Thursday 19 March 2020

Exploring The History

History:
It is the series of events, occasions, rebellions, invasions, wars, culture, civilization and much more which are interconnected and have happened long ago.
It is the affairs of human beings with different culture, civilization and events in the past. The overall study of human affairs in the past is called history. 
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Interest in History:
As we have known that history is about the human beings and their social and commercial life/affairs in the past.History might contain wars, rebellions, invasions as well as inventions off-course,but the interesting thing in all these is that how such things affected the lives of the human beings of that time. It facilitate us to learn about the peoples in the past to learn how they was their lively hood at that time, how was their homes look alike, what kind of clothes did they use to wear,what kind of food they intake for their survival, what was their religions which GODS they were preaching. Learning all these thing knowing about such kind of things happened in the past is  quite interesting for us to know about.    
It is interesting to learn about the life of then peoples in the past about their civilizations about their religions and their daily routines, their habits, their working or  their efforts for their lives for their survivals is quite adorable and mind catching topics. The governmental affairs of the peoples of that time the entertainment life is also an interesting thing to learn about. When we compare such things form the past with the life today and we figure out how different the life of the peoples in past was from the life today and how simple they were from the humans today.
Nowadays in schools and colleges pupils always ask "why do we learn history? its boring. Why do we have to study the lives of the peoples who have passed away long ago. Why do we need to learn about the culture and civilization of the peoples who lived thousands of years ago,why do we learn about the wars fought, the invasions done and the rebellions happened centuries ago?. That was the past which is finished we have today we have our present so why do we learn about history". The  answer for such questions is the life we are living today is directly related to the life that our ancestors have lived centuries ago if they weren't became the best versions of their selves at that if they did not bear such hardships so maybe our present that we are living with very comfort would not be the same. So studying history is realizing our background we have to realize what our ancestors did for us and what are we  doing today we have to learn from our history that how the life was at that time what difficulties did they have faced at that time and how they overcome their problems how did they make their lives better then the people they have lived before them. We need to learn about the history the bitter times the hardships the problems and their solutions.  

Sunday 7 January 2018

Bitcoin the powerful currency

Bitcoin

Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency that is using world widely. It is an online payment system and the first decentralized digital currency, which means in this the system, works without the central banks,
This is the currency that have no physical appearance but is highest valued currency unit in the world.  

Cryptocurrency

A cryptocurrency is a digital asset designed to work as a medium of exchange that uses cryptography to secure its transactions, to control the creation of different units, and to verify the transfer of assets.

History and Evaluation of Bitcoin

In 2008 a paper called peer to peer electronic cash system was posted by a person from Japan. His name was Santoshi Nakamoto. The paper of such electronic cash system was in list of discussions on cryptography at that time. On 18th august 2008 the domain name of this peer to peer electronic cash system was registered on Bitcoin.org by Santoshi Nakamoto.     
In the starting of 2009 the network of Bitcoin came into existence and the first Bitcoin was mined by Santoshi Nakamoto which have no value at that time there was a notable transaction of Bitcoin at that time a person used 10,000 BTC to buy two pizza’s indirectly using the digital currency.
In year of 2010 the exchange market for Bitcoin has been established named BitcoinMarket.com at that the value of a single Bitcoin was 0.003$ the time when this came into operation practically. In the middle of 2010 the value of one BTC rises 900% in few days rising from 0.008$ to 0.8$. After this the value of BTC keep on increasing up till the middle of 2011 it reaches 31$ and then it keep on increasing and after two years its value reaches 266$ but In the middle of 2013 its value decreases due to some market issues after that in November 2013 its value boosted and it reaches approximate 1200$. The value of BTC keeps on increasing and its market is emerging day by day today the value of BTC is 13,800$. It was 18,000$ a month before but due to some problems in blockchain (the crypto currency chain) its value falls down but it is expected that the value of BTC will be 30,000$ in next few months.

Mining of Bitcoin

Bitcoin Mining is a peer-to-peer computer process used to secure and verify bitcoin transactions payments from one user to another on a decentralized network. Mining involves adding bitcoin transaction data to Bitcoin's global public ledger of past transactions. Each group of transactions is called a block. Blocks are secured by Bitcoin miners and build on top of each other forming a chain. This ledger of past transactions is called the blockchain. The blockchain serves to confirm transactions to the rest of the network as having taken place. Bitcoin nodes use the blockchain to distinguish legitimate Bitcoin transactions from attempts to re-spend coins that have already been spent elsewhere.

Legality of Bitcoin

Bitcoin is legal in most authority/administration in the world but there are small number nation states that have banned its use, such as Ecuador. Wikipedia has a great guide on how Bitcoin is treated in all the countries around the world and explains regulatory policies surrounding it. Regulations vary from one border to the next so you should always research your location’s laws before participating in the network. Bitcoin is the most emerging power in the future that will be a super currency very soon.

