Genghis Khan Ep3 Strange Traditions of Mangols Shamefull Facts of Mangol Empire History

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Genghis Khan Ep3 Strange Traditions of Mangols Shamefull Facts of Mangol Empire History

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00:00Assalamualaikum friends, before watching the video, please subscribe to our channel and click on the bell icon so that our videos reach you regularly.
00:17Kaushant Khan first shook his head in disdain and then started saying,
00:20His height, his face, his identity, the sparkle in his eyes shows that such young men do not betray.
00:27This will be a great punishment. If you set him free, then let him stay with me for one night.
00:33After that, I will guarantee you that if he harms you during your stay, then you kill me in return.
00:41In response, Genghis Khan smiled, then addressed the armed soldiers and said,
00:45Leave Bargha Khan, remove his chains and hand him over to Kaushant Khan.
00:50I see that despite being our enemy under Kaushant Khan, how does our friend and our loyalist prove?
00:57At the behest of Genghis Khan, the young man's chains were removed, who was the leader of the Taichut tribe.
01:03His name was Bargha Khan.
01:05When Bargha Khan was free, Kaushant Khan went ahead and held his hand and said,
01:11You come with me.
01:12Bargha Khan did not say anything, quietly accompanied Kaushant Khan.
01:16Kaushant Khan took him to his tent.
01:18He wanted to say something that Bargha Khan suddenly held his feet and said,
01:23You have come as an angel for me.
01:25If you had not come, my life would have been ended.
01:28You have given me freedom.
01:30I will follow whatever you say, even if my death is brought before me.
01:35Last night, I also heard a conversation about you.
01:38You have come here as a stranger.
01:40And in a competition, you defeated Genghis Khan's best Teghzan, Karachah Khan, in seconds,
01:45picked him up with one hand and raised him in the air.
01:48When Genghis Khan's armed soldiers, who guard me, were talking,
01:53I had a desire in my heart that I wish I could meet a Teghzan and a soldier like you.
01:58After all, my wish has been fulfilled.
02:00Now I am yours.
02:02I will do whatever you say.
02:04On this, Kaushant Khan took a deep breath and said,
02:07My brother, I will jump from here for a day or two.
02:11You stay inside the Mongols and work.
02:13Maybe at some point I will feel your need.
02:16On this occasion, Bargha Khan cast a deep gaze on Kaushant Khan and said,
02:21I promise you, after you leave, I will stay inside the Mongols
02:26and whenever I need you, I will sacrifice my life for you.
02:30Kaushant Khan was pleased with these words of Bargha Khan.
02:33Then Kaushant Khan began to explain various things to Bargha Khan.
02:37During the stay inside the Mongols, Kaushant Khan had assumed
02:41that the hills above the Mongols were long,
02:44on which he used to apply oil to protect himself from the cold.
02:47His small feet became numb while riding on horses.
02:51His senses were sharp like animals.
02:54At night, his eyes could see very far in the dark.
02:57Getting down from the horse, he could tell by looking at the grass and grass
03:01that where he was in the desert.
03:03He used to ride while looking up at the sky,
03:06looking up at the sky, he used to ride.
03:09The enemies across the sky used to snatch their necks from him.
03:14They were mostly attacked.
03:16Every rider had a spear or a long sword hanging behind him.
03:20On his left side, there was an axe or a strengthened bow.
03:24On his left side, there was an axe or a strengthened bow.
03:29With great speed, he used to shoot arrows from the axe.
03:32While getting up, Kaushant Khan also learned that his forefathers were hunters.
03:37The Mongols themselves hunted with great skill.
03:40For most of the hunts, they used to raise calves
03:43which would go up so high and hunt the birds
03:46that their arrows could not reach them.
03:48Historians write that they would often go for a walk and eat
03:51and even drink so much that they would become completely drunk.
03:54But their alcohol, the rotten milk of the animals,
03:57especially the milk of the horses,
03:59which they considered to be the food of the food and the intoxication of the intoxication.
