Genghis Khans' biography has many great leaders in the old world. Even Alexander the Great, Hannibal, and even Julius Caesar are striving to seek power. Probably Genghis Khan is the most important of all these rulers. In order to prove that Genghis Khan is the greatest ruler, we must return to the early stages of his existence. We have to consider these issues; Genghis Khan struggles for power / his childhood life is his rule, his personal military accomplishments and his conquest How does it affect you?
In Genghis Khan and the creation of today's world, Jack Weatherford tells the story of Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire, and how it has become the beginning of the advanced world. In the 13th century Genghis Khan was the most competent and powerful pioneer. For nearly 30 years, Genghis Khan and Mongolian army defeated more land that has been conquered in world history. Genghis Khan is a pioneer of quality and thought and he is afraid in the Eurasian Continent
Genghis Khans' biography has many great leaders in the old world. Even Alexander the Great, Hannibal, and even Julius Caesar are striving to seek power. Probably Genghis Khan is the most important of all these rulers. In order to prove that Genghis Khan is the greatest ruler, we must return to the early stages of his existence. - Stephen Spielberg Biography Stephen Spielberg: A revolutionary hyperopia that would have thought of a wonderful filmmaking career that might have arisen from a small can of Stattbit peanut butter, which was painted in a window in the suburbs of Cincinnati nearby. People may not think such ordinary childhood mischief may turn boys into boys, he will become the most economically successful filmmaker in history.
Genghis Khan and the construction of the modern world (2004) is a history book written by McLester College's Dewitt Wallace Anthropologist Professor Jack Weatherford. It explains the rise and influence of Genghis Khan and its successors, and the influence on European civilization. In Genghis Khan, weatherford tends to be attributed to his ruling as a positive cultural influence different from most Westerners. In the previous section, he reviewed the history of Genghis Khan in the West, and the initial depiction of the leader as "excellent, noble king" in his work turns into a cruel heathen in the age of enlightenment I believed that. Weatherford uses three major sources other than the West. The secret history of Mongolia, Juvayni's Ta'rīkh-ijahān-gushā, Rashid-al-Din Hamadani's Jami al-Tawarikh.