Bitcoin Fork

Bitcoin is split into two different currencies which are generally branches of bitcoin and works with the same scenario as the bitcoin do. These forks are created just to maintain the market of bitcoin alive as we have known the mining of bitcoin is limited and will be stopped after sometime and then no bitcoin will mined after that, so for keeping the mining of BTC tree alive the owners have created these  other currencies with the same name but different last names.                                                                                                                     
                      1.  Bitcoin Cash                                                                                                                                         2.  Bitcoin Gold

 Bitcoin Economy

Bitcoin is a digital cryptocurrency that helps the people for different transactions and payments in a decentralized peer to peer networking system which is running through a powerful economic system of its users and developers, In such currency there is no authority to any other person to use someone else  assets. A user will generate a code that is called token to transfer a bitcoin or some value of it into someone else by using its computer or mobile.
The economy of bitcoin is emerging day by day as its demand ratio is quite greater than its supply that’s why the market value of a single bitcoin Is now in million rupees in our country. The market value of a bitcoin is also influencing the international exchange that’s why the value of bitcoin is increasing that of the value of dollar. The value of bitcoin remains same in any part of the globe that’s why its demand is this enough increased because people needs a currency on which no exchange rates applies on at any continent of the world.

Cryptocurrency Exchange  


Cryptocurrency exchanges or digital exchanges are businesses platforms that allow customers to trade in crypto currencies like bitcoin for other assets, such as conventional fiat money, or different digital currencies and costumers can easily buy and sell their crypto currencies like bitcoin here. In such exchange people can also invest in the value of bitcoin as if they cannot buy the overall bitcoin and can earn money through trading.  

Thursday 15 October 2015

UNIFICATION OF GERMANY UNDER OTTO VON BISMARCK:

1st Chancellor "Otto von Bismarck":
Otto Eduard Leopold, Prince of Bismarck, Duke of Lauenburg (1 April 1815 – 30 July 1898), known as Otto von Bismarck, was a conservative Prussian statesman who dominated German and European affairs from the 1860s until 1890. In the 1860s he engineered a series of wars that unified the German states (excluding Austria) into a powerful German Empire under Prussian leadership. With that accomplished by 1871 he skillfully used balance of power diplomacy to preserve German hegemony in a Europe which, despite many disputes and war scares, remained at peace. For historian Eric Hobsbawm, it was Bismarck, who "remained undisputed world champion at the game of multilateral diplomatic chess for almost twenty years after 1871, and devoted himself exclusively, and successfully, to maintaining the power.


Truer Words Have Been Spoken in 1862 King Wilhelm I appointed Bismarck as Minister President of Prussia, a position he would hold until 1890 (except for a short break in 1873). He provoked three short, decisive wars against Denmark, Austria and France, aligning the smaller German states behind Prussia in defeating his arch-enemy France. In 1871 he formed the German Empire with himself as Chancellor, while retaining control of Prussia. His diplomacy of real political and powerful rule at home gained him the nickname the "Iron Chancellor." German unification and its rapid economic growth was the foundation to his foreign policy. He disliked colonialism but reluctantly built an overseas empire when it was demanded by both elite and mass opinion. Juggling a very complex interlocking series of conferences, negotiations and alliances, he used his diplomatic skills to maintain Germany's position and used the balance of power to keep Europe at peace in the 1870s and 1880s.

Politics the art of Arcane:
He was the master of complex politics at home. He created the first welfare state in the modern world, with the goal of gaining working class support that might otherwise go to his Socialist enemies. In the 1870s he allied himself with the Liberals (who were low-tariff and anti-Catholic) and fought the Catholic Church in a culture war. He lost that battle as the Catholics responded by forming a powerful Center party and using universal male suffrage to gain a bloc of seats. Bismarck then reversed himself, ended the culture war, broke with the Liberals, imposed tariffs, and formed a political alliance with the Center party to fight the Socialists. A devout Lutheran, he was loyal to his king, who in turn gave Bismarck his full support, against the advice of his wife and his heir. While Germany's parliament was elected by universal male suffrage, it did not have real control of the government. Bismarck distrusted democracy and ruled through a strong, well-trained bureaucracy with power in the hands of a traditional Junker elite that comprised the landed nobility of the east. Under Wilhelm I, Bismarck largely controlled domestic and foreign affairs, until he was removed by young Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1890.
Bismarck, an aristocratic Junker himself, had an extremely aggressive and domineering personality. He displayed a violent temper and kept his power by threatening to resign time and again. He possessed not only a long-term national and international vision, but also the short-term ability to juggle many complex developments simultaneously. As the leader of what historians call "revolutionary conservatism,"[1] Bismarck became a hero to German nationalists; they built hundreds of monuments glorifying the iconic symbol of powerful conservative leadership. Historians generally praise him as a statesman of moderation and balance who kept the peace in Europe, and was primarily responsible for the unification of Germany and building its world-renowned bureaucracy and army.

