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Saturday, December 23, 2017

'Genghis Khan and the Mongols'

'In Genghis caravan inn, Weatherford tries to teach us or so Genghis caravanserai and the Mongolians. He cute to teach us more nearly the taradiddle of cosmos commerce. Even though we learned a lot about the Mongols and Genghis Khan that was non the master(prenominal) propose he was exhausting to make. Genghis Khan was a very(prenominal) authorized person, and his kingdom was very important as well. The Mongols helped form the humans as we receive it today. Genghis Khan was a great drawing card and he be it throughout the word of honor.\nIn the introduction, Weatherford decided to drop a line a book on the history of world commerce. Weatherfords main point in the introduction was that the world changed from the medieval to the modern, or began to, because of the Mongols. Weatherford wrote, The new engine room, knowledge, and technical wealth created the spiritual rebirth in which atomic number 63 rediscovered some of its prior culture, but more importantly, ab sorbed the technology for printing, firearms, the compass, and the abacus from the East (p. xxiv). \nThe source dent after the introduction was the mounting of the Genghis Khan and the carry together of the Mongolia. Genghis Khan also valued to take down the tribes that were non pure to him at a younger age. His ground forces began to grow large and larger. This section comprising these trinity chapters is very engaging. The startle chapter begins with the Genghis Khan gust on the Empire, which covers untold of Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan and the former Soviet Central Asia. In this section Weatherford provides the reader with a bully sense of Genghis Khans raising to power and how the Mongols viewed warfare. The Mongols did non believe in honor in war, but quite a in gaining victory. Weatherford does a good joke of illustrating that Genghis Khan was not born a military panache . This label is oft applied to the Mongol leader, but he learned from the lessons of others and then(prenominal) put those lessons into practice. The aged(a) Genghis Khan got the smarter he became.\nThe second section consi... '

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