There is a Russian series called with that name. I'm from Bulgaria so have watched it in subtitles but I'm not sure whether u would be able to find English subtitles. In Russian it's written as Эолатая Орда while in Bulgarian it would be Элатната Орда.
I visited the Gur-e-Amir in Samarkand in 2017. It's an extraordinarily beautiful building and city. Uzbekistan is one of the most incredible places I've ever been; I wholeheartedly recommend it to anyone and everyone. Istakhri, a 10th centry travel author wrote: "I know no place in Samarkand where if one ascends some elevated ground one does not see greenery and a pleasant place. It is the most fruitful of all the countries of Allah; in it are the best trees and fruits, in every home are gardens, cisterns and flowing water." Bear in mind that this was in the 10th century; under Temerlane's rule, the city only became richer and he arguably laid the foundation for it becoming one of the scientific capitals of the world at the time.
This sounds like a non-existant paradise discription out of the many surahs of the Koran. As fictional as Middle Earth in Tolkien's works. Samarkand is quite legendary though.
If you look closely, many of the leaders who could be called great also showed clear signs of psychosis. Napoleon, Alexander, Augustus, and Qin Shi Huang were all a few bats short in their belfries.
One thing historians do not pay to much attention about his life is he was very just and people under his rules were really safe, there is a line from him that some asked him how can a women wearing much gold can easily pass throughout cities without being rubbed? He said where I saw a thief I beheaded the guardian of that city
2:25 - Chapter 1 - A boy named iron 5:40 - Chapter 2 - Rise of the lame 8:00 - Chapter 3 - Towers of skulls 12:15 - Chapter 4 - Battling the elephants 15:00 - Chapter 5 - The last expedition 17:20 - Chapter 6 - Legacy
Actually he was a terrible builder. There's a building in Samarkand that almost fell over as soon as it was completed because he rushed the workers too much.
@@klaudioabazi4478 He really was. When Tamerlane came to anatolia, he gave elephants to towns so they can feed them, in one point townspeople couldnt take it anymore because elephants were hard to take care of. So they went to ''Hoca Nasreddin'', a smart Kadı of the area, he was asked to go to Tamerlane and take back the elephants because it was too much for them. He accepted and started to go to Tamerlane, as he came closer to Tamerlane more and more people left him alone, when he reached Tamerlane, there was no people left behind him, he was left alone. When Tamerlane asked him what he wanted he responded ''Townspeople are very happy with Elephants you gave them, they ask for more elephants!'
He single-handedly killed more Muslims than 300 years of crusade combined. And he even had the nerve to call himself the sword of Islam. A double edged sword if you ask me. Also he liked to raid Georgia, i mean, he loved to raid Georgia.
@LibtardsStillCant SilenceMe20 He followed mongol code of conduct for his politics and war. Mongols embraced islam just for the sake of legitimacy and not because of any change of heart, which is clearly visible in their actions.
In india muslims name their kids timur even Bollywood celebrities too. Muslims love him because they think he killed hindus idol worshippers because of lack of knowledge they don't know how many muzlï-ms he killed
One could say the long lost son of Genghis Khan not true but Tamerlane and Genghis both do share a common ancestor in the 9th century a very powerful warlord at the time.
"If you want to know the true value of this world, look at the value and character of those people who have it (arrogant people, corrupt rulers and Kings)" - Sufyān al-Thawrī
Tamerlane was a charismatic leader who lacked the vision to enable his military gains to persevere after his death. Ultimately, Tamerlane's legacy amounted to massive death counts and nothing more.
well he died on way on his final conquest so he had no time to prepare for an ordered succession. Also no matter preparations the empire would have been very unstable with Timur going from nothing to huge empire in just a couple of decades.
@@MuppetLord1 he was allegedly 69 at the time. Instead of going to war every 5 minutes he shouldve sat down to think what could be done to improve and stabilise the realm he ruled over. I'd rather claim Alexander the Macedon didnt had time. Kk no denial he probadly was over ambitious and went too far from home and died young but couldve stoped after finishing with Persia and starting to organise his empire. No wonder his soldiers didnt want to go further. Some of them probadly didnt knew how their kids and family looked like after so long campaigning at the end of geography. Ok we avenged against our menace so why going further? Already got more wealth than we could carry. Why die now?
Yeah most turko mongol conqueror type like Timur and Temujin lacked that "vision". Timur's son Shah Rukh is a bit different though. He ultimately failed to keep the empire after his death, but he tried.
I don't know if its just me but Timur and others like him often get judged for their treatment of their enemies but it makes sense. People are more likely to surrender in the face of terror than fighting and in an inadvertent way stopping others from dying.
@@fredbarker9201 Sacked not slaughtered I'm talking about basic tactics of warfare of the time. Quick conquest only really takes extreme place through Violance unless attacking an already large and established nation.
@@JuniorJuni070 People will justify what the Romans did or turn a blind eye to it but hey they built pretty roads and buildings so they were cool. Judging the morals of those of the past is easy with hindsight
Oh my god I am internally screaming!!! Huge fan of your channel and I was just waiting and wishing for you to do a video on Tamerlane! As someone that comes from Uzbekistan, has seen his tomb and has heard of his deeds, I am so so happy this video came out! :)
I visited Uzbekistan in early 2020 (before Covid). I'm from the USA. I saw Tashkent and Samarkand. Loved it. Easily one of my favorite countries I've been to.
@@Unknowngfyjoh its amazing to imagine these places. I'm from Bulgaria which is in the Balkans Europe. I wonder what I would feel like going to central Asia knowing that half a millennia ago my ancestors may have spent some time in there. Huge fan of the idea to become archeologist and look for historic places.
Tamerlane was a lot like Alexander the Great in that he is known as being a great conqueror but not so much a great ruler. However, while Alexander had the excuse of dying at an early age before he could effectively administer his conquered domains, Tamerlane didn't and his empire, though lasting another century, would only go downhill as a result.
Agreed. He built his empire around HIM, even though he assigned heirs and a line of succession. But while he was alive, he couldn’t quite break the autocratic mindset he’d always had. That, and he knew his armies’ loyalty was dependent on plunder, so he literally could not stop going on long campaigns that were really just pillaging sprees. Georgia, in particular, was plundered SIX TIMES during his reign. He was a brilliant leader and commander, but had no eye to a dynastic future.
He can be given credit for founding an empire. His descendants can be given the blame for not being able to sustain it. He should not be blamed for what happened a hundred years after his death. The Mughals in India can be seen to have formed an empire that, with many changes, survives in the form of Pakistan to this day.
This guy is insane the amount of destruction he wrought upon the world is just so tragic though. Gotta give a thumbs up for being able to start out as essentially a warband character and rise up to one of the most powerful conquerors before the age of gunpowder.
