he Ahom Kingdom (Assamese: আহোম ৰাজ্য) (1228-1826, called Kingdom of Assam in medieval times) was a medieval Hindu kingdom in the Brahmaputra valley in Assam, Indiathat maintained its sovereignty for nearly 600 years and successfully resisted Mughal expansion in North-East India. It was able to establish its suzerainty over the Brahmaputra valleyand had a profound effect on the political and social life in the region. The kingdom was established by Sukaphaa, a Tai prince from Mong Mao, in the upper reaches of theBrahmaputra river between the extant Sutiya kingdom in the north and the Kachari kingdom in the south. The kingdom expanded north, south and the west in succession and evolved into a multi-ethnic polity, beginning especially under Suhungmung Dihingia Raja in the 16th century. It made major advances under Susenghphaa Pratap Singha, under whom the administration was revamped and the first military and diplomatic contact with the Mughals were made. Mughal influence was completely removed from much of the Brahmaputra valley under Gadadhar Singha and the Ahom kingdom reached its zenith under his son, Rudra Singha. The kingdom became weaker with the rise of the Moamoria rebellion, and subsequently fell to a succession of Burmese invasions. With the defeat of the Burmese after the First Anglo-Burmese War and the Treaty of Yandabo in 1826, control of the kingdom passed into British (East India Company) hands.
Though it came to be called the Ahom kingdom in the colonial and subsequent times, it was largely multi-ethnic, with the ethnic Ahom people constituting less than 10% of the population toward the end.[1] The Ahoms called their kingdom Mong Dun Shun Kham, (Assamese: xunor-xophura; English: casket of gold) while others called it Assam. The British-controlled province after 1838 and later the Indian state of Assam came to be known by this name.
Sometimes, the causes seem to be obvious: a neighboring kingdom invades and conquers the state, a king dies without leaving an heir, or the military turns upon the ruler and ousts him.
Era of decline upon the collapse of the roman empire is called Fall of Rome
One important reason for the abrupt decline and fall of the Qing dynasty was the intense external pressure applied to Chinese society by the modern West.
Western Europe declined.
Find out what the reasons were and decided what were not the reasons.
An overemphasis on military service. The fall of Christianity. Extremely low inflation.
The factors that led to the decline of Egypt was a civil war that left Egypt weak and poorly defended. It happened near the end of the New Kingdom.
If you mean The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, it was Edward Gibbon.
Edward Gibbon wrote The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
A fall into death.
The Decline and Fall of America - 2008 was released on: USA: 1 January 2008
Fall of a Kingdom was created in 2003.
There were a number of reasons or causes as to why the Roman empire went into decline and fell. They ranged from the economy to the weakened military that couldn't defend the borders, the faulty leadership in government and even to lead poisoning. The best anyone can say is that it was a combination of circumstances and events that brought about the fall of Rome.
There were a number of reasons or causes as to why the Roman empire went into decline and fell. They ranged from the economy to the weakened military that couldn't defend the borders, the faulty leadership in government and even to lead poisoning. The best anyone can say is that it was a combination of circumstances and events that brought about the fall of Rome.
Edward Gibbon in his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empireindicated that freakishness in the arts was a sign of decline.
Fall of a Kingdom has 344 pages.
If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.If you mean the book, The History of the Decline and all of the Roman Empire, it is about exactly what its title says. It covers the causes and conditions that were detrimental to the empire.