Who ruled ancient India? Who ruled the Akkadian Empire? Who established Chaldean Empire? Who conquered the Assyrian Empire? Who established the Old Babylonian Empire? Who ruled the Byzantine Empire? Who took over the Babylonian empire? Who established the Middle Kingdom in Ancient Egypt?
Who ruled the Byzantine Empire? Who did the Romans conquer after Carthage? Who imperialized the Ottoman Empire? Who invaded ancient India? Which Persian king invaded Greece in the Battle of Marathon? Who killed Philip II of Macedon? Who conquered the Southern Kingdom of Israel in 587 B.C.E...
1.Genghis Khan. Born under the name of Temujin, Genghis Khan was a Mongolian warrior and ruler who went on to create the largest empire in the world – the Mongol Empire. Who almost ruled the world? But forGenghis Khan, it was just the start. Over the course of the century, he and ...
Unlike his grandfather Augustus, who ruled in cooperation with the Senate, Caligula wanted to break with tradition and rule alone. The boy emperor delighted in humiliating the Senate, never missing an opportunity to show them that they depended on his will. Thus, the story of Incitatus, a ...
fortheprecious Chinesecloththatwastradedabundantlyonit.Therouteswaxedandwanedover thecenturieswithchangingpoliticalandenvironmentalconditions.Afterthe 4.TheRomanEmpire罗马帝国 anempirethatsucceededtheRomanRepublicduringthetimeofAugustus,who ruledfrom27B.C.toA.D.14.Atitsgreatestextentitencompassedterritories stretching...
From its conception, Christianity would spread in the Roman Empire; however, many of the emperors and Senates looked upon the religion with disdain, and some would outlaw it and kill or persecute believers. There were a few emperors and Senates that would tolerate the religion, giving it some...
(r. c. 1206–1210) was a general of the Ghurid emperor Mu'izz ad-Din Muhammad Ghori. He was in-charge of the Ghurid territories in northern India, and after Mu'izz ad-Din's death, became the ruler of an independent kingdom that evolved into the Delhi Sultanate ruled by the M...
Constantine ruled the West, Licinius the East. The two remained rivals over a decade of uneasy truces before their animosity culminated in the Battle of Chrysopolis, in 324. Licinius was routed and Constantine became sole Emperor of Rome. To celebrate his victory, Constantine created ...
Egypt’s Alexandria and Syria’s Antioch were cities that pretty much ruled the roost as far as intellectual culture and theological thought were concerned, and represented the major poles that governed the development of orthodox (intentional lower-case “o”) Christianity. The major common ...
assumption that the city was first mentioned by the Byzantine chronicler Procopius of Caesarea in the 6th century CE. In fact, in historical sources, it is first mentioned during the time of the Byzantine Emperor, Leo the Isaurian, in the 8th century CE as Antibareos. While this may have ...