Having visited his tomb in Samarkand and seen the monuments there, the Timurids did accomplish something, his Grandson Ulugh Beg was one of the greatest astronomers before Galileo and Copernicus and built a masterful observatory for measuring astronomical movements.
@@colinmcdonald2499especially against citizens of the Delhi Sultanate many Muslims and Hindus who once resented one another started fighting for survival
Consider this: Timur was a brilliant strategist and leader. These two qualities allowed him to climb the social ladder and become a great warrior. He was also wise enough to spare any artisans he found in every conquered city. They would be taken back to the capital of Samerkand so they could work any building project that Timur had in mind.
I hold the fates bound hard in iron chains And with my hand turn fortune’s wheel about And sooner shall the sun fall from its sphere Than Tamburlaine be slain or overcome - Christopher Marlowe, English playwright, Tamburlaine the Great
Timur was straight up some sort of a perverse genius at committing war crimes to instill maximum terror in future opponents. Skull mountains, burying people alive in the foundation and walls of new buildings, trampling women and children with horses, etc. So many cities capitulated to him without a fight, and rarely tried to resist after occupation given what he did to Isfahan, Damascus and Baghdad.
Dear Biographics, I have been a fan of your biographic videos for a long time. I have found them to be both extremely informative, and entertaining! I'm not sure if you guys do requests or not, but could you please do a video on José Martí at some point?
My absolute fav ruler of all time. "Are you a Sunni are you?" "Well I'm a Shia, off with your head for my minaret of skulls." Then "Are you Shia, are you?" " "Well I'm Sunni, your body will make a nice brick in my wall" but the brutality was necessary to scare all the bandits along the silk road into submission. Now to actually watch the clip lol
I first heard of Tamerlane in a story from a book of Asian folk tales my mom owned. He featured in a story called "The Khoja Teaches Tamerlane's Donkey how to Read". In the story, the Khoja, a learned philosopher in Tamerlane's court, got into a boasting contest with some of his fellow government officials. He boasted that he was so great at teaching that he could teach a donkey to read. As luck would have it, Tamerlane passed within earshot just in time to hear the Khoja's boast, and ordered him to either make good on it by teaching one of Tamerlane's own donkeys, or suffer a horrible punishment. The Khoja asked for a month to teach the donkey, which the Emperor granted. The Khoja surprised everyone who knew him by being surprisingly lackadaisical in his "teaching", only giving the donkey two short lessons per day. When the month was over, Tamerlane summoned the Khoja to his palace to demonstrate that he had taught the donkey to read. The Khoja brought the donkey and a large book before the Emperor's court. He opened the book and stepped back. The donkey began turning the book's pages, one by one, with its tongue. After appearing to read several pages, the donkey looked up from the book and started braying. Tamerlane and his courtiers were impressed, and the Emperor richly rewarded the Khoja. After awhile, Tamerlane's curiosity got the better of him, and he summoned the Khoja to him and asked him what the actual trick was. The Khoja explained that he had put a few grains of barley between each page of the book and trained the donkey to turn the pages to get the grain. When the donkey opened a page that had no grain, he got upset and started braying.
The funny thing is that he’s treated as a hero in modern Uzbekistan, despite the fact that the Uzbeks drove his dynasty out of Central Asia. Samarkand is a wonderful city if you get a chance to visit it.
Robert Wilson, there is a huge difference between modern ethnic Uzbeks and semi-nomadic Uzbeks of Timur time. They were close to modern Kazahs who are kipchak. Nowadays Uzbeks mainly consist form non-nomadic karluk and o'g'uz groups.
'Tamerlane: The Bandit who Became an Emperor' I can't wait to watch this tale of personal reform led a man of humble background being trusted with the highest office in the land
The thought of "If I'm going to fight for you, you damn well better pay me!" came to mind. Treat your subjects with kindness and the world can be yours for the taking.
Timur and his country through the eyes of Ruy Gonzales De Clavijo, a Spanish nobleman who was sent as an ambassador to Timur's palace:Timur was of the race of Turkic immigrants and came from a noble generation who prided herself on her ancestry. The people of her country lived in tents, preferring the wandering lives of warrior shepherds to the luxury and comfort of cities, and preferred to camp in the open plains rather than stay in the most magnificent palaces, even in the countries they conquered. Source: Ruy Gonzales De Clavijo / The Life of Timur & Travels from Cadiz to Samarkand p.21
Why are you so obsessed with Europeans sources? Wt? Man from Spain was not specialist about Turkic history he was just ambassador lol All medieval Islamic and Mongolian source says he was mongol
@@hassanabdulsalam1000 Even Timur herself says I am Turkic, what are we discussing in the zafarname?Are you claiming that a man who prides himself on being Turkness is a Mongolian? :D:D
@@hannibalbarca2928 turk in medieval era had different meaning than today For example turk mongol Tatars were all synonymous to tribes of Central Asia Listen we know timur was from mongol barlas clan and this clan was mongol according to all medieval sources According to some European sources mongol empire are always known as great Tatars this is all confusion of distance people Timur was proud mongol And he also called himself ruler of turkistan that is fine but his origin is well documented
@@hassanabdulsalam1000 What does it mean that I am the chief of the oldest and greatest nation?These sentences are from Timur's zafarname herself, from her words about Turkness.
@@hannibalbarca2928 in medieval era turk and Mongols and even Tatars were synonymous words So timur was both mongol and turk but his origin is clearly Mongolian according to medieval sources we don't know anything else For me timur was turk because he was born in Turkic society most of timurid armies were turks So timur mongol origin is not important here Origin is not important most of the Time
Timur ( meaning iron in Turkic language ) was a Turkic🇺🇿 conqueror who wanted to restore the Mongol Empire . He wasn’t really Mongol , he was more Turkic .
The central Asian conquerors seem to be more analogous to pandemics in human form. Their activities certainly had profound effects across all of Asia and eastern Europe, but most of the great accomplishments following in their wake seem to be more attributable to those who survived them. richard -- "The scandal isn't what's illegal; the scandal is what's legal."
Ummm Sun Tzu? The Art of War? More widely used in modern militaries than any of the three named here. Not saying the three named here aren't used, but the way this is worded it says these are THEE three... When that's not true because Sun Tzu's work is more widely used in modern military than any of these three.
Can you do the history of The Thunderbirds? The aircraft, not the TV show. The aircraft are always evolving, the history is decades long, tragic, and they've entertained millions.
How about the Austin blues band? They first recorded for John Fahey’s Tacoma label; Jimmie Lee Vaughan (SRV’s big brother) and harpist Kim Wilson were an unbeatable combination, and Jimmie Lee is still the grand old man of the Austin scene - he linked Gary Clark Jr. up with Clapton, and made Clark an international star. How’s that for a CV?
