The Mongol empire (1206-1368) spanned from Eastern Europe across Asia. The empire emerged from the unification of Mongol and Turkic tribes in today's Mongolia and grew through invasions after the proclaiming of Genghis Khan in 1206 as ruler of Mongols.
The Mongol empire was the largest contagious empire in the history of the world, and the second largest empire in history, after British empire.
Under the Mongol technology, different commodities and ideologies were spread and exchanged across Eurasia. They were master engineers who used every technology known to man.
They built a spectacular international postal system and created standardized notes and paper currencies before Europe created its own.
James the 1st helped to pay for the James River Colony.
Answer:16,700 killed or wounded
Explanation:
Answer:
the founding myth of the Israelites. The scholarly consensus is that there was no Exodus as described in the Bible.
Modern archaeologists believe that the Israelites were indigenous to Canaan and were never in ancient Egypt, and if there is any historical basis to the Exodus it can apply only to a small segment of the population of Israelites at large.Nevertheless, there is also a general understanding that something must lie behind the traditions, even if Moses and the Exodus narrative belong to collective cultural memory rather to history. According to Avraham Faust "most scholars agree that the narrative has a historical core, and that some of the highland settlers came, one way or another, from Egypt."
Egyptologist Jan Assmann suggests that the Exodus narrative combines, among other things, the expulsion of the Hyksos, the religious revolution of Akhenaten, the experiences of the Habiru (gangs of antisocial elements found throughout the ancient Near East), and the large-scale migrations of the Sea Peoples into "a coherent story that is fictional as to its composition but historical as to some of its components."