Archives Islamic History

The Mongol Storm (part 5): What the Storm Left

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This is the fifth and final episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions and the astonishing reversal that followed. It begins outside the walls of Damascus in 1401, with one of the medieval world's greatest minds being lowered on a rope to meet one of its most destructive men face to face. The episode tells the story of Timur, the man the West called Tamerlane. A Turco-Mongol amir born near Samarkand around 1336, he was not a descendant of Genghis Khan in the male line, which is why he ruled through puppet khans and married into the bloodline to claim the title of son-in-law. He was a devout Muslim who prayed and called his wars jihad, and yet he waged merciless war from Delhi to Damascus, sacked Baghdad a second time in 1401, and shattered the Ottoman army at Ankara in 1402, capturing Sultan Bayezid, the only Ottoman sultan ever taken prisoner. He beautified Samarkand into one of the wonders of the age, built in part by the captive artisans he dragged back from the cities he destroyed. We sit inside his weeks of conversation with Ibn Khaldun, and we hold the paradox of the man honestly, between the favorable account of Yazdi and the hostile account of Ibn Arabshah, without trying to resolve it. Then comes the harvest the whole series builds toward. Timur's grandson Ulugh Beg, the astronomer king, who built a great observatory at Samarkand in the 1420s and produced the Zij-i Sultani, the most exact star catalogue since Ptolemy thirteen centuries earlier. And Babur, descended from both Genghis and Timur, who turned south and founded the Mughal Empire of India at the First Battle of Panipat in 1526, the line that would one day raise the Taj Mahal. The line of the world burners became a line of astronomers and emperors and builders of the most beautiful tomb on earth. And the episode closes the whole arc. It returns to the survivor of Bukhara and his nine words, and to the historian Ibn al-Athir, who could barely hold his pen and thought he was recording the death of Islam itself. He was wrong. The storm that came out of the steppe to erase the faith did not erase it. The grandsons of the conquerors knelt and became Muslims, the cities rose again, and the faith was carried by the Mongols' own descendants farther than it had ever reached. The storm that came to end a world had, in the end, carried it farther than ever before. Sources: Ibn Khaldun's autobiography al-Tarif (his firsthand account of meeting Timur), Ibn Arabshah's Aja'ib al-Maqdur, Sharaf al-Din Ali Yazdi's Zafarnama, and Babur's own memoir the Baburnama, with modern scholarship from Walter Fischel, Stefan Kamola, Lost Islamic History, and the Yaqeen Institute. Content Warning: This episode describes the conquests of Timur, including the second sack of Baghdad and the sack of Damascus and Delhi, handled factually and without graphic detail. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

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jakson The Mongol Storm (part 5): What the Storm Left kansikuva