Prussia:
 It was a historic state originating out of the Duchy of Prussia and the Margraviate of Brandenburg, and centered on the region of Prussia. For centuries, the House of Hohenzollern ruled Prussia, successfully expanding its size by way of an unusually well-organized and effective army. Prussia, with its capital in Königsberg and from 1701 moved to Berlin, shaped the history of Germany. In 1871, German states united to create the German Empire under Prussian leadership.

Unification Germany under Otto von Bismarck:
Otto von Bismarck pushed German unification through "blood and iron" and skillful understanding of realpolitik. As the map of central Europe stood in 1850, Prussia competed with Austria for dominance over a series of small principalities fiercely keen on maintaining their independence and distinctive characteristics. Prussia proper stretched from modern-day Lithuania to central Germany. Prussia also controlled the German lands around the Rhine River in the west. In between, from Denmark to Switzerland, lay small provinces that Bismarck needed to incorporate under the Prussian crown to create a viable German Empire.


Construction of Prussian Army and Political tactics:
In 1862, Bismarck reorganized the Prussian army and improved training in preparation for war. In 1864, he constructed an alliance with Austria to fight Denmark over Denmark's southern provinces of Schleswig and Holstein. Prussia received Schleswig while Austria administered Holstein. That situation, however, could not stand for long, as Austrian Holstein was now surrounded by Prussian lands.

War with Austria:
The second episode in Bismarck's unification efforts occurred in 1866. In concert with the newly formed Italy, Bismarck created a diplomatic environment in which Austria declared war on Prussia. The dramatic prelude to the war occurred largely in Frankfurt, where the two powers claimed to speak for all the German states in the parliament. In April 1866, the Prussian representative in Florence signed a secret agreement with the Italian government, committing each state to assist the other in a war against Austria. The next day, the Prussian delegate to the Frankfurt assembly presented a plan calling for a national constitution, a directly elected national Diet, and universal suffrage. German liberals were justifiably skeptical of this plan, having witnessed Bismarck's difficult and ambiguous relationship with the Prussian Landtag (State Parliament), a relationship characterized by Bismarck's cajoling and riding roughshod over the representatives. These skeptics saw the proposal as a ploy to enhance Prussian power rather than a progressive agenda of reform. Bismarck provoked a conflict with Austria over an unrelated border dispute and in the subsequent Seven Weeks' War--named for its brevity--Prussia crushed the collapsing Austrian army. The peace settlement transferred Holstein to Prussia and forced Austria to officially remove itself from all German affairs.


With Austria out of Bismarck's way, his next obstacle was the skepticism of the southern provinces. Overwhelmingly Catholic and anti-militaristic, the southern provinces doubted Prussia's commitment to a united Germany of all provinces. Prussia's Protestantism and historic militarism made the gulf between north and south quite serious. Therefore, Bismarck turned to realpolitik to unite the Germanic provinces by constructing a war against a common enemy. In 1870, Bismarck forged a note from the French ambassador, implying that the ambassador had insulted the Prussian king. After he leaked this letter to both populations, the people of France and Prussia, roused by nationalist sentiment, rose up in favor of war. As Bismarck hoped, the southern provinces rallied to Prussia's side without any hesitation. 

Franco-Prussian War:
Military conflict and tactical operation "In July 1870, France declared war on Prussia"
Napoleon III had tried to secure territorial concessions from both sides before and after the Austro-Prussian War, but despite his role as mediator during the peace negotiations, he ended up with nothing. He then hoped that Austria would join in a war of revenge and that its former allies particularly the southern German states of Baden, Württemberg, and Bavaria, would join in the cause. This hope would prove futile since the 1866 treaty came into effect and united all German states militarily, if not happily  to fight against France. Instead of a war of revenge against Prussia, supported by various German allies, France engaged in a war against all of the German states without any allies of its own. The reorganization of the military by von Roon and the operational strategy of Moltke combined against France to great effect. The speed of Prussian mobilization astonished the French, and the Prussian ability to concentrate power at specific points — reminiscent of Napoleon I's strategies seventy years earlier , overwhelmed French mobilization. Utilizing their efficiently laid rail grid, Prussian troops were delivered to battle areas rested and prepared to fight, whereas French troops had to march for considerable distances to reach combat zones. After a number of battles, notably Spicheren, Wörth, Mars la Tour, and Gravelotte, the Prussians defeated the main French armies and advanced on the primary city of Metz and the French capital of Paris. They captured Napoleon III and took an entire army as prisoners at Sedan on 1 September 1870.. Alsace-Lorraine was transferred to Germany in the peace settlement, allowing Prussia to declare the German Empire, or Second Reich, on January 21, 1871.



