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  2. AOL Mail

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  3. Seljuk Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seljuk_Empire

    The Seljuk Empire united the fractured political landscape in the non-Arab eastern parts of the Muslim world and played a key role in both the First and Second Crusades; it also bore witness to in the creation and expansion of multiple artistic movements during this period [19] By the 1140s, the Seljuk Empire began to decline in power and ...

  4. Bayinnaung - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayinnaung

    Bayinnaung Kyawhtin Nawrahta [note 1] (16 January 1516 – 10 October 1581) was King of Burma from 1550 to 1581. During his 31-year reign, which has been called the "greatest explosion of human energy ever seen in Burma", Bayinnaung assembled the largest empire in the history of Southeast Asia, [1] which included much of modern-day Myanmar, the Chinese Shan states, Lan Na, Lan Xang, Manipur ...

  5. Hanthawaddy Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanthawaddy_Kingdom

    The energetic reign of King Razadarit (r. 1384–1421) cemented the kingdom's existence. Razadarit firmly unified the three Mon-speaking regions—Myaungmya, Donwun, and Martaban—and successfully fended off the northern Burmese-speaking Ava Kingdom in the Forty Years' War (1385–1424), making the western kingdom of Rakhine a tributary from 1413 to 1421 in the process.

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  7. Garamantes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garamantes

    Linguist Roger Blench (2006) stated: “The Garamantes, whose empire in the Libyan Fezzan was overthrown by the Romans, wrote in a Libyan script, although we have no evidence they spoke Berber. What they did speak is open to conjecture; the most likely hypothesis is a Nilo-Saharan language, related either to Songhay or to Teda —the present ...

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  9. Abhira dynasty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abhira_dynasty

    From 203 to roughly 270 or 370, this dynasty formed a vast kingdom. The Abhiras had an extensive empire comprising modern-day Maharashtra, Konkan, Gujarat and parts of southern Madhya Pradesh. [3] Some scholars regard the Abhiras as a great almost an imperial power in the third century A.D. [4]