In
1220, the Islamic lands of Central Asia were overrun by the armies of the
Mongol invader Genghis Khan (ca. 1155-1227), who laid waste to many
civilizations and created an empire that stretched from China to the Caspian
Sea. But he failed to destroy the strength of Islam in Central Asia. In fact,
by the end of the thirteenth century, Genghis Khan's descendants had
themselves become Muslims. From the death of Genghis Khan in 1227 until the
rise of Timur (Tamerlane) in the 1380s, Central Asia went through a period of
fragmentation.
A
product of both Turkish and Mongol descent,
Timur claimed Genghis Khan as an ancestor. From his capital of Samarkand,
Timur created an empire that, by the late fourteenth century, extended from
India to Turkey. The turn of the sixteenth century brought an end to
Timurid Empire when another Mongol-Turkish ruler overwhelmed the weak Timurid
ruler in Herat. Muhammad Shaybani (also a descendant of Genghis Khan) and
his successors ruled the area around the Amu Darya for about a century, while
to the south and west of what is now Afghanistan two powerful dynasties began
to compete for influence.