Proclamation of the German Empire:
The humiliating capture of the French emperor and the loss of the French army itself, which marched into captivity at a makeshift camp in the Saarland ("Camp Misery"), threw the French government into turmoil; Napoleon's energetic opponents overthrew his government and proclaimed the Third Republic.The German High Command expected an overture of peace from the French, but the new republic refused to surrender. The Prussian army invested Paris and held it under siege until mid-January, with the city being "ineffectually bombarded".On 18 January 1871, the German princes and senior military commanders proclaimed Wilhelm "German Emperor" in the Hall of Mirrors of the Palace of Versailles. Under the subsequent Treaty of Frankfurt, France relinquished most of its traditionally German regions (Alsace and the German-speaking part of Lorraine); paid an indemnity, calculated (on the basis of population) as the precise equivalent of the indemnity that Napoleon Bonaparte imposed on Prussia in 1807; and accepted German administration of Paris and most of northern France, with "German troops to be withdrawn stage by stage with each installment of the indemnity payment.


Over all Timeline:
1804: Napoleon Bonaparte, self-crowned emperor of France, began his conquests of Germanic states east of the Rhine.
1805: Dissolution of the Austrian-led Holy Roman Empire, Francis I of Austria declared the new Austrian Empire.
1805: Napoleon grouped the Germanic states into the Confederation of the Rhine as a French client-state.
1815: After the defeat of Napoleon, the Congress of Vienna reinstated the Germanic states into the German Confederation under the leadership of the Austrian Empire.
1819: The Carlsbad Decrees suppressed any form of pan-Germanic activities to avoid the creation of a 'German state'; the Kingdom of Prussia, however, initiated a customs union with other Confederation states.
1834: The Prussian-led custom union evolved into the Zollverein that included almost all Confederation states except the Austrian Empire.
1848: Revolts across the German Confederation, such as in Berlin, Dresden and Frankfurt, forced King Frederick William IV of Prussia to grant a constitution to the Confederation. In the meantime, the Frankfurt Parliament was set up in 1848 and attempted to proclaim a united Germany, but this was refused by William IV. The question of a united Germany under the Kleindeutsch solution (to exclude Austria) or the so-called Großdeutsch (to include Austria) began to surface.
1861: King Wilhelm I became King of Prussia and he appointed Otto von Bismarck as the Chancellor, who favored a 'blood-and-iron' policy to create a united Germany under the leadership of Prussia.
1864: The Danish-Prussian War started as Prussia protested against Danish incorporation of Schleswig into the Kingdom of Denmark. The Austrian Empire was deliberately drawn into this war by Otto von Bismarck, Chancellor of Prussia. The Austro-Prussian victory led to Schleswig, the northern part, being governed by Prussia and Holstein, the southern part, being governed by Austria, as per the Treaty of Vienna (1864).
1866: Bismarck accused the Austrian Empire of stirring up troubles in Prussian-held Schleswig. Prussian troops drove into Austrian-held Holstein and took control of the entire state of Schleswig-Holstein. Austria declared war on Prussia and, after fighting the Austro-Prussian War (Seven Weeks' War), was swiftly defeated. The Treaty of Prague (1866) formally dissolved the German Confederation and Prussia created the North German Confederation to include all Germanic states except the pro-French, southern kingdoms of Bavaria, Baden and Württemberg.
1870: When the French emperor, Napoleon III, demanded territories of the Rhineland in return for his neutrality amid the Austro-Prussian War, Bismarck used the Spanish Succession Question and Ems Telegram (1868) as an opportunity to incorporate the southern kingdoms. Napoleon III declared war against Prussia.
1871: The Franco-Prussian War ended with Prussian troops capturing Paris, the capital of the Second French Empire. Bavaria, Baden, and Württemberg were incorporated into the North German Confederation in the Treaty of Frankfurt (1871). Bismarck then proclaimed King Wilhelm I, now Kaiser Wilhelm I, as leader of the new, united Germany (German Reich). With the German troops remaining in Paris, Napoleon III dissolved the French Empire and a new republic, the Third French Republic, was created under Adolphe Thiers.


Ghenghis khan and Mongolians Dynasty

Nature of Mongolians:
The knights at their tournaments, in their finery, armor and emblems of ancestry, believed they were the foremost warriors in the world, while Mongol warriors thought otherwise. Mongol horses were small, but their riders were lightly clad and they moved with greater speed. These were hardy men who grew up on horses and hunting, making them better warriors than those who grew up in agricultural societies and cities. Their main weapon was the bow and arrow. And the Mongols of the early 1200s were highly disciplined, superbly coordinated and brilliant in tactics.

The Mongols were illiterate, religiously shamanistic and perhaps no more than 700,000 in number. Their language today is described as Altaic, a language unrelated to Chinese, derived from inhabitants in the Altay mountain range in western Mongolia. They were herdsmen on the grassy plains north of the Gobi Desert, south of Siberia's forests. Before the year 1200, the Mongols were fragmented, moving about in small bands headed by a chief, or khan, and living in portable felt dwellings. The Mongols endured frequent deprivations and sparse areas for grazing their animals. They frequently fought over turf, and during hard times they occasionally raided, interested in goods rather than bloodshed. They did not collect heads or scalps as trophies.