You should make a video on each of the lives of the 6 “great” Mughal emperors of India: Babur, Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzeb - all of whom were direct patrilineal descendants of Timur (Tamerlane).
Babur conquered north India in 1526 AD but did not venture into south for a good reason He was aware of the great South Indian Vijaynagar empire with its 10 lakh standing army and special mercenary divisions and even cannon regiments trained by Portuguese Vijaynagar also had 220 ports on both sides of Indian peninsula The then emperor of Persia who hated Babur was a friend and ally of emperor krishna devaraya of Vijaynagar Mughals never conquered south India the way they did to north India Vijaynagar lasted for more duration than the Mughal empire was far richer and was more extensive Vijaynagar empire even had colonies in Srilanka and Burma South has always stopped invaders better than north India Way back in 730 AD the South Indian Kannada Chalukya emperor Vikramaditya and his general Avanijashraya Pulikeshi dealt a convincing defeat to Ummayud Arabs when they tried South Indian conquest after easily winning in Sindh
Timer is Korean ancestry Mongolian Mongolian ancestor is Korean Mongol is subtribe of Kokuri(Gogureo)”” kingdom Which was one of the greatest Morean Kingdom Timur’s grand grand grandfather originated from koreo(korea) dynasty and moved to Central Asia
Page -194- ^ Timour was the son of Teragay Nevian. He gives the following account of his lineage, in his memoirs :-" My father told me that we were descendants from Abu-al-Atrak (father of the Turks) the son of Japhet. His fifth son, Aljeh Khan, had twin sons, Tatar and Mogul, who placed their feet on the paths of infidelity. Turaene Khan had a son Kabul, whose son, Munga Bahadur, was the father of Temugin, small estate, with not more than three or four mounted attendants. He lived iu a village, near this city of Kesh, for the men of this land prefer living in the villages, and in the plains, to living in cities. His son, also, had not more than four or five horses. I will now tell you, what was told to the ambassadors, as certain truth in this city, and in other parts. It is said that Timour, having four or five servants, went out one day to steal a sheep, and on another day a cow, by force, from the people of the country. When he had got them, be ate them with his followers ; and some because of the plunder, others because he was a brave and good hearted man, joined him, until he had a force of three hundred mounted followers. From that time be traversed the country, to rob and steal all he could lay hands on, for himself and bis companions, and he also frequented the roads, and plundered the merchants.' Narrative of the embassy of Ruy Gonzalez de Clavijo to the court of Timour at Samarcand, A.D. 1403-6 by González de Clavijo, Ruy, d. 1412; Markham, Clements R. (Clements Robert), Sir, 1830-1916 ed
Turkic tribes have a tradition of kidnapping women and then marrying them (if they were unmarried). Sometimes this is "arranged". It's a common tradition still often practised in central Asia and Mongolia among tribes that are still nomadic. The young women that are kidnapped are not sex slaves or necessarily trapped by circumstance, they have rights of choice and can refuse the match (despite being kidnapped) and return to their parents. Apparently.
I took two classes with Beatrice Forbes Manz at Tufts: history of the mongol empire, and history of Afghanistan. The history of Afghanistan class was outrageously difficult
What a monstrous figure. It is said that who controls central Asia controls the world in the "great game". The great game continues today. US bases, expansion of NATO, the Afghan war, the new silk road (belt and road), a game which could easily turn nuclear at any time.
About this period, I asked my father to tell me the history of our family from the time of Yafet Aghlan, which he did, nearly in the following manner: " It is written in the Turkish history, that we are descended from Yafet Aghlan, commonly called (Abu al Atrak) Father of the Turks, son of (the Patriarch,) Japhet, he was the first monarch of the Turks: when his fifth son Aljeh Khan ascended the throne, the all gracious God bestowed on him twin sons, one of which was called Tatar, the other Moghul Timur. (2013). CHAPTER III. In C. Stewart (Trans.), The Mulfuzat Timury, or, Autobiographical Memoirs of the Moghul Emperor Timur: Written in the Jagtay Turky Language (Cambridge Library Collection - Perspectives from the Royal Asiatic Society, pp. 27-31). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139507325.015
Tamerlane built one of the biggest empires in the world . He did impossible work and he is the best imperator in the world at his time. He also colonied Russia and Mongolia , also Ottoman empire. He is the best . We must respect him because of his revolutionary movement at architecture as well as humiliation
@@ravshannabiyev4946 toride oka sssrdan qogan ig'vo ma'lumotlani bulayam tarix ekan db organib yotibdi. Bandit deganini ozi jaxlimmi chiqardi. Dunyoni eng kop joyini bosvogan 3 ta odamdan bittasiga bandit Didi. Chingizxon bandit, Amir Temur nabarot ozini yurtini ozod qigan mogulladan keyin bosvogan davlatlani
It is telling that Tamerlane has his story told by his conquests, reprisals, and public and personal wealth display in Samarkand. Administering this region seems like something he did not know how to do. So I make him to be a one-vast-excellent trick pony as a general/conqueror.
If ever there was someone who could turn up in the afterlife and give a list of demands it was Amir Timur. My favourite historical figure on my favourite channel. Thank you.
Interesting biography. Interesting personality and history. As with the khans, the caesars, the emperors and the kings, this was yet another violent psychopath with power. He moved history and shed lots of blood doing it. History has seldom been pleasant.
I'm in Uzbekistan now. While wandering about touristing we stumbled into a film set with black clad sword wielding horsemen raiding a village of screaming people. My lovely guide and I agreed that behind the talk of 'conquerors' and 'great warriors' was exactly this. A couple of ladies going about their business suddenly being attacked for their Stuff and bodies. Happily for us it was just a photo op and amusing diversion.
Timur removed Genghis Khan's Yass code of law and applied Islamic Shariya law over the Central Asia and Iran, he also fought many wars with Genghis Khan's descendants of Chagatai khanate and Golden horde of Russia.
I'm Turk from Turkey and Timur managed to defeat Ottoman empire and did leave empire to collapse (1.Mehmed saved it from collapsing) and he also captured 1.Bayezid as well but I respect him and love him because he's also my ancestor. It's a shame that both Turk 1.Bayezid and Timur had to fight against each other
How is he your ancestor, Go and explain otherwise you are a historical thief. In his letter he said that a "turcoman never spake with judgement" and "(Bayezid')Turcoman blood wont allow him to be civilized."
His son Shah Rukh was also very competent and he kept the state alive for another 30 ish years and well Timur was not a bandit just an extremely good Nomad
I love the biographic. But I don’t think this explains well enough how much of a tactical genius he was. Makes him seem purely opportunistic. But he was always 3 steps ahead of everyone who was unfortunate enough to find themselves on the bad side of him
@@Caesar88888 a wannabe dictator? Had most Westerners not been brainwashed by Alexander’s conquest, Timor is the greatest conquerer in history. Alexander was a fortunate boy who was raised, meanwhile, Timor literally came from the ground up and built an empire over his lifetime - and he never lost a battle! Was able to conquer more territory towards the East, which Alexander wasn’t able to go deep into India like Timor. Just face it, and leave your ethnocentric prejudice at the door and look at it objectively!
