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The Golden Horde is a 1951 American historical adventure film directed by George Sherman and starring Ann Blyth, David Farrar, with George Macready, Richard Egan and Peggie Castle. [2] Many of the exterior scenes were shot in the Death Valley National Park in California .
Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Comedy. 4D Man [N 6] distribution only; production by Fairview Productions and Jack H. Harris Enterprises: November 20, 1959: The Snow Queen: English dub, U.S. distribution only December 5, 1959: Operation Petticoat [N 7] distribution only; production by Granart Company
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The Golden Horde (1951) Bend of the River (1952) Flesh and Fury (1952) The Battle at Apache Pass (1952) Untamed Frontier (1952) Against All Flags (1952) The Human Jungle (1954) Sign of the Pagan (1954) The Far Horizons (1955) Wichita (1955) Red Sundown (1956) Navy Wife (1956) The Rawhide Years (1956) Autumn Leaves (1956) Hold Back the Night ...
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The Horde (Russian title: Орда Orda, working title: Святитель Алексий Svyatitel Alexy; The Golden Empire in the UK) is a 2012 historical film directed by Andrei Proshkin and written by Yuri Arabov.
The final chapters examine the decline and end of the Golden Horde. Chapter seven, Withdrawal, describes the anarchy which followed the extinction of the Jochid line, caused by the Black Death , the faltering of the Yuan dynasty in China, and the consequent opening of power to formerly-subservient lesser rulers such as Mamai .