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Saturday, 10 December 2016

The Mongol Empire at its greatest extent spanned most of Asia with its dominions reaching from Korea to Hungary and down to the Indus.

The Mongol Empire was great and vast spanning the entire of Russia.  It seems that any family or families that crossed the Ice Bridge did not do so out of  a necessity to find resources but out of persecution as a people holding unto the belief in a peace in ten principles communal living. Also, they may have crossed by accident.  They would have been  a less warrior minded people but not any less capable.  They ended up in the Arctic and also in the paradise of Alaska eventually where they could enjoy peace and  live instinctually in the coexistence with the animals and nature in the peace of  the ten commandments.  All Natives in North America, the West Indies and South America are essentially  Mongolian and were always, at first, very hospitable to foreigners and were also very willing to adopt their new ways that might involve, in the year 1999, cooking fish  on the top of a hot air conditioner in tin foil to save money if a refugee from St. Croix told you to do it and said "...do it this way."  Some natives look black  and some natives look white these days as time has passed.  But, who are they working for in terms of social and economic policy as they do not hire the natives or the graduates or the citizens regardless of race who are in their trust and association as graduates of field studies with compasses and who had to start a fire in the snowy winter and build a shelter for survival?  They trust people who speak two languages and who cuss them behind their back and who send the cash back to other countries.  There is a a socio-cultural polemic that  would run like a virus through any Brit-Milah minded culture or any genuine derivative of the same.  The word is virus. The word is not "savages" but holistic worshipers who sought to keep a holistic peace with the  environment.        
 
http://www.mongolianculture.com/Mongolia-Information.htm

The Mongol Empire at its greatest extent spanned most of Asia with its dominions reaching from Korea to Hungary and down to the Indus. The Mongol Empire Khans and their generals defeated the armies that controlled the territories of the nations we know of today as China, North and South Korea, Myanmar, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgystan, Tajikistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Afghanistan, northern India, Hungary, Transylvania, Bulgaria, eastern Germany, Russia, Ukraine, Poland and others.

 The lands that make up modern day Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan were conquered and ruled by the Mongol Empire’s Golden Horde Dynasty from 1237 until 1382. One of the greatest military battles of all time unfolded in 1223 when the armies of Russian nobility engaged the Mongols at the Battle of Kalka River. The Mongols outfought and destroyed the armies of the overly confident Russian princes and sent a collective shockwave that reverberated throughout Europe for centuries. The Golden Horde’s rule endured in Kazan and Astrakhan till 1554 and lasted in Crimea until 1783. Some historians5 have reasoned that the Mongol Golden Horde Dynasty helped unite the Russian princely states and aided Muscovy’s development as a regional power, which ultimately led to the creation of czarist Russia and its consolidation of Central Asia.

 Mongol armies had conquered and occupied all of northern China by defeating the Chin Dynasty in 1234, which gave rise to Mongolian rule of China. The greatest Mongol ruler of China was Khubilai Khan who came to the throne as predicted by his grandfather Chinggis Khan6. Khubilai Khan’s reign over China, from 1261 till 1294, brought about a period of great innovation and enlightened development throughout China. Khubilai Khan allowed China, a closed-off nation, to be opened up to foreign trade, and promoted the export of Chinese goods and culture. In 1264 Khubilai Khan established his capital at Peking (Beijing) the city Chinggis Khan had conquered in 1215. By defeating the Southern Sung in 1279 the Mongol Yuan Dynasty unified China for the first time since 970 B.C. and ruled the reunified state of China till1368. The sudden outbreak of the plague caused China to lose between one-half to two thirds of its population by 13517 and this situation also contributed to the weakening of the Yuan Dynasty of the Mongols.  A Han Chinese peasant named Zhu Yuanzhang led a peasant rebellion and forced the weakened Mongol Yuan court to leave China and he became the first Ming Dynasty ruler in 1368.


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