The Mongol invasion of Central Asia has…
April 1221 CE
The Mongol invasion of Central Asia has entailed the utter destruction of the Khwarezmid Empire along with the massacre of much of the civilian population of the region.
According to the near-contemporary Persian historian Juvaini, the Mongols had ordered only one round of slaughter in Khwarezm and Transoxiana, but had systematically exterminated a particularly large portion of the people of the cities of Khorasan.
After the husband of Genghis Khan's daughter is killed at Nishapur by a Muslim border guard, his widow orders the death of all in the city (~1.7 million), and the skulls of men, women, and children are piled in pyramids by the Mongols.
This earns the Mongols a reputation for bloodthirsty ferocity that will mark the remainder of their campaigns.
Among the dead is Persian poet and mystic Farid al-Din Abu Hamid Attar, considered the definitive author on Sufism, who leaves his “Biographies of the Saints,” notable for its delicately balanced rhymed prose, and his mystical epic, “Conference of the Birds,” a collection of metaphorical stories.
This invasion and earthquakes destroy the city’s famous pottery kilns.