Challenge.
Alauddin Ghori is
known as 'jahan
SOZ" which means
burner of the
world. Why do
you think he was
given this title?
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
Among the Turkish condottieri who rose to high office in Northern Persia was one Alptagin, who, falling out with his Samanid lord, established himself with a couple of thousand followers in the fortress of Ghazni in the heart of the Afghan mountains (a. D. 962). Here, in a kind of no-man's-land, secure from interference, he made his little kingdom, and here after an interval his slave Sabuktagin reigned in his stead (976). The new ruler was not content with the original stronghold of his master. He gathered under his banner the neighbouring Afghan tribes, added whole provinces to his dominions-Laghman to the east in the Kabul valley and Sistan on the Persian side-and, when called to support the tottering Samanid prince of Bokhara against the encroaching Turks, he turned the occasion to his own advantage and placed his son Mahmud in command of the rich province of Khorasan.
Sabuktagin was the first Moslem who attempted the invasion of India from the northwest. He went but a little way, it is true; his repeated defeat of Jaipal, the Brahman raja of the Panjab, in the Kabul valley, ended only in the temporary submission of the Indian king and the payment of tribute; but it pointed the way to Hindustan. Sabuktagin died in 997 before he could accomplish any larger scheme, but his son more than realized his most daring dreams.
Answer:
To avenge his brothers, who had been murdered by a Ghaznavid monarch, he devastated and burned the city of Ghazni, earning him the moniker 'Jahan-Soz,' which loosely translates to 'World Burner.'
A convex lens is one that converges light rays that travel parallel to its main axis.
Explanation:
He was a Sunni Muslim who was instrumental in establishing Islamic rule in the Indian subcontinent.
but also some of his closest advisers to succeed him and take leadership of his empire once he died.
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