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Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

A Wisdom Archive on Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

A selection of articles related to Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

More material related to Ala Ad-din Muhammad Ii can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Ala Ad-din Muhammad Ii
Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

ARTICLES RELATED TO Ala ad-Din Muhammad II

Ala ad-Din Muhammad II: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Early in the sixteenth century, Babur, who was descended from Timur on his father's side and from Genghis Khan on his mother's, was driven out of his father's kingdom in the Ferghana Valley (which straddles contemporary Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan) by the Shaybani Uzbeks, who had wrested Samarkand from the Timurids. After several unsuccessful attempts to regain Ferghana and Samarkand, Babur crossed the Amu Darya and captured Kabul from the last of its Mongol rulers in 1504. In his invasion of Delhi Sultanate of India in 1526, Babur ...

See also:

Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Read more here: » Islamic conquest of Afghanistan: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Ala ad-Din Muhammad II: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506

Followings years of conquest in China and Central Asia, the Mongol Empire had emerged as a major world power of its day and attempted to co-exist with some of their neighbors including the empire the Khwarezmia Shah (which included what is today Afghanistan) and sent emissaries to establish diplomatic and trading links. As either a bluff to dissuade the Mongols from aggression or as simply a haughty sign of disrespect, the Khwarezmia Shah Ala ad-Din Muhammad II had the diplomats executed and sent their heads back to the Mongols and this prom ...

See also:

Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Read more here: » Islamic conquest of Afghanistan: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506

Ala ad-Din Muhammad II: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule

Out of the Samanid Dynasty came the first great Islamic empire of the region, the Ghaznavid Empire, whose warriors, forged an empire that spanned much of Iranian plateau and Central Asia and conducted many successful raids into South Asia. Their military incursions assured the domination of Sunni Islam in what is now Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts of India. The most renowned of the dynasty's rulers was Mahmud, who consolidated control over the areas south of the Amu Darya then carried out devastating raids into India - looting Hindu temple ...

See also:

Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Read more here: » Islamic conquest of Afghanistan: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule

Ala ad-Din Muhammad II: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest

In 637, five years after the death of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad, Arab Muslims shattered the might of the Iranian Sassanians at the Battles of al-Qādisiyyah and Nahavand. The invaders began to move towards the lands east of Iran: Herat was captured in 652. By 709 all of Aryana came under Arab control and encountered pockets of resistance from local tribesmen for centuries. In addition, Tang China and Tibet mounted an opposition to the Arab invasion to prevent their incursions into Central Asia. Central Asia and eastern Iran were nominally ...

See also:

Islamic conquest of Afghanistan, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Ghaznavid and Ghorid Rule, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mongol Rule 1220-1506, Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - Mughal-Safavid Rivalry ca. 1500-1747

Read more here: » Islamic conquest of Afghanistan: Encyclopedia II - Islamic conquest of Afghanistan - The Islamic Conquest

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