Start Searching the Answers
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
The Question & Answer (Q&A) Knowledge Managenet
The Internet has many places to ask questions about anything imaginable and find past answers on almost everything.
The Safavid Empire of Persia was a gunpowder empire set up by Shah Ismāīl I in the early sixteenth century. The Empire, based at Isfahan, lasted until 1722, reaching its height under Shah Abbās the Great, at the beginning of the seventeenth centuries.
Weapons involving gunpowder were extensively used by both the Chinese and the Mongol forces in the 13th century. Song efforts to continually improve their weapons were one reason they were able to hold off the Mongols for several decades.
Cultures of the gunpowder empire differed from one another depending on outside influences, who they conquered and the rule brought upon them. As military technology, gunpowder empires decline especially the three Islamic empire because they did not modernize or reorganized their armies.
All empires were multi-national, multi-religious
While the empire he created largely fell apart (except for the area that his descendant Babur would take over to create India’s Mughal Dynasty), Tamerlane’s invasions were a testament to the significance of gunpowder. He used it to build a government dependent upon his military and the use of heavy artillery.
what led to the eventual fall of the ottoman empire in 1922? challenges in defending the ottoman empire from foreign invasion and occupation led to the ottoman defeat and dissolution.
How did Askia the Great challenge Sunni Ali’s legitimacy? He claimed Sunni Ali was a weak military commander. He questioned Sunni Ali’s faithfulness to the principles of Islam. He established strong tributary ties that had more allegiance to him than to Sunni Ali.