Search Results - "Mongol"
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The Mongol invasions of Central Asia
Published 2014“…The Mongol invasions of Central Asia were the greatest catastrophe in the history of Islamic civilization, laying waste to the global centre of intellectual achievement during the 11th to 13th centuries. …”
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The Mongol invasions of Central Asia
Published 2016“…The Mongol invasions of Central Asia were the greatest catastrophe in the history of Islamic civilization, laying waste to the global centre of intellectual achievement during the 11th to 13th centuries. …”
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Absolute reconstruction of the closing of the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean in the Mesozoic elucidates the genesis of the slab geometry underneath Eurasia
Published 2017“…Using the paleomagnetism-based absolute reconstruction method from Wu and Kravchinsky (2014), we present here the restoration of the closing of the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean (MOO) that existed between Siberia and North China-Amuria (NCA) during the Mesozoic. …”
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Late Mesozoic tectonics of Central Asia based on paleomagnetic evidence
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The battle of ‘AYN JALUT : the stronghold of the Islamic world after the fall of Baghdad
Published 2022“…Serangan yang dilakukan oleh Mongol adalah satu serangan yang telah mengakibatkan hampir 200,000-800,000 kematian dan khazanah dunia Islam musnah. …”
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The apologetic and pastoral intentions of Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya's polemic against Jews and Christians
Published 2010“…The Mongol destruction of Baghdad in 1258 and subsequent Mongol incursions into Syria through the early 1300s ushered in a period of great political and religious anxiety in the Near East. …”
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Political parody: The new image of Mongolian contemporary art
Published 2015“…Fundamental to this exegesis is researching the national sensibility for using parody in Mongolian art as a response to fear and as a mode of resistance-this is a new investigation in academic scholarship into Mongol identity and art.…”
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Hubungan Volga Bulgaria dengan Baghdad
Published 2011“…Bagaimanaprin, kegemilangan inr tidak dapat dikekalkan ekoran dari beberapa siri serangan Mongol seawal 1230 Masihi membowa kepada kejatuhan Volga Bulgariapada 1236 ke tangan lnrasa Mongol. …”
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Caliph Al-Mansur and Hulagu Khan
Published 2017“…This research discusses life and careers of the Mongol Khan Hulagu and the Abbasid Caliph Mansur in the light of the Machiavellian leadership theory. …”
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Differential Exhumation and Crustal Tilting in the Easternmost Tianshan (Xinjiang, China), Revealed by Low-Temperature Thermochronology
Published 2017“…These cooling phases are linked to tectonic events at the distant plate margins such as the Permian to Middle Triassic closure of the Paleoasian Ocean and the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous Mongol Okhotsk orogeny. Fault-controlled differential exhumation and block tilting are recorded in the distribution of apatite fissio n track ages across the region. …”
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Evolution, source and tectonic significance of Early Mesozoic granitoid magmatism in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (central segment)
Published 2013“…Early Mesozoic granitoid magmatism provides critical information on Mesozoic post-accretionary tectonic evolution of the Paleo-Asian Ocean and transitional tectonic regimes from Early Mesozoic subduction to Late Mesozoic closure of the Mongol–Okhotsk Ocean as well as post-accretionary continental growth.…”
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Chinggis khan and his conquest of Khorasan: causes and consequences
Published 2013“…It discusses Chinggis Khan's charismatic leadership qualities that united all nomadic tribes and gave him the authority to become the supreme Mongol leader, which helped him to invade Khorasan. …”
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Tectonic significance and geodynamic processes of large-scale Early Cretaceous granitoid magmatic events in the southern Great Xing'an Range, North China
Published 2017“…Here we report new U-Pb zircon ages (141-129Ma) of a suite of dioritic-granitic rocks from central Inner Mongolia, far from the sutures or plate boundaries of the Paleo-Pacific and Mongol-Okhotsk oceans, thus delineating an Early Cretaceous intracontinental magmatic province, which had a peak activity at 130-120Ma. …”
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Islamic abstractive motifs interpretation in Persian art: A historical study of Herat school painting / Neda Zoghi
Published 2019“…By delving deeply into the works of the early centuries of Islam to the present, one can perceive that it is the “ornament” that is of a special position in the Herat School of Islamic art as the most important school in the Timurid Dynasty and Persian painting history, for the development of forms and colours in Persian forms with Chinese influence in the Mongol Dynasty. The objectives of this research include analysing Islamic motifs in Persian painting, studying the theoretical foundations of Islamic motifs and Persian painting schools to examine the causes of the creation of the Islamic art motifs in the Herat School of Painting. …”
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The transition from a passive to an active continental margin in the Jiamusi Block: Constraints from Late Paleozoic sedimentary rocks
Published 2018“…This indicates that the transition from a passive to an active continental margin in the Jiamusi Block occurred between the Late Devonian and the late Carboniferous (380-310Ma) and was more likely related to the Mongol-Okhotsk oceanic subduction-accretion or Panthalassa Ocean, and not to the Paleo-Pacific Ocean or to the Paleo-Asian Ocean as previous considered.…”
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Apparent polar wander paths of the major Chinese blocks since the Late Paleozoic: Toward restoring the amalgamation history of east Eurasia
Published 2017“…Four major tectonic events were confirmed: (1) the TB accreted with the Kazakhstan orocline during amalgamation of the West Altaids during the Middle–Late Permian Period (ca. 265–250 Ma); (2) the suturing of the NCB and the SCB likely occurred in a scissor-like pattern and had been accomplished no later than the Middle Jurassic Period (ca. 180–160 Ma); (3) the amalgamation between the NCB and the TB along with the microblocks between the two might have been achieved during the Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous Periods (ca. 160–140 Ma); (4) the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean should have been closed no later than the Early Cretaceous Period (ca. 140–120 Ma).…”
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