Channel idea: Bibliographics. Cover important works of literature. I would absolutely love to hear you break down the various speeches in Plato's Symposium.
The Timurid dynasty was founded in 1370 by the Turkic warlord Temür, usually known in the west as Tamerlane (Temür the lame). Temür and his followers were Turks loyal to the Mongol tradition, but they were also Muslim and well acquainted with Perso-Islamic culture. Forbes Manz, B. (2018, April 26). Tamerlane and the Timurids. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History.
One of the most ironic facts: the people who vilified Timur the most are not the Europeans - it was the Arabs, Persians and South Asian Muslims that deeply resent Timur and portrayed him as a barbaric tyrant. Thus, this explained why these Muslim states offer no support for the Uyghurs as they see the Uyghurs = Central Asians = Timur.
It is unbelievable that I was watching the Richard the lion heart video . Playing a game of total war when the timurids emerge .about a week ago I thought to my self . Wonder if Simon will ever do a biographic war o graphic on Timur or the timurids . Low and be friggen hold !
Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/biographics to get 50% off your first order of Keeps hair loss treatment.
Please do Yi Sun Sin next.
@@frankieseward8667 pppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppppp
Idk what channel what this would fall on, but you should do a show about the black tom explosion in ny during ww1. Thanks
How can I sponsor here?
Random thought that I've always had: "The Golden Horde" is one of the coolest names I have ever heard.
I'm sure some mmorpg somewhere already wrote this down
There is a Russian series called with that name. I'm from Bulgaria so have watched it in subtitles but I'm not sure whether u would be able to find English subtitles. In Russian it's written as Эолатая Орда while in Bulgarian it would be Элатната Орда.
and they were one of the biggest assholes who ever walked the Earth
@@Caesar88888 what did tatars ever do to you?
@@greyralph1637 they did slavetrade
I visited the Gur-e-Amir in Samarkand in 2017. It's an extraordinarily beautiful building and city. Uzbekistan is one of the most incredible places I've ever been; I wholeheartedly recommend it to anyone and everyone. Istakhri, a 10th centry travel author wrote: "I know no place in Samarkand where if one ascends some elevated ground one does not see greenery and a pleasant place. It is the most fruitful of all the countries of Allah; in it are the best trees and fruits, in every home are gardens, cisterns and flowing water." Bear in mind that this was in the 10th century; under Temerlane's rule, the city only became richer and he arguably laid the foundation for it becoming one of the scientific capitals of the world at the time.
This sounds like a non-existant paradise discription out of the many surahs of the Koran. As fictional as Middle Earth in Tolkien's works. Samarkand is quite legendary though.
Sounds dangerous.
@Akobir Tuxtamishev In Spring of 2017. I went to Tashkent, Samarkand and Bukhara, but didn't have time to visit Khiva, unfortunately.
Uzbekistan is the only country I want to visit. I am from New Zealand. I would love to ride a horse to the Caspian sea and back
@@hughdrew9810 make sure you ask the horse if they love the idea, too
Timur never once lacked belief in his own capabilities and power, which is either the mark of a total psycho or a great man depending on who you ask.
It's both.
@@thechosenone1533 A great psycho?
If you look closely, many of the leaders who could be called great also showed clear signs of psychosis. Napoleon, Alexander, Augustus, and Qin Shi Huang were all a few bats short in their belfries.
One thing historians do not pay to much attention about his life is he was very just and people under his rules were really safe, there is a line from him that some asked him how can a women wearing much gold can easily pass throughout cities without being rubbed? He said where I saw a thief I beheaded the guardian of that city
Looking back on him he was both
2:25 - Chapter 1 - A boy named iron
5:40 - Chapter 2 - Rise of the lame
8:00 - Chapter 3 - Towers of skulls
12:15 - Chapter 4 - Battling the elephants
15:00 - Chapter 5 - The last expedition
17:20 - Chapter 6 - Legacy
I find it funny that in my country it's okay to call your child Gold, Iron, Tiger, Gormoshka
He was a great builder. He built towers of human skulls and many graveyards.
💀🪦💀 I LOVE skulls & graveyards! 🪦💀💀🪦💀💀🪦 Sounds fantabulous! 💀🪦💀
Actually he was a terrible builder. There's a building in Samarkand that almost fell over as soon as it was completed because he rushed the workers too much.
Yep. He build big towers of skulls. Some say over 17 million. This Guy was truly something else.
Blood for the blood good. Skulls for the skull throne
@@klaudioabazi4478 He really was. When Tamerlane came to anatolia, he gave elephants to towns so they can feed them, in one point townspeople couldnt take it anymore because elephants were hard to take care of. So they went to ''Hoca Nasreddin'', a smart Kadı of the area, he was asked to go to Tamerlane and take back the elephants because it was too much for them. He accepted and started to go to Tamerlane, as he came closer to Tamerlane more and more people left him alone, when he reached Tamerlane, there was no people left behind him, he was left alone. When Tamerlane asked him what he wanted he responded ''Townspeople are very happy with Elephants you gave them, they ask for more elephants!'
He single-handedly killed more Muslims than 300 years of crusade combined. And he even had the nerve to call himself the sword of Islam. A double edged sword if you ask me. Also he liked to raid Georgia, i mean, he loved to raid Georgia.
Can’t imagine they think fondly of him them
@LibtardsStillCant SilenceMe20 He followed mongol code of conduct for his politics and war. Mongols embraced islam just for the sake of legitimacy and not because of any change of heart, which is clearly visible in their actions.
In india muslims name their kids timur even Bollywood celebrities too. Muslims love him because they think he killed hindus idol worshippers because of lack of knowledge they don't know how many muzlï-ms he killed
@@friendlyatheist9589 Timur means Iron. Fantastic name.
@@haqiqatnigapiramiz8347 timur means dick
Tamerlane, the prince of destruction.
The last great nomadic conqueror before the age of gunpowder.
That's the point bro
During the age of gunpowder, actually. He and many others were using it
I remember hearing that in a Epimetheus video.
He was already using canons and early guns
He made one of the most classic of blunders. The most famous is "Never get involved in a land war in Asia."
One could say the long lost son of Genghis Khan not true but Tamerlane and Genghis both do share a common ancestor in the 9th century a very powerful warlord at the time.
Who is this warlord?
Bear with me here his name was Bondnchar Munkhag he lived back in 900
@@AKAZA-kq8jd thank you mate
A very large percentage of east Asia population is related to Gengis Khan, the guy was not only a military genious but a frigging rabbit.