04:02Among the Mongols, most of the houses were their tents
04:05in which there were many layers of wool.
04:07Like the roof of honeybees, the wool of the animals was oiled
04:12or a layer of milk was collected on it so that the cold could be stopped.
04:16A small hole was made in the middle of the roof so that smoke could come out of it.
04:20But the smoke would darken the inside of the tent.
04:24Anyway, the tent was kept bright from the outside.
04:27The Mongols were superstitious.
04:29When one of them was sick or had a disease,
04:32they would call their magician, who they called Shaman,
04:36who would play the drum and dance and claim to somehow relieve their pain.
04:42In addition, the Mongols also had this misconception
04:45that if someone knocked on the door of the tent,
04:47it meant that there was going to be a problem in the tent.
04:50If someone came inside wearing wet shoes,
04:53then he was afraid that lightning would strike him from the sky.
04:57The problem was going to be fatal.
04:59No Mongol would like to live in such a tent on which the lightning had fallen.
05:04In the winter season, black storms would come from the north.
05:08This storm was called Boran.
05:11These were such strong storms that they would sweep in the meadows in a way.
05:16In such a weather, they would wrap the skins of sheep and deer
05:19and lay down in their camphor tents near the meadows.
05:22Their tents, in which they slept, were made of white wool.
05:26The tent's roof was made of wood.
05:28At times, pictures of grapes, birds and animals were made on the wool for beauty.
05:33These tents were installed on the cars.
05:36The distance between the two wheels of the car was about 20 feet.
05:40The big chakras, which were called big yurts, were pulled by 20 to 22 bulls.
05:45These people would take their belongings and treasures in high-rise camels.
05:50In this way, their belongings did not get wet while crossing rivers.
05:54The Mongols had more than one wife.
05:57When their tents were set up, the first wife's tent was set up in her husband's west.
06:02The tents of others were set up a little further to the east.
06:06Their unmarried girls also worked a lot.
06:08Each girl carried 20 to 30 cars.
06:11Most of the land in their area was barren.
06:14Because they tied cars and carts to each other.
06:17And the girls sat on the carts in front of them and pulled the bulls.
06:20The rest of the cars would go back on their own.
06:23The Mongol men made arrows and zines in their tents.
06:26They also made tents and cars.
06:28They took care of the horses, washed the milk of the horses,
06:31knitted their clothes and kept those clothes under their zine.
06:35In the bushes, these people wore two layers of leather.
06:38One had the direction of the hair inside and the other outside.
06:41Their pajamas were also made of leather.
06:43Most of the time, they used to wear silk scarves in their clothes,
06:46which were light, soft and warm.
06:48In addition, they used to make deep glasses to drink from the horns of the mountain sheep.
06:53It was so big that it was difficult to hold two glasses in one hand.
06:58Mongol women were more passionate about freedom than men.
07:02They were the queens of their tents.
07:04It was their responsibility to protect the wealth and property of the family.
07:07When men went to hunt or attack, all the business was run by women.
07:11However, day and night, they were worried about what would happen tomorrow.
07:15Mongol women wore men's clothes.
07:17They wore high-heeled shoes made of sheepskin.
07:20They often wore red leather pajamas and wide coats on their chests,
07:25which were completely manly.
07:27If they found silk from somewhere, they wore it with pleasure.
07:30However, their hats were different from men's hats
07:33because they did not like the wide edges of their clothes,
07:36which were picked up in the summer and worn up to the shoulders in the storm.
07:40In addition, women had to ride 70 miles a day like men to protect their necks.
07:47Their masks were mostly white cloth,
07:49which was hung from under the eyes to the chest
07:52so that they could be protected from constant thunderstorms.
07:56They hunted wolves with arrows and often went to the battlefield with men.
08:01Sometimes they participated in the war themselves.
