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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Godan_KhanGodan Khan - Wikipedia

    Godan Khan. Godan ( Chinese: 闊端 ), also romanized as Koden and Khodan, (1206–1247) was a grandson of Genghis Khan. Godan administered much of Northern China ( Cathay) before Kublai Khan came to power. He was the second son of Ögedei Khan and Töregene Khatun and a brother of Güyük Khan.

  2. Godan Khan. Mongol leader. Learn about this topic in these articles: hisory of Mongolia. In Mongolia: The successor states of the Mongol empire. Genghis Khan’s grandson, Godan Khan, invaded Tibet in 1240, after which he sought spiritual guidance from the Sakya Pandita, leader of the Sa-skya-pa (Sakyapa; Red Hat) school of Tibetan Buddhism.

  3. Retrato de Anige de Nepal (1294). Kublai Kan (28 de septiembre de 1215-18 de febrero de 1294) ( mongol: Хубилай хаан, Chino: 忽必烈汗) fue el quinto y último gran kan (1260-1294) del Imperio mongol y primer emperador de la dinastía Yuan (1271-1294).

  4. List of rulers. European exploration. Asia portal • China portal. v. t. e. There were several Mongol invasions of Tibet. The earliest is the alleged plot to invade Tibet by Genghis Khan in 1206, which is considered anachronistic; there is no evidence of Mongol-Tibetan encounters prior to the military campaign in 1240.

  5. In CE 1244, Godan Khan, intrigued by Sakya Pandita’s reputation, invited him to Mongolia to give Buddhist teaching through which, Godan Khan became a Buddhist, and appointed Sakya Pandita Viceroy of Tibet. In CE 1253, Chögyal Pagpa, the nephew of Sakya Pandita, became the religious teacher to Godan Khan’s famous successor, Kublai Khan.

  6. Godan was never a central figure in the Mongolian history of the l3th century. He was not a grcat khan and his appanage comprised comparatively peripheral lands between China, Mongolia and Tibet, in the territory of the modern Chinese provinces of Qinghai. The wars he waged were neither large-scale nor significant ones. See Full PDF. Download PDF.

  7. After this and after the death of Altan Khan, the supremacy over the Mongols of the centre passed to the south to another descendant of Dayan, Ligdan (Legdan) Khan of the Chahar. He tried during his reign (1604–34) to build up a power comparable to that held by Altan Khan, but he was too late, because it coincided with the rise of the Manchu.