Women in the Mongol Empire (1206-1368 CE) shared the daily chores and hardships of steppe life with men and were largely responsible for tending animals, setting up camps, childrearing, producing food and cooking it. Having rather more rights than in contemporary cultures to the east and west of Mongolia, women could own and inherit property, were involved in religious ceremonies and could be shamans, and the wives of senior tribal leaders could voice their opinions at tribal meetings. Several Mongol women, the widows or mothers of Great Khans, even reigned as regents in the period before a new khan was elected as ruler of the Mongol Empire, often a span of several years.
Pancho Villa was born on 5 June 1878 and died on 20 July 1923
Pancho Villa was a Mexican Revolutionary General and one of the leading figures of the Mexican Revolution.
He is a military-zamindar of the northern Mexican state of Chihuahua and commanded a revolution in the northern section of Chihuahua.
Pancho Villa can be credited with decisive military success, which led to the ouster of Victoriano Herta.
Villa later attacked a small US-Mexican border town, resulting in the Battle of Columbus on March 9, 1916, and was reduced to retreating from American retaliation.