08:04The failure or success of a Mongol family's financial situation depended on these women.
08:09They used to do Samur Hambar,
08:11dry the animals' intestines and make taft,
08:14add salt to dry the skin,
08:16feed the milk, which was a priceless food for them,
08:19to the bags of skin,
08:21and to keep the tents warm,
08:23they used to collect fuel.
08:25Mongol women were very hardworking.
08:27They used to plow fields,
08:28carry loads on the animals,
08:30milk the cows,
08:31make butter,
08:33smear the skin,
08:34and make silk threads.
08:36For shoes, socks, clothes, and tents,
08:39it was their job to make woolen blankets.
08:41These women were very afraid of electricity.
08:44The land where the Mongols lived was also very strange and poor.
08:48Just south of them was the Gobi Desert.
08:51Its sand was spreading.
08:53To the left was the Altai Desert,
08:55to the east and south was the Khanjan Desert.
08:58In the north, this area,
08:59starting from the frozen north,
09:01snowy Daldans and Tandara,
09:03to the southern snowy mountains,
09:05Tibet, and the Himalayas.
09:07In the west, the Chinese Empire,
09:09starting from the valleys of the Javedang River,
09:11to the mountainous valleys like the backbone of Central Asia,
09:14and the western mountain ranges through the Margazans,
09:17ended at Yul,
09:18which was called by the Khanabadosh,
09:20the backbone of the land.
09:21This magnificent area was later called
09:23the Hand of Asia or Central Asia.
09:26It was also called Asia-Ala,
09:28because most of it is located on a high plateau,
09:32in the middle of which there are very high mountain ranges.
09:35In fact, this area of the Mongols
09:37was very cold, and so was its weather.
09:40Because somewhere it was extremely cold,
09:42somewhere it was scorching hot,
09:44and most of the time there were thunderstorms.
09:46In the cold Tandara,
09:47there was no food for animals other than cows.
09:50In the south of Tandara,
09:52there were Siberian jungles,
09:53which were crossed by the Tez and Shirin rivers.
09:56In the south of these jungles,
09:57there was an area of greenhouses,
09:58where it rained a little,
10:00and a lot of tall grass grew.
10:02In the west, the mountain ranges
10:04had entered this desert.
10:06In these jungles, the Khanabadosh
10:08had found iron and silver mines,
10:10and somehow or other,
10:11they used to earn a little.
10:13In the south of the long grass of the jungles,
10:15there was a dry and barren area,
10:17where the soil was burnt,
10:19where sand storms used to rise.
10:21On the banks of the Gobi Desert,
10:22there was a series of lakes.
10:24They had some old memories of the seas,
10:26their water was salty.
10:28If anything grew here,
10:30it was the tamarind of khakistari color
10:31and the delicate and fertile bushes,
10:33which were only food for camels.
10:35The cattle did not eat them.
10:36In the south, the most powerful
10:38Kohistani chain of the earth,
10:39the level of Tibet was high,
10:41on both sides of which
10:42there were very difficult mountains.
10:44These mountains were spread
10:45from Samarkand to the Tongkang Gulf.
10:47This is the area from where
10:49different tribes and nations
10:50migrated like floods
10:52and left this desert.
10:54Among those who left here,
10:55Awar, Balnari, Arya, Saithen,
10:57Turk, Mongols and many other tribes
10:59who left these areas
11:01and migrated to different areas.
11:03Another strange and strange story
11:05of this area was that
11:07the Khana-Badosh of the desert
11:09lived against each other.
11:11This was because their country
11:13was a strange house,
11:14because on one side there was
11:15the fertile land of the mountains
11:17and rivers,
11:18and on the other side
11:19there were dry and barren areas.
11:21Occupying the inhabited land
11:22meant life,
11:23and in the barren desert,
11:24the meaning of Jalawatni
11:25was inevitable destruction and death.
11:27Therefore, to leave the barren areas
11:29and reach the fertile areas,
11:31the tribes lived against each other.