@@AKAZA-kq8jd Bodonchir was legend not even a real person
"If you want to know the true value of this world, look at the value and character of those people who have it (arrogant people, corrupt rulers and Kings)" - Sufyān al-Thawrī
Tamerlane was a charismatic leader who lacked the vision to enable his military gains to persevere after his death.
Ultimately, Tamerlane's legacy amounted to massive death counts and nothing more.
well he died on way on his final conquest so he had no time to prepare for an ordered succession. Also no matter preparations the empire would have been very unstable with Timur going from nothing to huge empire in just a couple of decades.
So the Timurid Renaissance right?
@@MuppetLord1 he was allegedly 69 at the time. Instead of going to war every 5 minutes he shouldve sat down to think what could be done to improve and stabilise the realm he ruled over. I'd rather claim Alexander the Macedon didnt had time. Kk no denial he probadly was over ambitious and went too far from home and died young but couldve stoped after finishing with Persia and starting to organise his empire. No wonder his soldiers didnt want to go further. Some of them probadly didnt knew how their kids and family looked like after so long campaigning at the end of geography. Ok we avenged against our menace so why going further? Already got more wealth than we could carry. Why die now?
Yeah most turko mongol conqueror type like Timur and Temujin lacked that "vision". Timur's son Shah Rukh is a bit different though. He ultimately failed to keep the empire after his death, but he tried.
His successors had a big legacy actually, such as Shah Rukh, Ulugh Beg, Husayn Bayqara, and even the Mughals of India.
Not many channels cover this guy. Thanks Biographics!
I don't know if its just me but Timur and others like him often get judged for their treatment of their enemies but it makes sense. People are more likely to surrender in the face of terror than fighting and in an inadvertent way stopping others from dying.
He sacked the surrendering towns too you know. Same with the mongols the idea the mongols would spare you if you surrendered is probably just a myth
@@fredbarker9201 Sacked not slaughtered I'm talking about basic tactics of warfare of the time. Quick conquest only really takes extreme place through Violance unless attacking an already large and established nation.
@@PH-jv4ik
Sacking is slauthering as well..
Also burning buildings raping
And plundering.
@@JuniorJuni070 People will justify what the Romans did or turn a blind eye to it but hey they built pretty roads and buildings so they were cool.
Judging the morals of those of the past is easy with hindsight
@@rusmn12 gotta love euro centrism when it suits my agenda 😈 ❤️
Oh my god I am internally screaming!!! Huge fan of your channel and I was just waiting and wishing for you to do a video on Tamerlane! As someone that comes from Uzbekistan, has seen his tomb and has heard of his deeds, I am so so happy this video came out! :)
I visited Uzbekistan in 2015 during Navruz and just loved it.
@@Bubbaist oh yeah, Novruz is amazing! What city did you visit?
I visited Uzbekistan in early 2020 (before Covid). I'm from the USA. I saw Tashkent and Samarkand. Loved it. Easily one of my favorite countries I've been to.
@@Unknowngfyjoh its amazing to imagine these places. I'm from Bulgaria which is in the Balkans Europe. I wonder what I would feel like going to central Asia knowing that half a millennia ago my ancestors may have spent some time in there. Huge fan of the idea to become archeologist and look for historic places.
This guy seems like the ultimate boss at the end of the video game that you’ll never beat🙏🤣🤣
Tamerlane was a lot like Alexander the Great in that he is known as being a great conqueror but not so much a great ruler. However, while Alexander had the excuse of dying at an early age before he could effectively administer his conquered domains, Tamerlane didn't and his empire, though lasting another century, would only go downhill as a result.
Agreed. He built his empire around HIM, even though he assigned heirs and a line of succession. But while he was alive, he couldn’t quite break the autocratic mindset he’d always had. That, and he knew his armies’ loyalty was dependent on plunder, so he literally could not stop going on long campaigns that were really just pillaging sprees. Georgia, in particular, was plundered SIX TIMES during his reign.
He was a brilliant leader and commander, but had no eye to a dynastic future.
His ancestor began the Mughal empire
He can be given credit for founding an empire. His descendants can be given the blame for not being able to sustain it. He should not be blamed for what happened a hundred years after his death. The Mughals in India can be seen to have formed an empire that, with many changes, survives in the form of Pakistan to this day.
Timur himself said he didn't care what happened to his empire after he was gone. He just wanted to mark his name on History
Am empire that lasted 100 years is not too shabby
This guy is insane the amount of destruction he wrought upon the world is just so tragic though. Gotta give a thumbs up for being able to start out as essentially a warband character and rise up to one of the most powerful conquerors before the age of gunpowder.
Love his tenacity and willingness to succeed. But hate how he accomplished those ends.
@@rubenvasquez8750 That's how you do it. Not by being super nice.
Tamerlane is the bloodiest and most ruthless invader
He boiled women and children and drank their blood
He drank wine from the skulls of his victims
Undan battarlarini Angliyaliklar va yevropaliklar, ruslar qilgan.
Men Temurning biografiyasi haqida maʼlumotlarni fikrlarda yozib oʻtganman oʻqib koʻringlar ehtimol fikringiz oʻzgarar
Having visited his tomb in Samarkand and seen the monuments there, the Timurids did accomplish something, his Grandson Ulugh Beg was one of the greatest astronomers before Galileo and Copernicus and built a masterful observatory for measuring astronomical movements.
But yes. Apparently he wiped out something like 90% of the Nestorian bishoprics during his reign. He was also a genocidal killer.
Have u visited my hometown wow
@@asyaeem1 yes. I visited in 2012 or so.
@@colinmcdonald2499 coool
@@colinmcdonald2499especially against citizens of the Delhi Sultanate many Muslims and Hindus who once resented one another started fighting for survival
Consider this: Timur was a brilliant strategist and leader. These two qualities allowed him to climb the social ladder and become a great warrior. He was also wise enough to spare any artisans he found in every conquered city. They would be taken back to the capital of Samerkand so they could work any building project that Timur had in mind.
I realize I am a history nerd when I see a biographical episode on someone I love and first bump the air
Cute
Why do you love one of the worst mass genocides in history??
One of the most terrifying men to have every lived.
Timur / Tamerlane was like a fantasy series’s Dark Lord
I hold the fates bound hard in iron chains
And with my hand turn fortune’s wheel about
And sooner shall the sun fall from its sphere
Than Tamburlaine be slain or overcome
- Christopher Marlowe, English playwright, Tamburlaine the Great
Timur was straight up some sort of a perverse genius at committing war crimes to instill maximum terror in future opponents. Skull mountains, burying people alive in the foundation and walls of new buildings, trampling women and children with horses, etc. So many cities capitulated to him without a fight, and rarely tried to resist after occupation given what he did to Isfahan, Damascus and Baghdad.
