Re: Re : I was wondering...
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Originally Posted by Meneldil
Just have a look at the muslim conquest, it was the exact same thing (in lesser proportion). Muslims burnt cities, destroyed whole civilisations (Sassanid Persia ? Copte Aegyptia ?) killed a whole lot of innocents, and almost destroyed the Eastern Roman empire, though eventually they built the most advanced civilisation around mediterranea. However, can we say that they were not civilised ? Obviously not.
They took the best part from each civilisation they conquered, and that's what allowed them to be more advanced than christians.
Basically, that's what Mongols have done 800 years laters.
The comparison is completely out of proportion and here's why:
- The Arab conquest was one of faith - they had an ideological background since they wished to spread the word of Allah and his prophet Mohammad. The Mongol urge to rule over everyone is hardly an ideological background.
- The Arabs have forced their culture, language and faith upon the conquered, while the Mongols only picked the local customs to create some sort of "culture" themselves.
- The Arabs, before and after the conquest, had magnificent poets, writers, philosophers. The Mongols had only magnificent butchers.
- The Arabs left a glorious culture, which became the apogee of the medieval world. Excellent works of architecture, science, poetry, thinking... The Mongols left us... the yurt.
- The Arabs shaped the world and almost all the countries they conquered back then still speak their tongue and trace their origin back to the Arabs. The Mongols, not having a culture of their own to spread, were practically completely assimilated in two generations wherever they laid foot.
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I don't want to be annoying or what, but I think you're opinion is kinda biased.
How can I be biased? Never known a Mongol, live 20.000 km. away from their land now... how can I be biased?
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My sources might be wrong (though I doubt it), but I've read a lot of books on that topic. Many christians or muslims travellers (Marco Polo being one of them) who visited mongols' territories were simply astonished by their culture and their way of life.
Actually most of the accounts, especially of Muslim travellers, speak with horror about the huge, once glorious cities, that now lie in rabbles and about endless mounds of skulls and skeletons that was the trademark of the Mongol passage. Of course M. Polo would speak the contrary, and glorify the Great Khan: he made him disproportionaly rich, why wouldn't he speak favorable about him? (that's if you are looking for "biased" sources)
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And as I said in my previous post, (and from what I've understood from my readings) Mongols thought they were superior to other peoples (that's mostly why they didn't care about killing loads of innocents if that would save one of them) and that they were supposed to rule over the whole known world. Is that what you would expect from an uncivilised culture ?
Megalomaniac=cultivated? :dizzy2: