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Strongest Empires by timeline

Oh! is that right?
She must be a "hyperidiot" then. To identify Persia as a hyper-power, while Empires such as Omayyad and Abassied, that turned conquered nations and cultures religions, languages, way of life, and every single aspect of their lives upside down, as superpower.is just sooo funny...
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If you're read her book maybe you can understand the kind of arguments she have for her theory. She doesn't give culturally arguments, but military and economically. Those empires you mentioned weren't at their time economically and military hyperpowers. And they weren't tolerant, a ingredient Chua see as the main reason for hyperpowers:

Day of Empire

How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance -- and Why the Fall

She uses the term hyperpower, and the first hyperpower she writes about is the Persian Empire of the Achaemenids, beginning approximately in 559 BCE and ending around 330 BCE. Tolerance in that age was different from tolerance today. The Achaemenids were typical conquering overlords. They liked order and wanted local kings to rule their people in accordance with local customs, including religion. They were tolerant as long as order was maintained. It is not the kind of tolerance the people who believe in democracy should appreciate or practice.

Why the Achaemenid Empire fell revolves around the question why Philip II of Macedonia saw the Achaemenid rule of Darius III as having grown weak and why Philip's son, Alexander, was able to defeat Darius militarily. Chua does not convincingly tie the fall of the Persian hyperpower to the issue of tolerance.

She does better with another hyperpower: the Roman Empire. She recognizes a variety of conflicting opinions on why the Roman Empire fell and puts forth intolerance as one ingredient. She discusses the Christian emperors, the conflict between pagans and Christians and among Christians. Writing about the invasions that fragmented the western half of the empire she writes: "The attacks on pagans and heretics proved deeply self-destructive, actually facilitating the encroachments." She quotes Montesque:

Whereas the ancient Romans fortified their empire by tolerating every cult, their successors [the Christian emperors] reduced it to nothing by cutting out, one after the other, every sect but the dominant one.

The question remains: why were "barbarian" warrior groups able to assert themselves militarily within the western half of the Roman Empire, thereby fragmenting that part of the empire? The subtitle of Chua's book asks why. Why was there so little participation by local people in the defense of their own area against fearsome armies? The answer involves a political system that alienated people rather than served their interests and rulers who were afraid of an armed citizenry. Tolerance was a subsidiary element.

Chua turns to China and the Tang Dynasty. The recognized end of the Tang Dynasty is 907. Chua writes that "Tang intolerance intensified" in the 800s. She mentions the intolerance of the Taoist Emperor Wuzong, who was anti-Buddhist and opposed to all foreign religions. Christian and Zoroastrian churches and temples were suppressed. "Regional warlords," she writes, "came to rule their own kingdoms, and the central government [lost] fiscal control." Then, she adds, "etween 875 and 884, another series of uprisings shattered the empire." These are descriptions of conditions that do not necessarily contribute to an answer to the question why the Tang Empire fell. Chua says nothing about the contribution made by China's system of government -- rule by bloodline -- which eventually produced incompetent emperors, failed administrations and emperors perceived as having lost the Mandate of Heaven. The Tang Dynasty had the same system of government as the Western Han Dynasty and and fell for much the same reasond.

On the Mongols, Spain's Empire, the Dutch and the British, Amy Chua writes details that might be interesting to the average reader. About the British Empire she had to back away from her thesis, writing that her point "is emphatically not that 'alas, had only Britain been more tolerant it might still have colonies in Asia and Africa.' "

Amy Chua would like the U.S. to remain a tolerant nation. Her descriptions of the tolerance that was a part of the origins of the United States are valid enough. She describes the U.S. as a hyperpower, but writes,
The United States would be far truer to its own history and principles striving to be an exemplar of the world -- a "city on the hill" -- rather than arrogating to itself the sisyphean task of remaking societies around the world in its own image.

It is a different world from what existed at the time of the Achaemenids or the Roman Empire. The kind of empires then were different from what some people today describe loosely as empire. U.S. society is not going to be overrun by the kind of conquering armies that existed back then, civilized or tribal. The kind of conquests that existed prior to World War II are no longer likely. We have the United Nations, which grew out of the failure of those who attempted conquest during that biggest of wars. Chua mentions the United Nations:

Theoretically, the United States might ... throw itself behind a new democratic world government ruled by international institutions under international law. In this scenario, there would still be a hyperpower, but it would not be the United States; it would be the world government to which the United Sates had ceded authority.

The United Nations was not designed to supercede the sovereignty of its members or to prevent members from forming a coalition for armed defense. Theoretically the United States could be just one member of a combination of powers devoted to international law and military power, acting not as a hyperpower but in concert with these other nations. And rather than any decline or fall being involved, there would be economic benefit. Some of us in the United States like to think that nothing good in the world can happen unless it is initiated by us. The people elsewhere in the world are helpless children without the moral compass that we possess -- a strange view given that we in the United States are made of the same human stuff as the rest of the world and have derived what we are politically from elsewhere, namely Europe.


And many historians agree with her. There is no historian who put the Abbasid or the Omayyad empire to the list of hyperpowers.
 
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well dear black eagle I didn't want to but you let no other choice for me about the article that made you mad
all what mentioned about Calendar and astronomy and calligraphy were Iranian doing and maragha were
the place Iranian used for astrological studies .also half of what is said about architecture were Iranian doing
and the other half was Turks only a small part was Arabs . also if you search other scientist you'll see that the
majority of the remaining scientist were Spanish and European only small amount were original Arabs
If an American with an Indian ethnic background in LA made a substantial scientific advancement. Which country can add this to its scientific achievements?
India or US?
Of course its the US. Therefore they are all Arab achievements.
 
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If an American with an India ethnic background in LA made a substantial scientific advancement. Which country can add this to its scientific achievements?
India or US?
Of course its the US. Therefore they are all Arab achievements.