Childhood of Tamujin:
At the time of his birth in 1162, no one in China had heard of Europe and no one in Europe had heard of China.
By the time of his death in 1227, he had connected them with diplomatic and and commercial contacts that still remains unbroken.
Genghis Khan was born near the border of modern Mongolia and Siberia. Holeum, a young kidnapped girl struggle to give birth to him, her first child. Temujin was not valued by his father who was already married before he kidnapped his mother and had a son, Begter, slightly older than him from his first wife. At the age of 9, Temujin choose his wife Borte. His father died at the same period.
With her husband dead and no other man willing to take her, Holeum's family  was abandon by the Tayichiud tribe protecting them. Holeum and and an other woman with their 7 children were left out behind to die. Most of Temujin's youth was consumed by the work of helping his family survive. In the land of harsh lives, they had fallen to the lowest level of steppe life.

Death of his Father:
When he was nine, Yesugei, a member of the royal Borjigin clan of the Mongols, was poisoned by a band of Tatars, another nomadic people, in continuance of an old feud.
With Yesugei dead, the remainder of the clan, led by the rival Taychiut family, abandoned his widow, Höelün, and her children, considering them too weak to exercise leadership and seizing the opportunity to usurp power. For a time the small family led a life of extreme poverty, eating roots and fish instead of the normal nomad diet of mutton and mare’s milk. Two anecdotes illustrate both Temüjin’s straitened circumstances and, more significantly, the power he already had of attracting supporters through sheer force of personality. Once he was captured by the Taychiut, who, rather than killing him, kept him around their camps, wearing a wooden collar. One night, when they were feasting, Temüjin, noticing that he was being ineptly guarded, knocked down the sentry with a blow from his wooden collar and fled. The Taychiut searched all night for him, and he was seen by one of their people, who, impressed by the fire in his eyes, did not denounce him but helped him escape at the risk of his own life. On another occasion horse thieves came and stole eight of the nine horses that the small family owned. Temüjin pursued them. On the way he stopped to ask a young stranger, called Bo’orchu, if he had seen the horses. Bo’orchu immediately left the milking he was engaged in, gave Temüjin a fresh horse, and set out with him to help recover the lost beasts. 

Prince become his brother:
Temüjin and his family apparently preserved a considerable fund of prestige as members of the royal Borjigin clan, in spite of their rejection by it. Among other things, he was able to claim the wife to whom Yesügei had betrothed him just before his death. But the Merkit people, a tribe living in northern Mongolia, bore Temüjin a grudge, because Yesügei had stolen his own wife, Höelün, from one of their men, and in their turn they ravished Temüjin’s wife Börte. Temüjin felt able to appeal to Toghril, khan of the Kereit tribe, with whom Yesügei had had the relationship of anda, or sworn brother, and at that time the most powerful Mongol prince, for help in recovering Börte. He had had the foresight to rekindle this friendship by presenting Toghril with a sable skin, which he himself had received as a bridal gift. He seems to have had nothing else to offer; yet, in exchange, Toghril promised to reunite Temüjin’s scattered people, and he is said to have redeemed his promise by furnishing 20,000 men and persuading Jamuka, a boyhood friend of Temüjin’s, to supply an army as well. 

Stolen Death:
 Jamukha and Temüjin drifted apart in their friendship, each began consolidating power, and soon became rivals. Jamukha supported the traditional Mongolian aristocracy, while Temüjin followed a meritocratic method, and attracted a broader, though lower class, range of followers.Due to his earlier defeat of the Merkits, and a proclamation by the shaman Kokochu that the Eternal Blue Sky had set aside the world for Temüjin, Temüjin began rising to power. In 1186, Temüjin was elected khan of the Mongols. However, Jamukha, threatened by Temüjin's rapid ascent, quickly moved to stop Temüjin's ambitions. In 1187, he launched an attack against his former friend with an army of thirty thousand troops. Temüjin hastily gathered together his followers to defend against the attack, but he was decisively beaten in the Battle of Dalan Balzhut.Jamukha horrified people greatly and harmed his image by boiling seventy young male captives alive in cauldrons, alienating many of his potential followers and eliciting sympathy for Temüjin.Toghrul, as Temüjin's patron, was exiled to the Qara Khitai. The life of Temüjin for the next ten years is very unclear, as historical records are mostly silent on that period.

