Chinese Propaganda to justify their occupying Mangol Territory
blu_duc on
i guess theyre also including the greatest extent of the mughal empire, who were descenedants of genghis khan
Substantial_Web_6306 on
Completely wrong map, the Chagatai Khanate’s army was defeated by the Delhi Sultanate under Alauddin Khalji in 1299.
After the death of Mongkol Khan in 1259, Kublai and Ariq Böke were locked in a struggle for the throne, and the Mongol Empire disintegrated. After that, the Golden Horde did not recognise the suzerainty of the Yuan Dynasty, and the Ilkhanate was only a nominal vassal. The conquest for Southern China, the Song Dynasty, did not take place until 1279, and the attempt to conquer Vietnam was even later and failed.
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TillOver8456 on
Europe in this map. 🤡
bryopsidaindica on
Some maps include Indian territories in depictions of the Mongol Empire due to the Mongols’ attempted invasions of India during the 13th century. These invasions, led initially by Genghis Khan and later by his descendants, targeted the region that is now Pakistan and parts of North India. Although the Mongol armies made several incursions into the subcontinent, they were not able to establish lasting control over these areas. The inclusion of Indian territories in such maps may reflect these military campaigns rather than actual governance or prolonged control by the Mongols. The maps might be using a broader definition of the empire’s reach, emphasizing the extent of Mongol military expeditions rather than settled rule.
olivergiangvu on
This map is totally misleading.
PapaAntigua on
India was never part of the Mongol Empire. This is likely a “claimed” map, by which only a portion of India was occupied before the Mongols were utterly defeated and expelled from India.
I would consider it propoganda. Like how some countries use historical claims in order to inflate their modern ones.
Shot_Maintenance5859 on
Where is Caspian and Aral seas on 2nd map?
RightTea4247 on
Lol even the museum beneath the giant Genghis Khan statue outside of Ulaanbaatar doesn’t have a map that claims that India was part of the Mongol Empire!
Doc_ET on
I guess it’s counting the Mughal Empire as a continuation of the Mongol Empire? The Mughal emperors were direct descendents of Genghis Khan, so it’s not entirely insane.
Just mostly insane, there’s a time gap of a few centuries in there.
CoeliacSprue on
The map is wrong . Confusing Mughals with mongols .
makerofshoes on
I know it’s obscure, but in the very first episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus they do a skit where they re-enact famous deaths. One of the deaths in Genghis Khan. It always bugged me because they introduce him as “Genghis Khan, Conqueror of India”
The only thing I can think of is that maybe some definitions have migrated over time. Like maybe India used to more generally mean “the East” from a European perspective. In that case it would kind of make sense. But it always stuck out to me because the Monty Python crew were well-educated guys, and I’m fairly sure a big error like that wouldn’t make it past them. So I’m more inclined to believe it’s an anachronism (or whatever the word for that is- it was OK at that time but no longer makes sense)
maechuri on
Korean peninsula, as always, makes a perfect McNugget.
mysacek_CZE on
Damn Danube is thick…
Comfortable_Tea9683 on
Blud downright confused with mongols and mughals. Not the same thing. Not even in the same era. And some part of India? It shows almost 85% of India being covered.
UdontneedtoknowwhoIm on
Mughal empire claim decendants from Mongol
That_Collection_6380 on
Delusion
0zymandias_1312 on
the mughal empire
Paula_dissipated on
Cartography really be out here rewriting history 😂
World_wide_truth on
Every time i see the map of the mongol empire it keeps growing. Very weird
20 Comments
Chinese Propaganda to justify their occupying Mangol Territory
i guess theyre also including the greatest extent of the mughal empire, who were descenedants of genghis khan
Completely wrong map, the Chagatai Khanate’s army was defeated by the Delhi Sultanate under Alauddin Khalji in 1299.
After the death of Mongkol Khan in 1259, Kublai and Ariq Böke were locked in a struggle for the throne, and the Mongol Empire disintegrated. After that, the Golden Horde did not recognise the suzerainty of the Yuan Dynasty, and the Ilkhanate was only a nominal vassal. The conquest for Southern China, the Song Dynasty, did not take place until 1279, and the attempt to conquer Vietnam was even later and failed.
#
Europe in this map. 🤡
Some maps include Indian territories in depictions of the Mongol Empire due to the Mongols’ attempted invasions of India during the 13th century. These invasions, led initially by Genghis Khan and later by his descendants, targeted the region that is now Pakistan and parts of North India. Although the Mongol armies made several incursions into the subcontinent, they were not able to establish lasting control over these areas. The inclusion of Indian territories in such maps may reflect these military campaigns rather than actual governance or prolonged control by the Mongols. The maps might be using a broader definition of the empire’s reach, emphasizing the extent of Mongol military expeditions rather than settled rule.
This map is totally misleading.
India was never part of the Mongol Empire. This is likely a “claimed” map, by which only a portion of India was occupied before the Mongols were utterly defeated and expelled from India.
I would consider it propoganda. Like how some countries use historical claims in order to inflate their modern ones.
Where is Caspian and Aral seas on 2nd map?
Lol even the museum beneath the giant Genghis Khan statue outside of Ulaanbaatar doesn’t have a map that claims that India was part of the Mongol Empire!
I guess it’s counting the Mughal Empire as a continuation of the Mongol Empire? The Mughal emperors were direct descendents of Genghis Khan, so it’s not entirely insane.
Just mostly insane, there’s a time gap of a few centuries in there.
The map is wrong . Confusing Mughals with mongols .
I know it’s obscure, but in the very first episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus they do a skit where they re-enact famous deaths. One of the deaths in Genghis Khan. It always bugged me because they introduce him as “Genghis Khan, Conqueror of India”
The only thing I can think of is that maybe some definitions have migrated over time. Like maybe India used to more generally mean “the East” from a European perspective. In that case it would kind of make sense. But it always stuck out to me because the Monty Python crew were well-educated guys, and I’m fairly sure a big error like that wouldn’t make it past them. So I’m more inclined to believe it’s an anachronism (or whatever the word for that is- it was OK at that time but no longer makes sense)
Korean peninsula, as always, makes a perfect McNugget.
Damn Danube is thick…
Blud downright confused with mongols and mughals. Not the same thing. Not even in the same era. And some part of India? It shows almost 85% of India being covered.
Mughal empire claim decendants from Mongol
Delusion
the mughal empire
Cartography really be out here rewriting history 😂
Every time i see the map of the mongol empire it keeps growing. Very weird