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  1. 5 de jul. de 2021 · The mountain range has a length of about 500km and a width of about 240km. The average elevation of the Karakoram Mountain range is about 6,100m and overall, there are about 4 mountains that have an elevation of more than 8,000m and about 18 mountain peaks that have an elevation of more than 7,500m. The Karakoram contains the world’s 2 nd ...

  2. Karakorum, ancient capital of the Mongol empire, whose ruins lie on the upper Orhon River in north-central Mongolia. The site of Karakorum may have been first settled about 750. In 1220 Genghis Khan, the great Mongol conqueror, established his headquarters there and used it as a base for his invasion of China.

  3. Karakórum es un unidad de relieve; forma parte de Himalaya. La cordillera del Karakórum (del turco: "pedregal negro") es, con el Himalaya, una de las grandes cordilleras de Asia, situada en la frontera entre Pakistán (Gilgit-Baltistán), la India (Ladakh, en el estado Jammu y Cachemira) y China (región autónoma uigur de Sinkiang).

  4. 8 de nov. de 2021 · Founded by Genghis Khan in 1206 CE, the Mongol Empire was at its height the largest contiguous land empire in history. Karakorum was established as its capital by his son, Ögedei, in the 1230s ...

  5. 5 de nov. de 2021 · The ruins of Karakorum, the 13th-century capital of the Mongol Empire, are still visible on the Earth’s surface today.But scholars have long ignored this physical evidence. Instead, descriptions ...

  6. Kharahhorin (also spelled Karakorin, Karakorum, and Kharkhorin) is a city in Central Mongolia, about 300 km west of Ulaanbaatar as the crow flies. Locals call it Har Horin or Harhorin. Karakorum and its surroundings have been the location of many imperial capitals throughout history, including that of the Uighur Khaganate (9th century), the ...

  7. 4 de nov. de 2021 · Introduction. The ancient Mongolian city of Karakorum was constructed after AD 1220, with a magnificent palace added in 1235 (Sagaster Reference Sagaster 1999).An eyewitness account written in 1254 by Franciscan friar William of Rubruck, an envoy of King Louis IX of France, describes an enclosed city with four gates, which was home to Chinese artisans, Muslim merchants and captives from all ...