Elimination of Rivals:
Temüjin now set about systematically eliminating all rivals. Successive coalitions formed by Jamuka were defeated. The Tatars were exterminated. Toghril allowed himself to be maneuvered by Jamuka’s intrigues and by his own son’s ambitions and suspicions into outright war against Temüjin, and he and his Kereit people were destroyed. Finally, in the west, the Naiman ruler, fearful of the rising power of the Mongols, tried to form yet another coalition, with the participation of Jamuka, but was utterly defeated and lost his kingdom. Jamuka, inconstant as ever, deserted the Naiman khan at the last moment. These campaigns took place in the few years before 1206 and left Temüjin master of the steppes. In that year a great assembly was held by the River Onon, and Temüjin was proclaimed Genghis Khan: the title probably meant Universal Ruler.
Unification of Mongol Empire into one seal
The part of the Merkit clan that sided with the Naimans were defeated by Subutai, who was by then a member of Temüjin's personal guard and later became one of the most successful commanders of Genghis Khan. The Naimans' defeat left Temüjin as the sole ruler of the Mongol plains – all the prominent confederations fell or united under his Mongol confederation.
Accounts of Genghis Khan's life are marked by claims of a series of betrayals and conspiracies. These include rifts with his early allies such as Jamukha (who also wanted to be a ruler of Mongol tribes) and Wang Khan (his and his father's ally), his son Jochi, and problems with the most important shaman, who was allegedly trying to drive a wedge between him and his loyal brother Khasar. His military strategies showed a deep interest in gathering good intelligence and understanding the motivations of his rivals, exemplified by his extensive spy network and Yam route systems. He seemed to be a quick student, adopting new technologies and ideas that he encountered, such as siege warfare from the Chinese. He was also ruthless, demonstrated by his tactic of measuring against the linchpin, used against the tribes led by Jamukha.
As a result, by 1206 Temüjin had managed to unite or subdue the Merkits, Naimans, Mongols, Khereids, Tatars, Uyghurs, and other disparate smaller tribes under his rule. It was a monumental feat for the "Mongols" (as they became known collectively). At a Khuruldai, a council of Mongol chiefs, Temüjin was acknowledged as "Khan" of the consolidated tribes and took the new title "Genghis Khan". The title Khagan was not conferred on Genghis until after his death, when his son and successor, Ögedei, took the title for himself and extended it posthumously to his father (as he was also to be posthumously declared the founder of the Yuan dynasty). This unification of all confederations by Genghis Khan established peace between previously warring tribes and a single political and military force under Genghis Khan.

Conquests in Northern China:
Genghis Khan moved to secure his borders. To his south he made an alliance with the Uyghurs, who were closer than the Mongols were to the Silk Road and to wealth. He married his daughter to the Uighur Khan, and the Uighur Khan brought to the wedding party a caravan laden with gold, silver, pearls, brocaded fabrics, silks and satins. The Mongols had only leather, fur and felt – a humiliation for a master of the entire world.
Genghis Khan needed booty to pay troops securing his northern border and subduing an old enemy there, the Merkits. He acted on his mandate as the rightful ruler of the entire world and attacked the Tangut conquerors of northwestern China from a century before, the Tangut ruling Chinese farmers and herders there. The Tangut had much in goods like the Uighur Khan. Against the Tangut the Mongols were outnumbered in warriors two to one, and the Mongols had to learn a new kind of warfare against fortified cities, including cutting supply lines and diverting rivers. Genghis Khan and his army were victorious, and in 1210 Genghis Khan won from the Tngut recognition as overlord.



Also in 1210, the Jurchen emperor, Weishaowang, who ruled a part of northern China that includd Beijing, was concerned. He sent a delegation to Genghis Khan demanding submission as a vassal. The Jurchen emperor controlled the flow of goods along the Silk Road, and defying him meant a lack of access to those goods. Genghis Khan discussed the matter with his fellow Mongols and choe war. Genghis, according to the scholar Jack Weatherford, prayed alone on a mountain, bowing dwn and stating his case to "his supernatral guardians," describing the grievances, the tortures and killings that generations of his people had suffered at the hands of the Jurchens. And he pleaded that he had not sought war against the Jurchens and had not initiated the quarrel.
In 1211, Genghis Khan and his army attacked. The Jurchens had a large and effective army but they were hard pressed by both the Mongols and the Tangut. And the Jurchens were under attack by Chinese from south of the Yangzi River, the Southen Song emperor there wishing to take advantage of the Jurchen-Mongol conflict to liberat northern China.
The Jurchens drove the Chinese armies into retreat. The Mongols were benefiting from China having failed during the previous century to make itself a strong militay power, and the Mongols were benefitting from the Jurchens being burdened by their rule over a conquered people. The Mongols were benevolent toward those who sided with them and used terror and violence against those who did not. The Mongols ravaged the countryside, gathered information and booty and drove populations in front of them, clogging the roads and trapping the Jurchens within their cities, where Jurchen authority was subject to revolty those they had conquered. The Mongols used conscripted labor in attacking cities and in operating their newly acquired Chinese siege engines.
Against the Jurchens the Mongols had an advantage in diet, which included a lot of meat, milk and yogurt, and they could miss a day or two of eating better than Jurchen sold iers, who ate grains. Genghis Khan and his army overran Beijing and pushed into the heartland of northern China. Military success helped as people acquired the impression that Genghis  Khan had the Mand ate of Hea ven and that fighting against him was fighting heaven itself. The Jurchen emperor recognized Mong ol authority and agreed to pay tribute.

