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| #Post#: 28330-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Genghis Khan | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: October 19, 2024, 2:38 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| They look optimistic to a degree that cannot be described in | |
| words. | |
| #Post#: 30693-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Genghis Khan | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: July 30, 2025, 8:18 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| While replying in the other topic, I came across this: | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuan_dynasty#Four-class_system | |
| [quote]The population was divided into the following | |
| classes:[146] | |
| Mongols. The Mongols were called "Gao-chen"[Chinese script | |
| needed] (the citizens of the ruling empire) by the conquered | |
| Southern Song population.[147] | |
| Semu, consisting of non-Mongol foreigners from the west and | |
| Central Asia, like Buddhist Uyghurs from Turfan, Tanguts, | |
| Tibetans, Jews, Nestorian Christians, and Muslims from Central | |
| Asia.[148][146] | |
| Han, a category usually referring to Han Chinese people, but | |
| under Yuan usage referred to various peoples, most of whom were | |
| former subjects of the Jurchen Jin dynasty such as Han Chinese | |
| in Northern China, Jurchens, Khitans, but also Koreans and other | |
| ethnicities who lived north of the Huaihe | |
| River[149]: 247 [146] | |
| Nan (Southerners), or all subjects of the former Southern Song | |
| dynasty, including ethnic Han Chinese and minority native ethnic | |
| groups in southern China, as well as the people of the Dali | |
| Kingdom. They were sometimes called "Manzi" during the Yuan | |
| dynasty. They were on the "bottom of the privilege ladder" in | |
| Yuan society.[146][/quote] | |
| Notably: | |
| [quote]the Northern Chinese were ranked higher than the Southern | |
| Chinese, because the Song dynasty in southern China fought | |
| longer and surrendered later.[/quote] | |
| See also: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/mythical-world/turanian-diffusion/ | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/mythical-world/yandi-vs-huangdi-myth-confirme… | |
| #Post#: 31420-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Genghis Khan | |
| By: 90sRetroFan Date: November 21, 2025, 5:56 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| This is equivalent to Israel moving its capital from Tel Aviv to | |
| Jerusalem: | |
| https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7fPinVV0exE | |
| The release of this story should be enough for China to nuke the | |
| site. But instead the "New Chinese" are currently calling for | |
| nuking Japan. (I hardly need to remind the Mongols have been | |
| invading China over and over again for millennia (hence the need | |
| for the Great Wall) whereas Japan and China had friendly | |
| relations for millennia until Japan absorbed Western thought | |
| during the Meiji Restoration.) How is reviving Karakorum not far | |
| worse than visiting the Yasukuni Shrine? Yet the "New Chinese" | |
| will only complain about the latter. | |
| They can't stop tweeting about Nanking, but never once mention | |
| how many Chinese the Mongols killed, raped and enslaved during | |
| the Mongol invasion. Why not? (Hint: on average, Mongols are | |
| taller whereas Japanese are shorter; see also: | |
| https://trueleft.createaforum.com/ancient-world/re-turanian-diffusion/msg945/#m… | |
| />) | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongol_conquest_of_the_Song_dynasty | |
| [quote]Casualties and losses | |
| Very heavy[/quote] | |
| [quote]In 1273, Fancheng capitulated, the Mongols putting the | |
| entire population to death by sword[/quote] | |
| [quote]Resistance continued, resulting in Bayan's massacre of | |
| the inhabitants of Changzhou in 1275 and mass suicide of the | |
| defenders at Changsha in January 1276.[/quote] | |
| [quote]The Song dynasty elite were unwilling to submit to Mongol | |
| rule, and opted for death by suicide. The Song councilor Lu | |
| Xiufu, who had been tasked with holding the child-emperor Zhao | |
| Bing of the Song in his arms during the battle, also elected to | |
| join the Song leaders in death. It is uncertain whether he or | |
| others decided that the young Emperor should die as well. In any | |
| event, the councilor jumped into the sea, still holding the | |
| child in his arms. Tens of thousands of Song officials and women | |
| also threw themselves into the sea and drowned. [/quote] | |
| Another (perhaps?) possible reason why "New Chinese" never | |
| complain about the Mongol invasion: | |
| [quote]Southern Song Chinese troops who defected and surrendered | |
| to the Mongols were granted Korean women as wives by the | |
| Mongols, whom the Mongols earlier took during their invasion of | |
| Korea as war booty.[38] [/quote] | |
| ::) | |
| Descriptive excerpts about the Mongol invasions from The | |
| Lightning and the Sun: | |
| [quote]The Mongols, says Harold Lamb, �led out the people of | |
| walled towns, examining then carefully and ordering the skilled | |
| workers � | |
| who would be useful � to move apart. Then the soldiers went | |
| through the | |
| ranks of helpless human beings, killing methodically with their | |
| swords and | |
| hand axes � as harvesters would go through a field of standing | |
| wheat. They | |
| took the wailing women by the hair, bending forwards their | |
| heads, to sever | |
| the spine more easily. They slaughtered with blows on the bead | |
| men who | |
| resisted weakly.�4 It is said that about nine million people | |
| were thus put to | |
| the sword | |
| ... | |
| even if the figures were to be brought down to their half, still | |
| they would | |
| suggest a magnitude of slaughter unprecedented in history. | |
