Out of
the Samanid Dynasty came the first great Islamic empire in
Afghanistan, the Ghaznavid, whose warriors, raiding deep
into the Indian subcontinent, assured the domination of
Sunni Islam in what is now Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts
of India. The most renowned of the dynasty's rulers was
Mahmud, who consolidated control over the areas south of the
Amu Darya then carried out devastating raids into
India--looting Hindu temples and seeking converts to Islam.
With his booty from India, he built a great capital at
Ghazni, founded universities, and patronized scholars.
Mahmud was recognized by the caliph in Baghdad as the
temporal heir of the Samanids. By the time of his death,
Mahmud ruled the entire Hindu Kush region as far east as the
Punjab as well as territories far north of the Amu Darya.
However, as occurred so often in this region, the demise in
1130 of this military genius who had expanded the empire to
its farthest reaches was the death knell of the dynasty
itself. The rulers of the Kingdom of Ghor, southeast of
Herat, captured and burned Ghazni, just as the Ghaznavids
had once conquered Ghor. Not until 1186, however, was the
last representative of the Ghaznavids uprooted by the
Ghorids from his holdout in the Punjab. The
Ghorids controlled most of what is now Afghanistan, eastern
Iran, and Pakistan, while parts of central and western Iran
were ruled by the Seljuk Turks. Around 1200, most Ghorid
lands came into the hands of the Khwarazm Turks who had
invaded from Central Asia across the Amu Darya. Islamic
Conquest
<<< Contents
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Rule
Library of Congress Country StudyGhaznavid
and Ghorid Rule
Library of Congress Country Study
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