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Guo Kan (Chinese: 郭侃; pinyin: Guō Kǎn, 1217–1277 AD) was a Chinese general who served the Mongol Empire in their conquest of China and the West. He descended from a lineage of Chinese generals.
El ejército mongol, dirigido por Hulagu Kan y el comandante chino Guo Kan, salió hacia Bagdad en noviembre de 1257. Estaba compuesto por mongoles, sus vasallos chinos, armenios, georgianos y persas, y francos del Principado de Antioquía.
It is the 18th most common family name in China and can be traced as far back as the Xia dynasty. There are eight legendary origins of the Guo surname, which include a Persian ( Hui) origin, a Korean origin, and a Mongolian origin, as a result of sinicization.
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).
Kanzhongguo ( Chinese : 看中國 ), also known as Vision Times, is a Falun Gong -affiliated Chinese language weekly newspaper. [1] . It was founded in 2001 as a website, www.secretchina.com. In 2006, it began publishing weekly print versions in major U.S. cities and Australia (as Vision China Times) where large Chinese communities exist.
In the narration, it mostly focuses on the performance of the Chinese general Guo Kan who allegedly devised a new siege engine to attack the unusual fortification of Maymun-Diz. Background
Guo Kan or Kuo K'an Chinese: Chinese: 郭侃, (1217–1277) was a famous general of Han Chinese descent that served the Mongol Khans in their Western conquests and the conquest of China itself.