@@darthvenator2487 yeah he was one evil soab but they - kings generals etc- all were. However he’s standout
@@fredbarker9201 Not Washington.
Dear Biographics, I have been a fan of your biographic videos for a long time. I have found them to be both extremely informative, and entertaining! I'm not sure if you guys do requests or not, but could you please do a video on José Martí at some point?
Oxford
A Timurid is one of his descendants; a member of the Turkic dynasty founded by him, which ruled in central Asia until the 16th century.
My absolute fav ruler of all time. "Are you a Sunni are you?" "Well I'm a Shia, off with your head for my minaret of skulls." Then "Are you Shia, are you?" " "Well I'm Sunni, your body will make a nice brick in my wall" but the brutality was necessary to scare all the bandits along the silk road into submission. Now to actually watch the clip lol
Greatest Biography Channel on UA-cam period BTW u look great bald, Simon
Nah, not really
I first heard of Tamerlane in a story from a book of Asian folk tales my mom owned. He featured in a story called "The Khoja Teaches Tamerlane's Donkey how to Read". In the story, the Khoja, a learned philosopher in Tamerlane's court, got into a boasting contest with some of his fellow government officials. He boasted that he was so great at teaching that he could teach a donkey to read. As luck would have it, Tamerlane passed within earshot just in time to hear the Khoja's boast, and ordered him to either make good on it by teaching one of Tamerlane's own donkeys, or suffer a horrible punishment. The Khoja asked for a month to teach the donkey, which the Emperor granted. The Khoja surprised everyone who knew him by being surprisingly lackadaisical in his "teaching", only giving the donkey two short lessons per day. When the month was over, Tamerlane summoned the Khoja to his palace to demonstrate that he had taught the donkey to read. The Khoja brought the donkey and a large book before the Emperor's court. He opened the book and stepped back. The donkey began turning the book's pages, one by one, with its tongue. After appearing to read several pages, the donkey looked up from the book and started braying. Tamerlane and his courtiers were impressed, and the Emperor richly rewarded the Khoja. After awhile, Tamerlane's curiosity got the better of him, and he summoned the Khoja to him and asked him what the actual trick was. The Khoja explained that he had put a few grains of barley between each page of the book and trained the donkey to turn the pages to get the grain. When the donkey opened a page that had no grain, he got upset and started braying.
Great story. Thanks. 💜
The funny thing is that he’s treated as a hero in modern Uzbekistan, despite the fact that the Uzbeks drove his dynasty out of Central Asia. Samarkand is a wonderful city if you get a chance to visit it.
It's like the English revering the myth of King Arthur even though his whole deal was fighting Anglo-Saxon invaders.
@@RubyDoobieScoo we English revere a Welsh Warrior/King who killed our forefathers.
Robert Wilson, there is a huge difference between modern ethnic Uzbeks and semi-nomadic Uzbeks of Timur time. They were close to modern Kazahs who are kipchak. Nowadays Uzbeks mainly consist form non-nomadic karluk and o'g'uz groups.
@@haqiqatnigapiramiz8347 True, and the word "Turkmen" has certainly evolved over time.
'Tamerlane: The Bandit who Became an Emperor'
I can't wait to watch this tale of personal reform led a man of humble background being trusted with the highest office in the land
@@Stevie-J You mean he wasn't elected? He was some kind of tyrant?
His and Genghis's conquests prove one thing and it's that brutality makes the path to conquest easier
now circumstances are different
His most famous words which he wrote in his rings: "Justice is power"
The thought of "If I'm going to fight for you, you damn well better pay me!" came to mind. Treat your subjects with kindness and the world can be yours for the taking.
I’d love to see you do a profile on Nader Shah. Last of the great Asian conquerors. Known by some as the “Persian Napoleon.”
He met a brutal end , with his head cut off by his own soldiers
He was an Iranian shah , but he wasn't Persian.
He was basically a dacoit he defeated Mughals and looted delhi he took the peacock throne
Napoleon of Persia* he wasnt an ethnic Persian but a Turkoman from the Afshar tribe
@Erqĭn Məmbetjanuli 🇰🇿 Q̆iyat doesnt matter what his ethnicity was. He was Iranian and secured Irans borders and prevented ottoman invasion.
Timur and his country through the eyes of Ruy Gonzales De Clavijo, a Spanish nobleman who was sent as an ambassador to Timur's palace:Timur was of the race of Turkic immigrants and came from a noble generation who prided herself on her ancestry. The people of her country lived in tents, preferring the wandering lives of warrior shepherds to the luxury and comfort of cities, and preferred to camp in the open plains rather than stay in the most magnificent palaces, even in the countries they conquered.
Source: Ruy Gonzales De Clavijo / The Life of Timur & Travels from Cadiz to Samarkand p.21
Why are you so obsessed with Europeans sources?
Wt? Man from Spain was not specialist about Turkic history he was just ambassador lol
All medieval Islamic and Mongolian source says he was mongol
@@hassanabdulsalam1000 Even Timur herself says I am Turkic, what are we discussing in the zafarname?Are you claiming that a man who prides himself on being Turkness is a Mongolian? :D:D
@@hannibalbarca2928 turk in medieval era had different meaning than today
For example turk mongol Tatars were all synonymous to tribes of Central Asia
Listen we know timur was from mongol barlas clan and this clan was mongol according to all medieval sources
According to some European sources mongol empire are always known as great Tatars this is all confusion of distance people
Timur was proud mongol
And he also called himself ruler of turkistan that is fine but his origin is well documented
@@hassanabdulsalam1000 What does it mean that I am the chief of the oldest and greatest nation?These sentences are from Timur's zafarname herself, from her words about Turkness.
@@hannibalbarca2928 in medieval era turk and Mongols and even Tatars were synonymous words
So timur was both mongol and turk but his origin is clearly Mongolian according to medieval sources we don't know anything else
For me timur was turk because he was born in Turkic society most of timurid armies were turks
So timur mongol origin is not important here
Origin is not important most of the Time
Timur ( meaning iron in Turkic language ) was a Turkic🇺🇿 conqueror who wanted to restore the Mongol Empire . He wasn’t really Mongol , he was more Turkic .
The central Asian conquerors seem to be more analogous to pandemics in human form. Their activities certainly had profound effects across all of Asia and eastern Europe, but most of the great accomplishments following in their wake seem to be more attributable to those who survived them.
richard
--
"The scandal isn't what's illegal; the scandal is what's legal."
13:43 Yeah. Mongols have long tradition with that sort of thing. They had whole list of different kind of executions that didn't shed blood.
Timur will aways be name for inspiration of my Mount&Blade character, his entire life really fit for the game.
