Conqueror: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* '''Bones of the Hills''' (2008): Xi Xia and Chin are under Mongol domination, but Genghis Khan's ambassadors to Khwarezm are tortured and killed. The Mongols move against the Arabs in revenge, and their armies reach as far west as Russia.
* '''Bones of the Hills''' (2008): Xi Xia and Chin are under Mongol domination, but Genghis Khan's ambassadors to Khwarezm are tortured and killed. The Mongols move against the Arabs in revenge, and their armies reach as far west as Russia.
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=== The series provides examples of: ===
== The series provides examples of ==
* [[The Alliance]]: What the Mongol nation starts off as.
* [[The Alliance]]: What the Mongol nation starts off as.
* [[Bilingual Backfire]]
* [[Bilingual Backfire]]
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** The killing-one's-enemies part is still seen as honourable nowadays...
** The killing-one's-enemies part is still seen as honourable nowadays...
*** The exact extent of this trope depends on who you talk to.
*** The exact extent of this trope depends on who you talk to.
** Codes of honor differ and the [[Hordes From the East]] even at their best would hardly have behaved like a fairy tale [[Knight in Shining Armor]]. Being able to [[Rape, Pillage and Burn]] without your enemy being able to do anything about it would likely have been considered a way to show off what a [[Badass]] [[Proud Warrior Race Guy|Warrior]] you were by [[Take That|rubbing in your enemy's face]] what an incompetent [[Papa Wolf]] he was. They would likely have thought it "honorable". It was evil but unfortunately often times not only are [[Humans Are Warriors|humans warriors]], they are often [[Humans Are Bastards|bastards]]. And before someone mentions it, yes that is a disgusting thought.
** Codes of honor differ and the [[Hordes From the East]] even at their best would hardly have behaved like a fairy tale [[Knight in Shining Armor]]. Being able to [[Rape, Pillage and Burn]] without your enemy being able to do anything about it would likely have been considered a way to show off what a [[Badass]] [[Proud Warrior Race Guy|Warrior]] you were by [[Take That|rubbing in your enemy's face]] what an incompetent [[Papa Wolf]] he was. They would likely have thought it "honorable". It was evil but unfortunately often times not only are [[Humans Are Warriors|humans warriors]], they are often [[Humans Are the Real Monsters|bastards]]. And before someone mentions it, yes that is a disgusting thought.
* [[Drowning My Sorrows]]: Genghis and Hoelun hit the airag pretty hard after {{spoiler|Temulun}} dies.
* [[Drowning My Sorrows]]: Genghis and Hoelun hit the airag pretty hard after {{spoiler|Temulun}} dies.
* [[Eyes of Gold]]: Genghis Khan, and all but one of his children.
* [[Eyes of Gold]]: Genghis Khan, and all but one of his children.

Revision as of 14:41, 23 October 2016

A series of three books, with three more on the way, by Conn Iggulden which tell the story of the Mongol Empire. So far, it includes:

  • Wolf of the Plains (2007) (Published in America as Genghis: Birth of an Empire): Follows Temujin, son of Yesugei, as he is banished from his tribe and goes on to not only survive, but begin to unite all the people of Mongolia, becoming Genghis Khan.
  • Lords of the Bow (2008): Having crushed the Tartars and united the Mongols into a single nation, Genghis Khan turns his attention to the tribes' traditional oppressors, the Xi Xia and Chin empires in what is now northern China.
  • Bones of the Hills (2008): Xi Xia and Chin are under Mongol domination, but Genghis Khan's ambassadors to Khwarezm are tortured and killed. The Mongols move against the Arabs in revenge, and their armies reach as far west as Russia.

The series provides examples of