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Show ---- . . Thus it would the Mongols Indeed, they demonstrated when to origins. to a singular willingness their barbarous The Mongols should also be judged by their freedom from • --In Khan, who did always eager ti a dd'i lt10n not to matters be!ong consult own any of to true Jewish r abbt s .. t h elr ea ers. splrltua lId 20 statesmanship. Chingiz Khan Empire in Persia, was and Muslim Chingiz The execution of • of , all the established faiths, CAbbasid Caliph al-MustaCsim billah (640-656/1242-1258) grandson greatness the sages of various denominations ferent mat ter s of life and the In the religion. representatives of Buddhist lamas, . ,to of they demonstrated their courts at f a i t hs-v-Chr Ls t Lan f'r i.ar s , -Ii them- adapt repudiate new welcoming equally ulama to govern- environment and to the framework of the mediaeval mind» C from the wr i t er s fair, any judgment of the Mongols be bigotry and by their tolerance in by upon their basing judgment few contemporary a categorize subsequent period of their settled should be based upon the selves of 19 the historian to unrelenting destroyers, as conquered nations. ments rash for seem and the records acts early arc h ltecture. i an d promoter of SClence, learnlng and the founder of by was on dif- the last HulaguJ) the Ilkhanite performed after consultation with the Muslim 19JIj A. Boyle, "Dynastic and Political History of the 11Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 5. The Saljuq and Mon gol Periods, ed. by J. A. Boyle. (Cambridge a University Press, 1968), pp. 379-97. Khansu in The 20William Woodville Rockhill, The Journey of William of Rubruck to the Eastern Parts of the World, 1253-55 as Narrated by Himself. with Two Accounts of the Earlier Journey of John of Pian de Carpine, tr. from the Latin, and edited with an introductory (Londons Hakluyt Society, 1900), pp. 225-235. notice. |