| It is noticeable that material signs of power, wealth or culture | |
| � | |
| strong walls, works of irrigation, libraries; � for which the | |
| conquerors had | |
| no use, were no more respected than human life | |
| ... | |
| As we have seen, in all the conqueror�s | |
| campaigns, cities that had, to any extent, resisted the Mongols, | |
| had been | |
| destroyed, and the greater part of their inhabitants put to the | |
| sword. But the | |
| blood of the Golden Family, even though it were shed through the | |
| veins of | |
| one single individual, was still more precious, in Genghis | |
| Khan�s eyes, than | |
| that of any number of Mongol soldiers, and cried for a greater | |
| vengeance. | |
| The old Khakhan, therefore, commanded that all living creatures | |
| � people | |
| without the customary discrimination between the useful and the | |
| useless; | |
| beasts; and the very birds of the air, � be killed to the | |
| last[/quote] | |
| Woke comments from the video link: | |
| [quote]Genghis Khan is a mass murderer whose Mongolia people | |
| praise him like a hero is ridiculous[/quote] | |
| [quote]That clown actually has a picture of Genghis Khan on his | |
| wall, like what[/quote] | |
| [quote]They are really obsessed with their ancestors war | |
| crimes[/quote] | |
| [quote]Moving the capital back will make this move as a attempt | |
| to glorify the Mongol empire's war crime.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Why does Mongolia get away with celebrating the Mongol | |
| Empire? Even amongst the ranks of Empires, the Mongols were | |
| utter brutal and heartless. They should be making amends to the | |
| nations surrounding them that they brutalised, not celebrating | |
| it.[/quote] | |
| [quote]Mongolia is the country equivalent of "peaking in high | |
| school"[/quote] | |
| [quote]Imagine they were school shooter and killed one third of | |
| the school.[/quote] | |
| [quote]In the past, after all those conquests, instead of moving | |
| their people to the lands with good soils for farming, they | |
| chose to to conquest further[/quote] | |
| #Post#: 31421-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Genghis Khan | |
| By: Zhang Caizhi Date: November 21, 2025, 10:06 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mausoleum_of_Genghis_Khan | |
| [quote]Ejin Horo fell to the Communists at the end of 1949 and | |
| was controlled by their Northwest Bureau until the establishment | |
| of Suiyuan Province the next year.[10] The district's Communists | |
| set up rituals honouring Genghis Khan in the early 1950s, but | |
| abolished the traditional religious offices surrounding them | |
| like the Jinong and controlled the cult through local committees | |
| with loyal Party cadres.[10] Without the relics, they relied | |
| largely on singing and dancing groups.[10] In 1953, the PRC's | |
| central government approved the recently formed Inner Mongolian | |
| provincial government's request for 800,000 RMB to create the | |
| present permanent structures.[3] Early the next year,[15] the | |
| central government permitted the return of the objects at Kumbum | |
| to the site being constructed at Ejin Horo.[10] The region's | |
| chairman Ulanhu officiated at the first ritual after their | |
| return, decrying the Nationalists for having "stolen" them.[10] | |
| After this ritual, he immediately held a second ceremony to | |
| break ground on a permanent temple to house the objects and the | |
| khan's cult, again approved and paid for by China's central | |
| government.[10] By 1956, this new temple was completed, greatly | |
| expanding the purview of the original shrine.[14] Rather than | |
| having eight separate shrines throughout Ejin Horo for the Great | |
| Khan, his wives, and his children, all were placed together; a | |
| further 20 sacred and venerated objects from around the Ordos | |
| were also brought to the new site.[14] The government also | |
| mandated that the main ritual would be held in the summer rather | |
| than in the third lunar month, in order to make it more | |
| convenient for the headers to maintain their spring work | |
| schedules.[14] With the Darkhads no longer liable for personally | |
| paying for maintenance of the shrine, most accepted these | |
| changes.[14] An especially large celebration was held in 1962 to | |
| mark the 800th anniversary of Genghis Khan's birth.[15] | |
| In 1968, the Cultural Revolution's Red Guards destroyed almost | |
| everything of value at the shrine.[14] For 10 years, the | |
| buildings themselves were turned into a salt depot as part of | |
| preparations for a potential war with the Soviet Union.[27] | |
| Following Deng Xiaoping's Opening Up Policy, the site was | |
| restored by 1982[3] and sanctioned for "patriotic education"[14] | |
| as a AAAA-rated tourist attraction.[3] Replicas of the former | |
| relics were made, and a great marble statue of Genghis was | |
| completed in 1989.[28] Priests at the museum now claim that all | |
| of the Red Guards who desecrated the tomb have died in abnormal | |
| ways, suffering a kind of curse.[29] | |
| Mongolians continued to complain about the poor state of the | |
| mausoleum.[30] A 2001 proposal for its refurbishment was finally | |
| approved in 2004.[30] Unrelated houses, stores, and hotels were | |
| removed from the area of the mausoleum to a separate area 3 km | |
| (1.9 mi) away and replaced with new structures in the same style | |
| as the mausoleum.[30] The 150-million-RMB (about $20 | |
| million)[31] improvement plan was carried out from 2005 to 2006, | |
| improving the site's infrastructure, expanding its courtyard, | |
| and decorating and repairing its existing buildings and | |
| walls.[32] The China National Tourism Administration named the | |
| site a AAAAA-rated tourist attraction in 2011.[33][/quote] | |
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