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Category Archives: Mongols
The Ilkhan Turns Muslim, 1291-95
In 1291, the Mamluks finally captured Acre, the last outpost of the Crusader states. The Christian world didn’t know that they’d never take back any of that land, but in fact, they never would, until after World War I. At the … Continue reading
Posted in Literature, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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In Xanadu did Kublai Khan: the Yuans, 1271
“In Xandu did Cublai Can build a stately Pallace, encompassing sixteen miles of plaine ground with a wall, wherein are fertile Meddowes, pleasant Springs, delightfull streames, and all sorts of beasts of chase and game, and in the middest thereof … Continue reading
Posted in Mongols
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The Eighth and Ninth Crusades, 1270-2
The Mamluk Sultan Baybars had a field day in the Holy Land during the 1260s. War between Venice and Genoa had drawn the remaining Crusader towns into war with each other, exhausting the region one more time. Mamluk forces, which … Continue reading
Posted in Crusades, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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Hulegu Khan and Goliath’s Well, 1260
Möngke Khan died in 1259. The Mongolian procedure for selecting a new Great Khan was not an automatic succession by Möngke’s son, but a massive family gathering called a kurultai. The kurultai was usually organized with an obvious purpose by one … Continue reading
Posted in Crusades, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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The Fall of Baghdad, 1258
The last Caliph of Baghdad ascended to his throne in 1242. The position had been powerless for a long time during the Turkish migrations, ruling in name while the cities were virtually independent, but then a series of energetic Caliphs … Continue reading
Posted in Medieval cycle of life, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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The Ilkhan and the Fall of Alamut, 1256
Between 1251 and 1254, Mongol armies subdued the Goryeo Kingdom of Korea, though not without drama. Under military pressure, the Korean king sent them a hostage who was supposedly his son, but it turned out to be a stepson not … Continue reading
Posted in Castles, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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The Splendor of Karakorum, 1251
In 1251, the Mongol Empire went through an internal coup. Temujin’s son Ögedei had died in 1241, and his widow got their son Güyük installed as Great Khan. But when Güyük died and his widow tried to do as her mother … Continue reading
Posted in Holidays, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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The Mamluk Revolution, 1250
Under the last real Ayyubid Sultan, as-Salih, the Mamluk corps was built up to unprecedented size and strength. They were a neat solution to a political problem because as slaves, they did what they were told, but as people with … Continue reading
Posted in Crusades, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series), Women
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The Saint and the Seventh Crusade, 1248-50
Of course, the Pope called a new crusade. But Europe was in bad shape for a Crusade. In the Sixth Crusade, the King of Hungary had led, but now Hungary was in ruins. Europe’s bad boy Frederick was not only … Continue reading
Posted in Crusades, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series), Women
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Sack of Jerusalem, 1244
When the Mongols invaded the land of Khwarezmia, south of the Aral Sea, they sent a wave of ferocious refugees who had been the toughest kids on the block until the Mongols showed them up. Bands of Khwarezmian fighters went … Continue reading
Posted in Crusades, Mongols, Muslim Empire (old series)
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