Discuss political activities of Mongols after Genghis khan
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Mongol Empire had captured many territories in Central Asia and China. Genghis Khan had reached a topmost position among the rulers in Asia. After his death, Ogedei Khan became the successor of this Mongol Empire. His grandsons divided this Mongol Empire into Khanates. Genghis Khan died a natural death in the year 1227 after being defeated the Western Xia.
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Discuss political activities of Mongols after Genghis khan
- The Khagan was in charge of the Mongol Empire. After Genghis Khan's demise, it divided into four divisions, each of which had its own Khan (Yuan Dynasty, Il-Khanate, Chagatai Khanate, and Golden Horde).
- The greatest contiguous land empire in history was the Mongol Empire, which existed in the 13th and 14th centuries. The Mongol Empire, which had its beginnings in modern-day Mongolia in East Asia, at its height spanned from the Sea of Japan to portions of Eastern Europe, extending northward into parts of the Arctic, eastward and southward into portions of the Indian subcontinent, attempting invasions of Southeast Asia, and capturing the Iranian Plateau, as well as westward as far as the Levant and the Carpathians.
- Genghis Khan (c. 1162–1227), who was recognised by a council in 1206 as the head of all Mongols, led the unification of many nomadic tribes in the Mongol heartland to become the Mongol Empire.
- Under his and his successors' leadership, the empire expanded quickly as they dispatched armies of invasion in all directions. In an imposed Pax Mongolica, the huge transcontinental empire linked the East with the West, the Pacific with the Mediterranean, and allowed the movement of trade, technologies, goods, and ideas throughout Eurasia.
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