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There has been much discussion among historians as to why the Franco-Mongol alliance never became a reality and why, despite all the diplomatic contacts, it stayed a chimera or fantasy. [3] [8] Many reasons have been proposed: one was that the Mongols at that stage in their empire were not entirely focused on expanding to the West. By the late ...
France–Mongolia relations are the bilateral relations of France and Mongolia. While contacts were established between French and Mongol rulers in the 13th century, relations between the modern nations only became official on 27 April 1965, [ 3 ] only gaining momentum in the 1990s as a result of Mongolia's democratic revolution .
Franco-Mongol alliance: 1220–1316 Franco-Scottish alliance: 1295–1560 Franco-Polish alliance: 1524–1526 Franco-Hungarian alliance: 1528–1552 Franco-Ottoman alliance: 1536–1798 Franco-English alliance: 1657–1660 Franco-Indian alliance: 1603–1763 Franco-British alliance: 1716–1731 Franco-Spanish alliance: 1733–1792 Franco ...
Toggle Franco-Mongol alliance subsection. 1.1 Ed17. Toggle the table of contents. Wikipedia: WikiProject Military history/Peer review/Franco-Mongol alliance. Add ...
Good point, though "Franco-Mongol alliance" is indeed how it is generally described. So maybe again: "The Franco-Mongol alliance was a series of diplomatic and military rapprochements between the Crusader Franks and the Mongols during the second half of the 13th century, which ended with very limited results and an ultimate defeat against the ...
Among the European monarchs, he alone remained interested in crusades to the Holy Land. Towards that end, he was pursuing a Franco-Mongol alliance with Arghun, ruler of the Mongol Ilkhanate in Baghdad. Arghun was seeking to join forces between the Mongols and the Europeans against their common enemy, the Muslim Mamluks.
The foreign alliances of France have a long and complex history spanning more than a millennium. One traditional characteristic of the French diplomacy of alliances has been the "Alliance de revers" (i.e. "Rear alliance"), aiming at allying with countries situated on the opposite side or "in the back" of an adversary, in order to open a second front encircling the adversary and thus re ...
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