There are three teachers of military science in world history:
Alexander, Genghis Khan, Tamerlane
Harold Lamb
Ummm Sun Tzu? The Art of War? More widely used in modern militaries than any of the three named here. Not saying the three named here aren't used, but the way this is worded it says these are THEE three... When that's not true because Sun Tzu's work is more widely used in modern military than any of these three.
Would really like a bio of Tokugawa Ieyasu*, he was a really interesting person.
Can you do the history of The Thunderbirds?
The aircraft, not the TV show.
The aircraft are always evolving, the history is decades long, tragic, and they've entertained millions.
How about the Austin blues band? They first recorded for John Fahey’s Tacoma label; Jimmie Lee Vaughan (SRV’s big brother) and harpist Kim Wilson were an unbeatable combination, and Jimmie Lee is still the grand old man of the Austin scene - he linked Gary Clark Jr. up with Clapton, and made Clark an international star. How’s that for a CV?
Lot of y'all in the comments forgetting the Timurid Renaissance...
The greatest bandit of all times is a pretty smashing title, I gotta say.
Video brings back memories of dealing with the Timurids in Medieval II total war.
If I lived during the 14th century, I would have probably followed Timur to the ends of the Earth and beyond.
Most definitely ultimate gangster all time
I'm Turk from Turkey but I would definitely respect Timur
Tamerlane is both historically fascinating and horrific
You should make a video on each of the lives of the 6 “great” Mughal emperors of India: Babur, Humayun, Akbar, Jahangir, Shah Jahan, and Aurangzeb - all of whom were direct patrilineal descendants of Timur (Tamerlane).
he won't because simon is racist. he won't make biographics of any ruler with Turkish origin or like this video he will call them mongol origin.
Babur conquered north India in 1526 AD but did not venture into south for a good reason He was aware of the great South Indian Vijaynagar empire with its 10 lakh standing army and special mercenary divisions and even cannon regiments trained by Portuguese Vijaynagar also had 220 ports on both sides of Indian peninsula The then emperor of Persia who hated Babur was a friend and ally of emperor krishna devaraya of Vijaynagar
Mughals never conquered south India the way they did to north India
Vijaynagar lasted for more duration than the Mughal empire was far richer and was more extensive Vijaynagar empire even had colonies in Srilanka and Burma
South has always stopped invaders better than north India
Way back in 730 AD the South Indian Kannada Chalukya emperor Vikramaditya and his general Avanijashraya Pulikeshi dealt a convincing defeat to Ummayud Arabs when they tried South Indian conquest after easily winning in Sindh
Timer is Korean ancestry Mongolian
Mongolian ancestor is Korean
Mongol is subtribe of Kokuri(Gogureo)”” kingdom
Which was one of the greatest Morean Kingdom
Timur’s grand grand grandfather originated from
koreo(korea) dynasty and moved to Central Asia
Page -194-
^ Timour was the son of Teragay Nevian. He gives the following account of his lineage, in his memoirs :-" My father told me that we were descendants from Abu-al-Atrak (father of the Turks) the son of Japhet. His fifth son, Aljeh Khan, had twin sons, Tatar and Mogul, who placed their feet on the paths of infidelity. Turaene Khan had a son Kabul, whose son, Munga Bahadur, was the father of Temugin, small estate, with not more than three or four mounted attendants. He lived iu a village, near this city of Kesh, for the men of this land prefer living in the villages, and in the plains, to living in cities. His son, also, had not more than four or five horses. I will now tell you, what was told to the ambassadors, as certain truth in this city, and in other parts. It is said that Timour, having four or five servants, went out one day to steal a sheep, and on another day a cow, by force, from the people of the country. When he had got them, be ate them with his followers ; and some because of the plunder, others because he was a brave and good hearted man, joined him, until he had a force of three hundred mounted followers. From that time be traversed the country, to rob and steal all he could lay hands on, for himself and bis companions, and he also frequented the roads, and plundered the merchants.'
Narrative of the embassy of Ruy Gonzalez de Clavijo to the court of Timour at Samarcand, A.D. 1403-6 by González de Clavijo, Ruy, d. 1412; Markham, Clements R. (Clements Robert), Sir, 1830-1916 ed
Man's life was a successful Mount and Blade run
because timur is turkic Mount and Blade is a turkish game :D
He set his enemies underneath heavy carpets then had them trampled to death by horses. Those were the good old days, weren’t they?
Kechrasiz bu ishni birinchi mo‘g‘illar qilishgan temur mo‘g‘ul emas u barlos urug‘i u turkiy
Haha good old days fosure
Turkic tribes have a tradition of kidnapping women and then marrying them (if they were unmarried). Sometimes this is "arranged". It's a common tradition still often practised in central Asia and Mongolia among tribes that are still nomadic. The young women that are kidnapped are not sex slaves or necessarily trapped by circumstance, they have rights of choice and can refuse the match (despite being kidnapped) and return to their parents. Apparently.
Timirid-Ming show down would have been so epic
I took two classes with Beatrice Forbes Manz at Tufts: history of the mongol empire, and history of Afghanistan. The history of Afghanistan class was outrageously difficult
You forgot to mention that Timur used elephants from India because he figured no one would be crazy enough to use the same tactics as him.
What a monstrous figure.
It is said that who controls central Asia controls the world in the "great game". The great game continues today. US bases, expansion of NATO, the Afghan war, the new silk road (belt and road), a game which could easily turn nuclear at any time.
Please do one about William of Orange
This was a great episode. I hope we can get a biographics on Nasser and Ceausescu soon.
Yes, they would make for some great episodes
Oxford
Timur was not a Mongol himself, but from the Turkic Barlas tribe in Transoxania, now Uzbekistan.
About this period, I asked my father to tell me the history of our family from the time of Yafet Aghlan, which he did, nearly in the following manner: " It is written in the Turkish history, that we are descended from Yafet Aghlan, commonly called (Abu al Atrak) Father of the Turks, son of (the Patriarch,) Japhet, he was the first monarch of the Turks: when his fifth son Aljeh Khan ascended the throne, the all gracious God bestowed on him twin sons, one of which was called Tatar, the other Moghul Timur. (2013). CHAPTER III. In C. Stewart (Trans.), The Mulfuzat Timury, or, Autobiographical Memoirs of the Moghul Emperor Timur: Written in the Jagtay Turky Language (Cambridge Library Collection - Perspectives from the Royal Asiatic Society, pp. 27-31). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/CBO9781139507325.015
Burying people alive to keep a promise not to shed blood is a brilliant idea, brutal but brilliant.