11:34The tribes that won,
11:35lived,
11:36and those who lost,
11:37became slaves and perished.
11:39Much more dangerous than
11:40these human battles
11:41was the battle that
11:42kept man constantly
11:43on his back
11:44against nature.
11:46But their bodies
11:47were made to endure
11:48such hardships.
11:50Coincidentally,
11:51a large fertile area
11:52in those areas
11:53is located in the south-east
11:54of Lake Baikal,
11:55where the Margazars
11:56used to swim
11:57from the springs
11:58of those rivers
11:59that used to fall
12:00into this lake
12:01or into the Aamu River.
12:02This area was very popular
12:03and was a source
12:04of conflict
12:05between the Khana-Badosh tribes.
12:07And in this area,
12:08the Mongols were
12:09in control
12:10of the Changez Khan
12:11and were in peace.
12:14On the third day,
12:15when the delegation
12:16of the Caliph of Baghdad
12:17from Baghdad
12:18and the former ruler
12:19of Tibristan,
12:20Badroddin Ameed,
12:21were marching,
12:22Koshan Khan also
12:23gave his horse
12:24his last look
12:25when he came out
12:26of the yurt
12:27in which he lived.
12:29Outside the yurt,
12:30the wife of the Kanjar,
12:31Tobai,
12:32and his sister,
12:33Oloon,
12:34were standing.
12:35Oloon was holding
12:36a stick.
12:37When Koshan Khan
12:38came out of the yurt,
12:39Oloon started
12:40addressing him
12:41very seriously.
12:42Do not be fooled
12:43by any deception
12:44that I have started
12:45to like you.
12:46Because when you
12:47came to this yurt
12:48for the first time,
12:49I had asked you
12:50that Changez Khan
12:51has said that
12:52the girl you like
12:53will be married
12:54to you.
12:55Keeping this
12:56announcement in mind,
12:57I had asked you
12:58that if you
12:59find a girl
13:00like me,
13:01will you marry her?
13:02But you
13:03refused and
13:04proved that
13:05you are a strong
13:06man of morals
13:07and character.
13:08But keep this
13:09in your mind
13:10that if you
13:11would have
13:12asked me
13:13to marry you
13:14during your
13:15stay here,
13:16I would have
13:17refused to marry
13:18you.
13:19The first and
13:20most important
13:21thing
13:22that I had
13:23asked you
13:24to do
13:25was that
13:26you should
13:27become the
13:28reason for
13:29the insult
13:30of the
13:31King of
13:32Karachi
13:33who is
13:34the uncle
13:35of my
13:36brother
13:37Khanjar.
13:38After
13:39saying this,
13:40Oloon
13:41stopped
13:42and said
13:43that
13:44you have
13:45stayed here
13:46as a guest
13:47and the
13:48yurt
13:49is yours.
13:50After
13:51Oloon
13:52stopped,
13:53Koshan Khan
13:54looked at
13:55Oloon
13:56and said
13:57Oloon,
13:58listen to
13:59what I
14:00am going
14:01to say.
14:02If you
14:03were in
14:04such a
14:05situation
14:06that you
14:07would have
14:08presented
14:09yourself as
14:10my life
14:11partner,
14:12I would
14:13have
14:14refused to
14:15marry you.
14:16I would
14:17have
14:18refused
14:19to
14:20marry
14:21you.
14:22I
14:23would
14:24have
14:25refused
14:26to
14:27marry
14:28you.
14:29I
14:30would
14:31have
14:32refused
14:33to
14:34marry
14:35you.
14:36I
14:37would
14:38have
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14:40to
14:41marry
14:42you.
14:43I
14:44would
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14:47to
14:48marry
14:49you.
14:50I
14:51would
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14:56you.
14:57I
14:58would
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15:54would
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16:00I
16:01would
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16:08would
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19:37I
19:38would
19:39have
19:40refused
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