Why did the Turkish Invasion take place and how did they help invaders to establish an empire in India?
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Answer:
Answer: During the thirty-three years of his reign, Mahmud Ghazni carried out seventeen raids on India. He was interested in wealth rather than setting up an empire in the Indian subcontinent. After 150 years of Mahmud's invasions Muhammad of Ghor (hence called Ghori) attacked India
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Answer:
Explanation:
Asia Minor was the most populous part of the Byzantine Empire, its heartland. Without it, the empire simply didn’t have enough resources to compete in the long run. Turkification was also helped by the fact that the Greeks were of a different religion than the Turks.
After the Seljuk victory, many Turks poured into Asia Minor, establishing little statelets, and ruling over the native population. Following the subsequent Mongol invasions, even more poured in, fleeing from their former lands in Persia and Central Asia.
This brings them within the Muslim caliphate, which from762 is based in Baghdad. The Baghdad caliphateis in one sense the Persian empire in a new guise. Within this empire the Turks play an increasingly important role, both as tribal allies and as slaves in Persian armies. Gradually the Turks begin to carve out territories for themselves.
However, there was no Arab incursion into the mainland of India. (Circa 1000 AD) Ghaznavid raids under Mahmud of Ghazni - main motive was plunder. (1194 AD) Ghurid invasion led by Mu'izz ad-Din Muhammad Ghori and the subsequent establishment of the Delhi Sultanate - main motive was not plunder, but empire building