The Mongol Storm (part 5): What the Storm Left

This is the fifth and final episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions and the astonishing reversal that followed. It begins outside the walls of Damascus in 1401, with one of the medieval world's greatest minds being lowered on a rope to meet one of its most destructive men face to face. The episode tells the story of Timur, the man the West called Tamerlane. A Turco-Mongol amir born near Samarkand around 1336, he was not a descendant of Genghis Khan in the male line, which is why he ruled through puppet khans and married into the bloodline to claim the title of son-in-law. He was a devout Muslim who prayed and called his wars jihad, and yet he waged merciless war from Delhi to Damascus, sacked Baghdad a second time in 1401, and shattered the Ottoman army at Ankara in 1402, capturing Sultan Bayezid, the only Ottoman sultan ever taken prisoner. He beautified Samarkand into one of the wonders of the age, built in part by the captive artisans he dragged back from the cities he destroyed. We sit inside his weeks of conversation with Ibn Khaldun, and we hold the paradox of the man honestly, between the favorable account of Yazdi and the hostile account of Ibn Arabshah, without trying to resolve it. Then comes the harvest the whole series builds toward. Timur's grandson Ulugh Beg, the astronomer king, who built a great observatory at Samarkand in the 1420s and produced the Zij-i Sultani, the most exact star catalogue since Ptolemy thirteen centuries earlier. And Babur, descended from both Genghis and Timur, who turned south and founded the Mughal Empire of India at the First Battle of Panipat in 1526, the line that would one day raise the Taj Mahal. The line of the world burners became a line of astronomers and emperors and builders of the most beautiful tomb on earth. And the episode closes the whole arc. It returns to the survivor of Bukhara and his nine words, and to the historian Ibn al-Athir, who could barely hold his pen and thought he was recording the death of Islam itself. He was wrong. The storm that came out of the steppe to erase the faith did not erase it. The grandsons of the conquerors knelt and became Muslims, the cities rose again, and the faith was carried by the Mongols' own descendants farther than it had ever reached. The storm that came to end a world had, in the end, carried it farther than ever before. Sources: Ibn Khaldun's autobiography al-Tarif (his firsthand account of meeting Timur), Ibn Arabshah's Aja'ib al-Maqdur, Sharaf al-Din Ali Yazdi's Zafarnama, and Babur's own memoir the Baburnama, with modern scholarship from Walter Fischel, Stefan Kamola, Lost Islamic History, and the Yaqeen Institute. Content Warning: This episode describes the conquests of Timur, including the second sack of Baghdad and the sack of Damascus and Delhi, handled factually and without graphic detail. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

Eilen31 min
jakson The Mongol Storm (part 4): The Khan Who Knelt kansikuva

The Mongol Storm (part 4): The Khan Who Knelt

This is the fourth episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions and the astonishing reversal that followed. After the destruction of Baghdad and the turning of the tide at Ain Jalut, this episode tells the strangest part of the whole story: how the storm that came to erase Islam ended up praying toward Mecca, and how the empire built to destroy the faith became the machine that spread it farther than the first Muslims ever had. The episode opens in 1295 with Ghazan, the great-grandson of Hulagu, declaring himself a Muslim and making Islam the official religion of the Ilkhanate, the Mongol state in Persia and Iraq. We look honestly at the politics of that moment, the general Nawruz who set conversion as the price of the throne, and the way the court historians later spun the story. Then we look at what Ghazan actually built: tax reform, rebuilt roads, and above all the Shanb-i Ghazan at Tabriz, a great domed tomb ringed by a mosque, two madrasas, a Sufi lodge, an observatory, a hospital, and a library, almost item for item an inventory of exactly the kind of thing the Mongols had destroyed at Bukhara and Baghdad, now raised again in the same ground. At Ghazan's right hand stood his vizier Rashid al-Din, a physician born into a Jewish family who converted to Islam as an adult and then wrote the Jami al-Tawarikh, the Compendium of Chronicles, which has a fair claim to be the first true history of the world, covering the Arabs, the Persians, the Mongols, China, India, and the Franks of Christian Europe. From Persia the episode travels north to the Golden Horde, where Berke had been the first Muslim khan but where it was Uzbeg, two generations later, who made Islam the faith of the whole steppe, carried not by armies but by Sufi teachers and merchants moving along the Mongol roads. And at the height of Uzbeg's reign the great traveler Ibn Battuta arrives and describes the khan's moving camp as a vast town on the move, mosques and bazaars mounted on wagons, the smoke of the cookfires rising as the city rolled across the grass. The big theme is the deepest irony of the age. The Mongol conquest stitched together a single connected world from China to the edge of Europe, and once Islam had gotten inside the rulers, that network became the arteries along which the faith flowed, reaching regions the great Arab conquests had never touched. The catastrophe became the vehicle. The men who lit the fires fathered the men who carried the lamp. The episode keeps the honest qualifications in view, the politics, the slowness, the survival of the old steppe law, and closes by looking ahead to Timur, the devout Muslim conqueror who would sack Baghdad a second time and fill the path from Delhi to Damascus with the ruin of his fellow believers. Sources: Rashid al-Din's Jami al-Tawarikh, Ibn Battuta's Rihla, and the broader chronicle tradition, with modern scholarship from Lost Islamic History and the Yaqeen Institute. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

