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Yes however they were working on decreasing their brutal methods and weren't as cruel as they began.
I agree that they were incredibly brutal towards Chinese and most khans were discriminatory towards them, however under Genghis Khan's grandson Kublai, he was incredibly supportive of the Chinese and their accomplishments to the point where the Mongolians believed he was almost of a traitor.
(Kublai Khan) I was not discriminatory towards our neighboring Chinese civilians and I embraced their scientific accomplishments, and preserved their bureaucracy and wealth.
(Kublai Khan) I helped decrease poverty in the empire by creating a public-assistance program that stored surpluses of various goods so that when there was a bad economic year in the empire, there would be material to provide to the poorer.
(Kublai Khan) I expanded the knowledge base and learning ability of our empire by expanding the printing business to provide more books for the public and funded more astronomical equipment for scholars to use and discover with.
Their destruction of cities in Russia had long-term, devastating economic and social impacts on them.
They killed 200,000 people in a single assault in Baghdad and destroyed the entire civilization.
Mongols were incredibly brutal and would kill everything in their path when conquering and would wipe out entire civilizations.
The Mongolian empire made great efforts to reduce taxes so that they wouldn't be pressuring the lower class of their empire.
Women throughout Mongolia were permitted to own land and possess freedoms that usually (only) males had at the time.
I am probably a good person but I haven't taken the time to fill out my profile, so you'll never know! |