Genghis Khan: a History of World Conquerors (two Volumes)

Genghis Khan: a History of World Conquerors (two Volumes)

by H

Length:
550Kwords84chapters
Latest:
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Updated 5y agoScraped 1d ago
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About This Novel

With the development of the war of conquest, the Genghis Khan clan moved from the Mongolian grasslands to northern China, to Central Asia and Europe. After three western expeditions, the four great khanates, the reunification of China, and several eastern and southern expeditions, the Mongol Empire at that time was indeed a veritable world empire, and the Genghis Khan clan was indeed a veritable "world conqueror." To describe and reflect the Genghis Khan clan is actually to describe and study the exchange and integration of various cultures, and to study the world history at that time. This work can also be said to be the product of the exchange and integration of Eastern and Western cultures. It is an exploration of another path from the grassland besides the Maritime Silk Road, opening up new horizons for readers. The book is divided into four volumes: "Grassland Overlord", "Conquest of the Central Plains", "Road to the Sea" and "Wonderful Miles of the Setting Sun". It begins with Genghis Khan's unification of the Mongolian grassland and his three western expeditions to the south to conquer Jin and Mongolia. It then went through the three Western Expeditions of Ogedai, Guiyu and Mengge. During the reign of the Great Khan, there were also brief periods of towing thunder and supervising the country; then Kublai Khan completed the great unification in Chinese history. Wars broke out among the Mongolian noble kings, and Kublai Khan launched the Eastern and Southern Expeditions until the demise of the Yuan Dynasty. During the process of writing "Genghis Khan", the author suffered an accidental stroke and lost the ability to move his right hand. He insisted on writing the book with his left hand in the hospital; after being discharged from the hospital, he was hit by the 7.2-Magnitude Kobe earthquake. "These complicated things are intertwined, and the days that are unforgettable even if you want to forget them are closely connected with this work."

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