8. kesä 202632 min
jakson The Mongol Storm (part 3): The Day the Storm Broke kansikuva

The Mongol Storm (part 3): The Day the Storm Broke

This is the third episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions and the astonishing reversal that followed. It tells the story of the day the unstoppable were finally stopped: the Battle of Ain Jalut, fought on the twenty fifth of Ramadan, the third of September 1260, in the Jezreel Valley of Galilee. The episode begins with the men who marched out of Egypt, the Mamluks, slave soldiers bought as boys on the same steppe the Mongols came from and raised into the most disciplined heavy cavalry in the Islamic world. We meet Sultan Qutuz, a Khwarazmian prince enslaved as a child, and his brilliant general Baybars, the Qipchaq Turk who had already broken the Seventh Crusade and captured King Louis the Ninth of France. We read Hulagu's chilling ultimatum to Qutuz, with its promise to shatter the mosques and reveal the weakness of his God, and we watch Qutuz answer it by executing the envoys and mounting their heads on the Bab Zuwayla gate of Cairo. Then comes the battle itself, where the Mongols' own signature trick, the feigned retreat, was turned against them by men who had been born to it, and where Qutuz tore off his helmet and charged crying Wa Islamah, O my Islam. The episode is careful about what the sources can prove. It gives the honest version of Ain Jalut: the armies were roughly matched, not ten to one, and the deepest cause of the Mongol defeat was the death of the Great Khan Mongke, which had stripped away their numbers. Ain Jalut broke the myth of Mongol invincibility, but it did not end the war. And the victory was soaked in regicide within weeks, when Baybars assassinated Qutuz on the road home and took the throne. The deepest turn, though, happened far to the north. Berke, grandson of Genghis Khan and ruler of the Golden Horde, had become the first Mongol khan to embrace Islam, won over by merchants and Sufis of Bukhara. When he learned that his cousin Hulagu had destroyed Baghdad and killed the khalifa, he allied with the Mamluks and went to war against his own family, crushing Hulagu's army at the frozen Terek River in 1263. The episode is honest that Berke also had hard material motives, pastures, the slave trade, and a wider Mongol civil war, while insisting that the faith was real, central, and new. Mongol against Mongol, because of Islam. Sources: al-Maqrizi's Kitab al-Suluk, Ibn Abd al-Zahir's biography of Baybars, Ibn Kathir's al-Bidaya wa al-Nihaya, al-Nuwayri's Nihayat al-Arab, and Rashid al-Din's Jami al-Tawarikh, with modern scholarship and accessible Islamic history sources including Saudi Aramco World, Britannica, Lost Islamic History, and the Yaqeen Institute. Content Warning: This episode describes the Battle of Ain Jalut, the execution of envoys, the killing of commanders, and the assassination of Sultan Qutuz, handled factually and without graphic detail. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

6. kesä 202631 min
jakson The Mongol Storm (part 2): The Fall of Baghdad kansikuva