Xiyonat tufayli bu ishni qildi
Tamerlane built one of the biggest empires in the world . He did impossible work and he is the best imperator in the world at his time. He also colonied Russia and Mongolia , also Ottoman empire. He is the best . We must respect him because of his revolutionary movement at architecture as well as humiliation
ha oka , qarasez hamma kritika qib yotiptimi
@@ravshannabiyev4946 toride oka sssrdan qogan ig'vo ma'lumotlani bulayam tarix ekan db organib yotibdi. Bandit deganini ozi jaxlimmi chiqardi. Dunyoni eng kop joyini bosvogan 3 ta odamdan bittasiga bandit Didi. Chingizxon bandit, Amir Temur nabarot ozini yurtini ozod qigan mogulladan keyin bosvogan davlatlani
Omeni emmagurlar bilmasdan Gapirovradi. Maraz g'arbliklar . O'zlarini ko'ti yonyaptida
@@InomOlimjonov ha asabni asraymiz
Made Genghis look warm and cuddly
It is telling that Tamerlane has his story told by his conquests, reprisals, and public and personal wealth display in Samarkand. Administering this region seems like something he did not know how to do. So I make him to be a one-vast-excellent trick pony as a general/conqueror.
Fun fact: Once Putin was asked who were his historic idols. He said Stalin and Tamerlane. Not surprising
Cool fact, the fictional city of Ashgobad, in Aladdin, is based off Tamerlane's capitol of Samarkand.
William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke would make another great addition to the excellent content.
If ever there was someone who could turn up in the afterlife and give a list of demands it was Amir Timur. My favourite historical figure on my favourite channel. Thank you.
Interesting biography. Interesting personality and history. As with the khans, the caesars, the emperors and the kings, this was yet another violent psychopath with power. He moved history and shed lots of blood doing it. History has seldom been pleasant.
At first I was like "Tamerlane, who dis?"
Then the name 'Timur' was spoken.
"Oh, that guy! Cool!"
Great video, Simon! I was hoping you'd do one on this fascinating figure.
13:11 Who translated this? Why is it "thy obedience" and not "thine obedience"? (Or, for that matter, "your obedience"?😅)
No wonder Wizards of the Coast named a whole tribe of awesome bloodthirsty warriors Temur.
7:56 "Towers of Skulls". Sounds like a heavy metal album
Finally waited for this one for so long, great video.
Woah! Earliest I've ever been on a Whistlerverse video
I'm in Uzbekistan now. While wandering about touristing we stumbled into a film set with black clad sword wielding horsemen raiding a village of screaming people. My lovely guide and I agreed that behind the talk of 'conquerors' and 'great warriors' was exactly this. A couple of ladies going about their business suddenly being attacked for their Stuff and bodies. Happily for us it was just a photo op and amusing diversion.
When someone says you no real life character can give thanos a run to his money show them this video
Tamerlane always rubbed off on me as one of the Greatest Generals in Human History. Dude was so good he could've threatened the Ottomans.
He did.. He ended up whooping their asses too..
@@one-re2ub Yeah 50 years later Ottomans conquering Constantinople and 50 years later his empire collapses.
Tamerlane is literally just a Mount and Blade protagonist rl.
Genghis is so lucky 🍀 to have such an incredible fanboy.
He called himself sword of Islam, He also fought with mongols and beat him in russia
Timur removed Genghis Khan's Yass code of law and applied Islamic Shariya law over the Central Asia and Iran, he also fought many wars with Genghis Khan's descendants of Chagatai khanate and Golden horde of Russia.
the founder of Ming dynasty was a bandit as well i believe
A psychopath will stop at nothing to gain power, and then abuse it.
Your understanding of psychopathy is limited.
All the horrors of the Mongols with none of the few good things lol
Should do Biographics on Helge Meyer, he suped up his car and ran supplies into bosnia during the war, total legend badass.
I'm Turk from Turkey and Timur managed to defeat Ottoman empire and did leave empire to collapse (1.Mehmed saved it from collapsing) and he also captured 1.Bayezid as well but I respect him and love him because he's also my ancestor. It's a shame that both Turk 1.Bayezid and Timur had to fight against each other
How is he your ancestor, Go and explain otherwise you are a historical thief. In his letter he said that a "turcoman never spake with judgement" and "(Bayezid')Turcoman blood wont allow him to be civilized."
His son Shah Rukh was also very competent and he kept the state alive for another 30 ish years and well Timur was not a bandit just an extremely good Nomad
Ned Kelly in Central Asia. Did he wear a green silk sash under his short or tunic?
I love the biographic. But I don’t think this explains well enough how much of a tactical genius he was. Makes him seem purely opportunistic. But he was always 3 steps ahead of everyone who was unfortunate enough to find themselves on the bad side of him
Thank you for this.
Little is known about him.
Bravo.
One of the most evilest, ruthless and notorius rulers in history, theres no movie about Timur because personas like him exist only in reality...
I find him one of the most interesting humans ever...
seems like you are a wannabe dictator 😁
Unfortunately I don't find pleasure in causing havoc and death so... No
@@Caesar88888 a wannabe dictator? Had most Westerners not been brainwashed by Alexander’s conquest, Timor is the greatest conquerer in history. Alexander was a fortunate boy who was raised, meanwhile, Timor literally came from the ground up and built an empire over his lifetime - and he never lost a battle! Was able to conquer more territory towards the East, which Alexander wasn’t able to go deep into India like Timor. Just face it, and leave your ethnocentric prejudice at the door and look at it objectively!
@@velocirshtr3756 Alexanders empire was bigger and Alexander personally fought on frontlines
So far the only thinks that I knew about Tamerlane was the victory of Ankara in 1402 and the capture of the Ottoman sultan Bayezid the Lightning.
Channel idea: Bibliographics. Cover important works of literature. I would absolutely love to hear you break down the various speeches in Plato's Symposium.
You missed important stuff like Temur invaded Georgia 8 times but literally 0 words about it
The Timurid dynasty was founded in 1370 by the Turkic warlord Temür, usually known in the west as Tamerlane (Temür the lame).
Temür and his followers were Turks loyal to the Mongol tradition, but they were also Muslim and well acquainted with Perso-Islamic culture.
Forbes Manz, B. (2018, April 26). Tamerlane and the Timurids. Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Asian History.
*Please make a video on Mullah Omar the founder of the Taleban*
One of the most ironic facts: the people who vilified Timur the most are not the Europeans - it was the Arabs, Persians and South Asian Muslims that deeply resent Timur and portrayed him as a barbaric tyrant. Thus, this explained why these Muslim states offer no support for the Uyghurs as they see the Uyghurs = Central Asians = Timur.
Could you please do an episode on Artemisia I of Caria? 🙏
It is unbelievable that I was watching the Richard the lion heart video . Playing a game of total war when the timurids emerge .about a week ago I thought to my self . Wonder if Simon will ever do a biographic war o graphic on Timur or the timurids . Low and be friggen hold !
I feel like Simon loves doing Keeps ad reads lol