In the West, Genghis Khan and Mongolian tribes are seen as savage savages who destroyed the whole culture, destroyed the city, and killed a lot of people. Although these statements are correct, the Mongol empire is certainly more than pure barbarous. Many of the practices carried out by Genghis Khan are the cause of Mongolia's success. Genghis Khan adapts, innovates and has the ability to be the most conquering in the world.
As well as his warrior, his new book "Genghis Khan: His Conquest, His Empire, His Legacy", he is an experienced historian Frank McLean who does not hesitate to call his topic in the world history is. The great conqueror, the ruler of the roughly organized kingdom, "spread from the Pacific Ocean to the Caspian Sea, from Korea to the Caucasus, from Siberia to the Yellow River." McLean created his book based on the earliest materials on Genghis Khan's lifetime and age. Comprehensive "The result is the most readable, fun and comprehensive research on this subject since John Man's 2005 book" Genghis Khan: Life, Death and Resurrection ".
Genghis Khan is not a genius. Instead, as one biographer says, he is "an ongoing practical learning cycle, experimental adaptation, and a constant revision focusing on his unique discipline and motivation." He is the world's largest conquistador. He is more willing to learn than any other conqueror. Immediately, their expanding empire led to another 'technology' they had never had before: city walls. In the Tangut attack, Khan first learned about the inside and outside of the war to augment the major strategies of cities and sieges, and soon became an expert. Later, with the help of Chinese engineers, he taught how to make a siege capable of defeating the wall by soldiers. In the campaign against Jurched, Khan knew the importance of winning the mind.