The Mongol Storm (part 2): The Fall of Baghdad

This is the second episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions and the astonishing reversal that followed. It tells the story of the single most catastrophic day in the political history of the medieval Muslim world: the fall of Baghdad in 1258. The episode follows Hulagu, a grandson of Genghis Khan, as he leads an enormous army west to finish what his grandfather began. We watch him switch off the feared Assassins of Alamut in a single campaign, then close in on Baghdad, a city that had been the capital of the Abbasid khilafa for nearly five centuries but that had grown weak, divided, and badly led. We look honestly at the khalifa al-Musta'sim and his fatal mixture of pride and paralysis, at the contested accusation that his own vizier betrayed the city, and at the swift and terrible siege that followed. Then comes the sack, the destruction of the libraries, the famous image of the Tigris running black with ink, and the execution of the last khalifa, rolled in a carpet so that no royal blood would touch the earth. The episode treats the violence the way the Muslim chroniclers did, soberly and without sensationalism, and it is careful about what the sources can prove, including the modern argument that Baghdad's intellectual life was not destroyed as completely as legend holds. From Baghdad the storm rolls on into Syria, taking Aleppo and Damascus under a Christian Mongol general, and the refugees flee toward Egypt with the Mongols at their backs. And then, at the last possible moment, the story turns on an accident no one in the path of the storm could have known about: the death of the Great Khan far away in China, which pulled Hulagu and the bulk of his army back east and left only a fraction behind. For the first time in forty years the Mongols were exposed, and in Egypt a new power, the slave-soldiers known as the Mamluks, decided to march out and meet them. Sources: Ibn Kathir's al-Bidaya wa al-Nihaya, Rashid al-Din's Jami al-Tawarikh, Ata-Malik Juvayni's Tarikh-i Jahangushay, and the broader chronicle tradition, with modern scholarship from Michal Biran, Timothy May, Lost Islamic History, and the Yaqeen Institute. Content Warning: This episode describes the 1258 sack of Baghdad, the mass killing of its population, and the execution of the last Abbasid khalifa, handled factually and without graphic detail. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

5. kesä 202629 min
jakson The Mongol Storm (part 1): The Khan of the Steppe kansikuva

The Mongol Storm (part 1): The Khan of the Steppe

This is the first episode of a five part series on the Mongol invasions of the Muslim world, and the astonishing reversal that followed. It opens with a survivor of the sack of Bukhara, who summed up the fate of his city in nine words, and then pulls back to show the world as it stood before the catastrophe: Baghdad, capital of the Abbasid khilafa for nearly five hundred years, a metropolis of close to a million people, home to the learning of the House of Wisdom, the center of a connected civilization that stretched from Muslim Spain to the frontiers of India. A world that felt permanent. Then it turns to the cold grasslands of Mongolia, and to Temujin, the boy who survived a brutal childhood to unite the warring tribes of the steppe and become Genghis Khan. We look closely at the war machine he built, the discipline and the speed and the deliberate use of terror, and at how this did not begin as a holy war at all. It began as a trade dispute. A caravan seized at the frontier city of Otrar, hundreds of merchants killed, an ambassador mutilated and sent back, and a point past which there was no return. In 1219 the storm broke over Central Asia, and the great cities of the eastern Muslim world, Bukhara and Samarkand and the ancient centers of Khurasan, began to fall. The episode handles the violence the way the Muslim chroniclers did, soberly and without sensationalism, and it is honest about what the sources can and cannot prove, from the famous speech attributed to Genghis Khan in the mosque of Bukhara to the disputed casualty figures. It closes with the historian Ibn al-Athir, who lived through these years and could barely bring himself to write them down, and with the storm turning, at last, toward Baghdad. Sources: Ibn al-Athir's al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh, Ata-Malik Juvayni's Tarikh-i Jahangushay (History of the World Conqueror), Ibn Kathir's al-Bidaya wa al-Nihaya, and Rashid al-Din's Jami al-Tawarikh, with modern scholarship from Michal Biran, Timothy May, Lost Islamic History, and the Yaqeen Institute. Content Warning: This episode discusses the mass killing and destruction of the Mongol conquests of Bukhara, Samarkand, and the cities of Khurasan, handled factually and without graphic detail. Enjoyed this episode? Dive deeper into Islamic history with the Archives app - bite-sized lessons, real stories, and daily adventures you can finish in 5 minutes. 📲 Download the Archives app here [https://archiveszone.app/open-app] 🌐 Learn more here [https://archiveszone.app/#home] 📸 Follow Basel on Instagram here  [https://www.instagram.com/baselgazi/?hl=en] If this episode helped you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. Assalamu alaykum, and we'll see you in the next one.

5. kesä 202630 min