Answer:The Mongol Empire controlled Central Asia beginning in the 13th and 14th centuries. Due to their time ruling over the area, Mongol influence can still be seen in culture and even in physical features of the people who live there. In the 20th century, the area came under the control of the Soviet Union. Under Soviet rule, Russian became the official language of many of the Central Asian countries. Today, it is still one of the main languages spoken in the area.
It could be argued that these two groups both had a major impact on the region, although at different times. The Mongols set the cultural mode in the 18th century, while the Soviets set it in the 20th.
Suleyman the Magnificent did live in the sixteenth century, but the next fact already doesn't check out: he was not a Safavid emperor (Safavids were ruling Iran, and Suleyman was the ruler of the Ottoman empire). The whole sentence is false.
In 1913 congress passed the Federal Reserve Act the purpose of this act was to create the Federal Reserve System which is the central banking system of the United States. It was given the authority to issue Federal Reserve Notes (known as the US Dollar) as legal tender. President Woodrow Wilson signed it into law.