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The Coming of the Seljuks

The Coming of the Seljuks.png The First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and MesopotamiaThe First CrusadeThumbnailsAsia Minor, Syria, and Mesopotamia
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Haroun-al-Raschid died in 809. At his death his great empire fell immediately into civil war and confusion, and the next great event of unusual importance in this region of the world comes two hundred years later when the Turks, under the chiefs of the great family of the Seljuks, poured southward out of Turkestan, and not only conquered the empire of Bagdad, but Asia Minor also. Coming from the northeast as they did, they were able to outflank the great barrier of the Taurus Mountains, which had hitherto held back the Moslems. They were still much the same people as those of whom Yuan Chwang gave us a glimpse four hundred years earlier, but now they were Moslems, and Moslems of the primitive type, men whom Abu Bekr would have welcomed to Islam. They caused a great revival of vigour in Islam, and they turned the minds of the Moslem world once more in the direction of a religious war against Christendom.

Author
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Outline of History - Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind, by H. G. Wells published 1920
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