Religion of Genghis Khan:
The religion of genghis Khan, empeor of the mongols, about whose romantic conquests much has been written, must remain largely a matter of conjecture and theory . But the subject is important from the point of view of the impact of animasim and origional monotheism. Did monotheism precede animism among the mongolians, or was it contemporary with, or develop from it. Did Tamuchin as a youth have same idea of God as he had when he died, as Genghis Khan, or had he been subtly influcenced by Christianity or Mohammedanism, with the both of witch he had contacts in later life, though he embraced neither faith. For the remained a Deist supported by shamanism. There may be many source of information about his life history, but these are not all easily availble to students of the region of Mongolia, at that period. Whatever the religious views of his tibesmen may have been, genghis kHan was certainly the man of Crystallize and consilidate them, in the same way as he consolidated the loose tribes which afterwards formed his Empire.



Sunday 6 September 2015

Takh-i-Bhai The Buddhist Monastery In Mardan An Overview Of Ghandara Civilization And Lifestyle of Monks in 1st BCE.

Takht-e-Bhai the buiddist Monastery in Mardan:
The ostentatious structure and imposing relics of the Buddhist Monastery in takht-i-bhai (throne of origin) has captivated a large number of local archaeologist Buddhist Chinese students and other students who have flicked to see the takh-i-bhai Buddhist site which dates back to early 1st century AD.






History Takht Bhai:
 Takht-i-bai is located in Gandhara, as a most important site of Buddhism. Takht-i-Bai was a first center of Zoroastrianism, while Zoroastrianism has survived into the modern period, particularly in India, where it has been present since about the 9th century. "Ancient semi-dualistic monotheist religion of Greater Iran", but after the arrival of Buddhism it was converted into center of Buddhism.
Decline of old years, and new beginning of takht bai: Most of the Sassanid Empire was overthrown by the Arabs over the course of 16 years in the 7th century. Although the administration of the state was rapidly Islamicized and subsumed under the Umayyad Caliphate, in the beginning "there was little serious pressure" exerted on newly subjected people to adopt Islam, its make a new beginning of the takhth bai.
The discovery of ancient artifacts, near Mardan in caves, proof the existence of civilization of stone age, the artifacts are almost 15000 to 18000 year old. The region shows the influx of Asian culture in "Bronze era", which is so promising that these people ruled this land from many years, many evidence are being provided but still not proof the extent of the great gandhara civilization. The Gandhara was officially known in extended area in era of Archemenian Empire, the Perisan great empire.  In the era of Cyrus the great (558-28 BCE) it was well known pilgrimage of Buddhism. The historical based year for Gandhara existence is Mid 1st millennium BC to the beginning of 2nd millennium

Takht-i-Bhai Meaning:
Takht-i-bhai or Takh Bay rare known a s station s a pathian archaeological site in Mardan, KP, Pakistan.  It was 1st a Zoroastrian complex which come after the arrival of Buddhism was then converted into Buddhist Monastic complex it is found in 1st century BCE. It was lasted as UNESCO world heritage site in 1980. The word Takht-i-Bhai may have different explanations in Avestan Takht mean capital and bhai means Good so the whole word means Good Capital. In other things Takht means Throne and Bhai means Water or Spring in Persian. 

Gandhara Ancient name:
The name of Gandhara have many meanings, but the most promising theory relevant to the name is the word "Qand or Gand, evolved from pool or well of water, many names are appeared with other places name relevant to the water, three of them is (water mount). Tashkand (Stone walled pool) and Yarkand.x The reason for these names is that the region is quite rich in water supplies; especially around Peshawar.
Empire ruled over takht Bai in Gandhara region:
Achaemenids "First Persian Empire, was an empire based in Western Asia, founded by Cyrus the Great,"(~600-400 BCE)
Greeks "Bacterian rule were power over the region for many years until khushans (~326-324 BCE),

Mauryans " Iron Age historical power in ancient India, ruled by the Maurya dynasty from 322–185 BCE." (~324-185 BCE),

Indo-Greeks (~250-190 BCE),
Scythians (~2nd century to 1st  century BCE),
Parthians "After the great perisan empire, Parthians dominated the region (~1st century BC to 1st century CE),
Kushans "In the Golden age of khushans Gandhara floruished(~1st to 5th  century CE),
White Huns "Dominated for some time" (~5th century CE)
Hindu Shahi " The Shahi rulers of Kapisa/Kabul who ruled Afghanistan from the early 4th century till AD 870 Shahi were also known by "Brahmana Hindu"(~9th to 10th century CE).
Fact: When the Sassanian were defeated by the Muslim Arabs in 644 C.E., Gandhara along with Kabul was ruled by Buddhist Turks.

