dauysty Kazybek, 1667, Syrdarya coast – 1763 (according to other sources, 1764 and 1765), wintering at the Terakty spring in the modern Karkaraly district of the Karaganda region) – a great Kazakh biy. Kazybek Keldibekuly was an orator, public figure, ambassador, belonged to the Middle Zhuz, to the Karakesek clan of the Argyn tribe. His nickname “Kaz Dauysty” means “goose-voiced” in translation from Kazakh. Along with Tole bi and Aiteke bi, he was one of the three great biys of the Kazakh people and one of the authors of the first systematized code of Kazakh customs and laws, “Zhety Zhargy.”
Aiteke bi Baibekuly (real name Aytyk, 1644, Kyzylsha, modern Uzbekistan – 1700, Nurata district of Uzbekistan) – a great Kazakh biy, orator. He made a significant contribution to the unification of the Kazakh people.
The monument is located in front of the central entrance to the regional court building. It is a symbol of the wisdom, justice, and honor of the Kazakh people.
The height of the monument is approximately 4 meters, it is made of bronze and placed on a marble pedestal. The author is a well-known Kazakhstani sculptor Bakhytbek Mukhametzhanov.