The rise of the Mongol Empire was a seismic event in Eurasian history. Expanding aggressively from their homelands, armies of mounted Mongol archers fanned out to conquer regions as remote from one another as the Pacific seaboard and the borderlands facing the kingdoms of Poland and Hungary.
As the 13th century progressed, historic empires, which until recently had asserted themselves confidently, now lay in crumbled ruins. This was a time of conquest, and the Mongols were not gentle in imposing their rule. Their armies left a trail of devastation in their wake, filled with plundered cities, piles of corpses and deserted settlements.