MongoliaThe Ilkhans
The Mongol defeat at Ain Jalut in 1260 led directly to the
first important war between grandsons of Chinggis. The Mamluk
leader, Baibars, made an alliance with Berke Khan, Batu's brother
and successor. Berke had converted to Islam, and he thus was
sympathetic to the Mamluk for religious reasons, as well as
because he was jealous of his nephew, Hulegu. When Hulegu sent an
army to Syria to punish Baibars, he was attacked suddenly by
Berke. Hulegu had to turn his army back to the Caucasus to meet
this threat, and he made repeated attempts to ally himself with
the kings of France and England and with the Pope in order to
crush the Mamluks in Palestine. Berke withdrew, however, when
Khubilai sent 30,000 troops to aid the Ilkhans.
This chain of events marked the end of the Mongol expansion
in Southwest Asia. Although Hulegu's successors did not exhibit
the austere martial qualities of their forebears, they did bring
a partial and brief economic revival to Iran. An increase in
commerce and the expansion of trade routes brought a measure of
cross culturization between Iran and China. The Mongol rulers
devoted themselves to a more genteel life and let their provinces
be governed by Turkish viziers. Finally these viziers seized
control, and the Ilkhan khanate ended with the death of Abu Said
in 1335.
Data as of June 1989
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