Artifacts:
In the nineteenth century, British soldiers and administrators started taking interest in the ancient history of the Indian Subcontinent. In the 1830s, coins of the post-Ashoka period were discovered and in the same period Chinese travelogues were translated. Charles Masson, James Prinsep, and Alexander Cunningham deciphered the Kharosthi script in 1838.

Influence over gandhara:
 As a result of long periods of cross-cultural fertilization and dialogue, the various Kingdoms of Gandhara became centers of learning and education in the ancient world. In particular, Gandhara was noted for its distinctive Gandhāra style of Buddhist art, a consequence of merger of Greek, Syrian, Persian, and Indian art traditions
Jewish king Afghana in the Gandhara near takhth bai: Afghana or Avagana  born in 1000 BC according to common folklore, Afghana is considered in old Asian folklore a tribal chief or prince of Bani Israel (Israelite) origin and back then for India a Jewish King of Gandhara. He was either buried or his ashes were burned in
Gandhara or Ghor.


The Destruction by White Huns and flourishing of Buddhism:
 The Kidarites managed to maintain strong hold over the region, carrying on the traditions of their predecessors the Kushans up to the middle of the 5th Cent CE when the White Huns, invaded the region. As Buddhism and by extension the Gandhara culture was already at an stronger by this time, the invasion caused both physical destruction and, due to the Huns adoption of the Shivite faith cause the Buddhism to boost in the region, while on the another hand there was the existence of Great Gupta Empire, which was already immersed in Buddhism.

Geological Locations of Buddhist Monastery in Mardan:
The north western frontier province   (NWFP) (now renamed kyber pakhtunkhwa k.p) has been I vastly  bestowed with various precious resources  such as snow covered mountains, thick forests, gas resources, vast gemstone deposits and other minerals .  Mardan the kp second largest city after Peshawar is called the land of gandhara as it was the heart of of the ancient civilization. The takht-i-bhai  archaeological site is one of the most significant amazing site in Pakistan .it is situated on the Mardan-swat road some 13kilometers north of the city the that-i-bhai site is located 2 km east of takht-i-bhai bazaar , this Buddhist complex stands 500 feet above the ground .


Nearby Places:
The village of “thordher” (old name said ghani kalae ) “ghafe, lundkhwar, shergarh, sarooshah,sehri-bahlol,pathai mazdoorabad ,fazle-e-abad ,gangai,hathian,pirsaddiand takkar” are other historical places in the vicinity of takht bhai. This Buddhist monastery is situated on takht-i- bhai.       

Sahri-i-bahol:
The second component the neighboring city remains at sahr-ibablol is located approximately 5 km
 away in a fertile plain . the sahri-bahlol ruins are the remnants of a small ancient fort.
Field town of the kushan period. The town is set on an elongated mound up to 9 meters high and
surrounded by portions of the first two or three centuries AD. The area covered is 9.7 hectares. 

Strong building and structure:
takht-i-bai building is still believed to be strong, and can maintain for many years.
A person who found his fortune: There is old tail that once a time there was a poor person, ruled by a tyrant business owner. A day came when he found his fortune, due to the hidden wealth of takht bai. 
Famous thing of takht-i-bai: The most famous thing of takht-i-bai is "Kabbab and sugarcane, while kabbab is a dish from Arabs land.









Structure:
There are four main areas of the takht-i-bhai complex
The stupa court, a cluster of stupa located in the central courtyard.
The monastic chambers, consisting of individual cells arranged around a courtyard assembly halls and a dining area.
A temple complex consisting  of stupa, and same like to the stupa court, but of later construction

The Antarctic monastic complex , which consist of small , dark cells with law openings which may have been used for certain forms of Antarctic mediation.

Italian Architecture Designing:
The historical site is an archaeological wonder consider to be significant because of its unique design the architecture design of Buddhist Monastery is liked Italian architecture designing. The valley and houses are made of stones in that time in the of Italian architecture designing.



















Frontier Sugar Mill Takht-i-Bhai (1939):

 A sugar mill was build in takht-i-bai area, which was second largest sugar mill in khyber pakhtunkhwa "KPK". The sugar mill was closed due to the high taxation, and shortage of Electricity While Pakistan is still facing the shortage of Electricity it is being believed that the shortage will last until 2019 because Pakistan is building Nuclear reactors. The closing of sugar mill caused many problems "financially and socially". The ANP government was also failed to solve this problem, but due to lacks of spirit and concentration, ANP government almost failed the project forever.



  
Museums:

 In 1907-1908 the curator of Peshawar muses “Dr. DB Spooner” systematically 1910-11 “Mr. Hargeaves” another curator discovered the famous and thin Siddhartha in three parts a large number of stone and stucco sculptures have been excavated since then which are now on display in Peshawar and Mardan museums  many however were wasted due to which are stolen. According to 2008 many precious things of gandahara were put in Mardan museum in their government of (Awamy national party).




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