The Indian you mention probably have a US passport, is a US citizen and consider himself a American. Non of this above is correlated with the Persians under the Islamic empire. The Persians during that time didn't saw themselves as Arabs and even the Arabs considered them as Ajam, non-Arabs. All of your arguments are invalid.

It were Persian achievements, made by Persian scientist. And those Arabs doesn't gave the Persians a ground for such scientifically society. During the Sassanids (before islam) the Persians were long busy with making contribution to science and when the Arabs came they destroyed many libraries in Iran. The science during that time was only made by the Mu'tazila, the liberal-islamic school who were majorly influenced by the Greeks. Eventually the fundamentalistic muslims came on power and destroyed that liberal-islamic school and since then majorly 'Islamic' achievements in science aren't present. We all can see what the Arab Ibn Khaldun say about Arabs and there naturally habit to destroy everything.

It's quite pathetic that Arabs like you, due to your non-scientificaly history, want to claim contributions made by a other culture/race.
 
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The Indian you mention probably have a US passport, is a US citizen and consider himself a American. Non of this above is correlated with the Persians under the Islamic empire. The Persians during that time didn't saw themselves as Arabs and even the Arabs considered them as Ajam, non-Arabs. All of your arguments are invalid.

It were Persian achievements, made by Persian scientist. And those Arabs doesn't gave the Persians a ground for such scientifically society. During the Sassanids (before islam) the Persians were long busy with making contribution to science and when the Arabs came they destroyed many libraries in Iran. The science during that time was only made by the Mu'tazila, the liberal-islamic school who were majorly influenced by the Greeks. Eventually the fundamentalistic muslims came on power and destroyed that liberal-islamic school and since then majorly 'Islamic' achievements in science aren't present. We all can see what the Arab Ibn Khaldun say about Arabs and there naturally habit to destroy everything.

It's quite pathetic that Arabs like you, due to your non-scientificaly history, want to claim contributions made by a other culture/race.

Congratulations! 700 factual errors in one post.

First of all, Arabs never destroyed libraries.(source?)
second, Arabs used to call everyone living in Iran and the Stan-countries Persian, so most what you consider as Persian were actually not. In fact half of citizens of "Persia" today are not Persians.
third, when "Persians" use to publish scientific and literary books in Persian language it got no attention at all, that's why Most scientific publication written in Persian were translated to Arabic by the same authors. It was THE scientific language of its time.
fourth, Most"Persians" living in Persia who converted to Islam under the Abbasid Caliphate didn't consider the Arabs as foreign occupiers. Therefore, they were citizens of Abbasid. As the example I gave in previous post.
Finally, Most Persian scientific contribution in the middle ages were done during the Islamic golden age, which without Arabs and the Arab government it would have never happened.
 
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He had like a few dozen elephants which scared the hell out of the Romans. By the third Punic war all his elephants had already passed away.

Consider what would have happened if Hannibal had somehow managed to bring several thousand elephants with him.

...Romans came prepared with flammable weapons and anti-elephant devices: these were ox-led chariots, equipped with long spikes to wound the elephants, pots of fire to scare them, and accompanying screening troops who would hurl javelins at the elephants to drive them away...

from wiki...as im hard pressed to find better sources...they lost in the end this battle but learned how to combat elephants.
 
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Atleast she gives argumentations for her theory, unlike you who only can attack her on her ethnicity and other non-argumentated nonsense. She is a professor of a well-respected university and she have reached more in her life than you ever will.

That's not a theory. A theory is backed by experimental evidence. How can you have an experiment for saying what's a hyperpower or not? She's a law professor, don't need to say more, lawyers aren't exactly known for telling the truth.

And lmao for saying I'm doing personal attacks, when you're doing the same. I'm at the University of California; if you go by that logic that being at a high ranked school means you're destined for greatness and is actually smart (as opposed to having money/connections/knowing how to crack the system) then I have "reached more in my life than you ever will."

Seriously, what are you, 15?
 
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That's not a theory. A theory is backed by experimental evidence. How can you have an experiment for saying what's a hyperpower or not?

Theory doesn't need experiments. At least not in this sense, maybe you are confusing it with scientific theories..
In history pretty much everything is theory with no experiments apart from the few remains we can find that give a glimpse into lives long ago.
 
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What about Alexander..Which empire did he lead?

23 years and a great warrior.
 
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Theory doesn't need experiments. At least not in this sense, maybe you are confusing it with scientific theories..
In history pretty much everything is theory with no experiments apart from the few remains we can find that give a glimpse into lives long ago.

then lets call it for what it is: an idea. because that's what a "theory" without evidence is. god i hate lawyers and journalists.
 
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Shia empires were a menace to Islamic influence. Shia empires of Nader shah and others attacked Moghul and Ottoman empire when all of them were Muslims. This greatly weakened Moghul and Ottoman empires which led to their downfall.

wasn't it ottoman Sunni Empire that started to attack shia Safavid dynasty at the time we were at war with Portuguese empire at Persian Gulf?
 
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lol uk 1714 to 1914 you must be crazy maybe navy but not overall france was in napoleon times so what world you in only navy uk could defeat france at that time napoleons army fought nearly all of europe
Thats was the idea of UK: make France to fight senseless wars with its neighbors, meanwhile they captured colonies around the world. Your great Napoleon sold Louisiana to Anglo Saxons, so he could keep his stupid wars.

Thats why we talk now in English here and not in French.

Umayyad Empire was leader in the science and arts..
Ummayyad Empire had almost zero science. All Muslim science started with Abbasids (Persians).

If this Empire was not the greatest in the history, I don't know what it is...

Umayyad-Empire
Umayyad-Empire.jpg

This of course:

Brit1914.JPG
 
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