Immortal, the ancient tomb guards the future

Mondo Culture Updated on 2024-02-28

Peerless warrior Genghis Khan: A mysterious army that guarded the tomb for 700 years.

We all have a dream of being a soldier, shouting that we will fight bravely for our country and achieve great causes. However, the reality is always cruel, and we can only be ordinary ordinary people in the end. As a result, we can only find satisfaction in the illusory imagination.

When watching military-themed film and television dramas, when those actors shouted "Soldiers are born for war", we can also feel that bit of passion. Today, we are going to get to know a warrior in history who was truly born for war. He is the generation of Tianjiao in the pen of ***, he is Genghis Khan who galloped the grassland, and he is Temujin.

Genghis Khan, known as the "conqueror of the world", was a combat hero in the age of cold weapons, and his Mongol cavalry terrified the entire Eurasian continent. In his life, he fought countless battles and destroyed more than 100 countries, and no one was invincible. He is not the kind of cold and murderous person that Westerners call him, he is just pushed into the battlefield by fate.

In 1162, Temujin was born in the upper reaches of the Tsunan River in the Mobei steppe. In the steppe, he spent nine carefree years, enjoying his honorable position as the son of a Mongol chieftain. However, when he was only nine years old, his father died, and the tribe was scattered, and Temujin had to take on the responsibility of avenging his father and rebuilding the tribe. In the grassland, if you want to be respected and not bullied, you must become strong. However, for Temujin, who was only nine years old, this was obviously a difficult thing to do. In the years since his father's death, he has been subjected to numerous bullies.

However, this painful experience was not meaningless for him, because he made some poor friends in this low-level life, and learned not to look at others by their origins. Years of endurance have tempered his broad-mindedness. As a result, Temujin gathered around him a large number of Mongol warriors of humble but outstanding strength. He was able to accommodate the old ministry that had left him, something that many leaders struggled to do. When Temujin was 18 years old, his enemy, the Mirbeg, took his wife, and the two sides went to war, and Temujin won a great victory.

Around 1184, Temujin was proclaimed Khan of the Mongol Beggars, and this event led to the Battle of the Thirteen Wings. After that, the mighty Temujin set out to find the enemy who had killed his father, and he sent an army to defeat the beggars and kill their leader. Subsequently, in the Battle of Koyitian, he won almost a complete victory, gradually defeating the Tatar tribe, the Taichi Wu tribe, and the Naiban tribe. After unifying Mongolia, Temujin marched westward and destroyed Khorezm. After returning to Mongolia, he went to war with the Western Xia Kingdom, which was also his last battle as a steppe eagle. After the victory, Temujin died.

Although Genghis Khan did not leave a mausoleum after his death, it is rumored that it has been more than 700 years and the place of his burial remains a mystery. Legend has it that a secret army has guarded his mausoleum for generations, silently protecting the hero's peace.

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