Also with all the land they owned how did they control it all and keep everyone doing what they're supposed to do.all the mongols did was kill everyone and not make peace with any other countries. Overall the mongols had positive and negative consequences from conquering so much land. But even today we still use things they use like hospitals and orphanages. And because of the mongolas we have cultural…
The Mongols ruled much of the Asian continent from 1206 to 1368. The impact that the Mongols had on the world was very strong. According to document 1 in the DBQ, more than double the amount of land conquered by Alexander the Great was conquered by the Mongols loyal ruler, Genghis Khan. Cruel and intelligent battle strategies created many different effects.. The Mongolians of the Asian Steppe had a positive impact on the world during their rule of the Asian continent from 1206 to 1368 by influencing the unification of China, many laws, and the Silk Road.…
Genghis Khan also unified tribes in Mongolia in 1206. The Yuan dynasty was established when his grandson, Kublai Khan conquered China. Its significant achievement was the unification…
Furthermore, the Mongols triumphed over most of Eurasia by…
These brutal displays of strength greatly intimidated other cities, and led them to surrender before the Mongols would ever set foot in their city walls. After conquering the land that they desired, the Mongols used the people that they conquered to help them govern in the form of a bureaucracy. They were also very tolerant of the cultures of their conquered people and they codified a common law code. When Genghis Khan died, his sons took control and split the empire into four khanates to make it easier to…
The expansion of the Mongol Empire in 13th century definitely made a difference in the later ruling policies and decision-making conditions of both east and central Asia. As the fifth generation descendant of Timur, who is also a offspring of Genghis Khan, Babur was the Mughal Emperor of India. In his ruling policies, he adopted Genghis Khan’s ruling policies in multiple ways. Just as other descendants of Genghis Khan, Babur “possessed a core of family loyalists”, continuing a family-centered empire.…
The turks and the mongols had similar views on religion and economic influence, but their artistic impact sets them apart. Despite this, they both had a significant impact on their respective societies beginning in the late 13th century. Both of these empires allowed for great amounts of religious tolerance, especially for their time period. Although the mongols practiced shamanism, an animistic religion that primarily focused on powerful spirits, they were extremely tolerant of all religions. Chinggis Khan, a mongol leader, was interested in the religions of the lands he conquered and frequently brought religious leaders from all regions back to Karakorum (the capital) so he could be properly educated about their religions.…
The Mongols advanced on Baghdad and demanded the city’s surrender. The Mongols conquered Asia because the shah of Central Asia, not knowing anything about the Mongols, killed the envoys for being insolent enough to request changes in the conditions of trade between the Mongols and the Central Asians. The Mongols were known for their encouragement for free trade and with control of both ends of the trade route they used it to spread goods and diseases formed throughout Asia and Europe. Trading was the main purpose that technology advances and kept the Mongols in power that differed from Asia and…
Given its military prowess, the Mongol Empire was able to stretch its territory to an extraordinary level--the four corners of the border were marked by Poland, Egypt, Java, and Japan. (Weatherford 214) The empire covered most of Asia and tiny parts of Europe and Africa. Despite the suffering from the warfare, the areas under the Mongol rule “were able to enjoy a unprecedented century of political peace with a commercial, technological, and intellectual explosion unlike any in prior history.” (Weatherford 214)…
The Mongols created the largest empire in all of history. The land they had conquered is more than two times that of the next greatest conqueror, Alexander the Great. But unlike Alexander, who is often remembered as a hero, the legacy of the Mongols is one of brutality and barbarism. But in truth, these so-called “barbarians” were, in fact, not very barbaric at all. Recent discoveries challenged the long-accepted statement of Mongols being savage brutes, suggesting that they were perhaps wrongly labelled; the facts about them were twisted and lost to history.…
Kublai Khan ruled China when his brother put him in charge of the Northern Mongolian Empire. He rose to power in 1260 and reigned until his death in 1294. He ruled China for more than thirty years.…
The Manchus unlike the Mongols didn’t destroy much of China and instead adopted much of the elements of Chinese culture before they took over. The Saxons, Angles, Franks, Jutes, Vandals and Visigoths were Germanic tribes that lived in Europe but where pushed into the civilized settlements that inhabited most of Europe to avoid the oncoming Mongolian army and in the end lead to the downfall of the Roman Empire. When the Mongols finally did end up conquering China in 1234 they ended up destroying more than half of China but also brought with them the Yuan Dynasty. During the time China was under the Mongolian rule it soon got the attention of the European travelers and merchants due to China being praised by various ‘reports’ created by other traders and merchants, the most famous of those would be the report made by Marco Polo after he traveled through China .One report of the Mongols impact on China written in the 13th Century by a Persian historian stated, “With one stroke a world which billowed with fertility was laid desolate, and the regions thereof became a desert, and the greater part of the living, dead, and their skin and…
1, 6,8). The size of their conquests were tremendous- including nearly all of Asia, the Middle East, and parts of Europe- and was the biggest known empire in the world (Doc. 1). Because the cartographer focused on more on Asia and provided nothing else to compare the size with, the portion of conquered land appears to be larger. Also, the chart uses conquerors from earlier times, where it may have been more challenging to gain land. In addition, the Mongols were able to make cultural improvements, enhanced communication, thrived in wine-making, extended the silk industry, protected trade routes and lands, and boosted economic development (Doc. 6).…
The Mongols had a very different approach to controlling their empire…
The empire unified large areas, some of which are still unified today such as Russia and western China (Jackson, 2009). Numerous factors led to the rise and spread of the Mongol Empire but some played a larger role than, among these factors is the predecessors to the empire, and their military and political…