The method (tactic) is not just unigue to Genghis Khan, Attilla used it a thousand years earlier while operating in western Asia. Dividing your enemy simply causes the following:
1. By dividing him up it causes him to lose command (control) of the second half of the unit. Who's going to all of a sudden command the portion that the commander's not positioned with?
2. By division, the divided unit has to "re-organize" (chain of command, mission (objective), etc.).
3. One & Two above create confusion.
Simple tactic. Not new.
to increase their control over entire regions of Indian subcontinent. This strategy entailed fanning the flames of religious division between native Muslim and Hindu groups, and taking advantage of the political rivalries that existed between local native rulers.
No, the Chinese used gunpowder before the Mongols did. So did the Jurchens, who conquered northern China in the early 1100s. The Mongols undoubtedly acquired knowledge of gunpowder weapons from the Jurchens and the Chinese.
fire lances and gunpowder
It rose from the fact that Genghis Khan (aka Temujin) began taking control of few Mongolian herders, then many more, then forming an army large enough to conquer the entirety of Mongolia. Then expanding into the territories of the Indigenous Siberian tribes, forcing them to accept Genghis Khan as their sovereign. Then Genghis Khan expanded his influence to the Jurchens in Manchuria. Then the Mongol Empire expanded to conquer much of Northern China and then expand west-wards towards Central Asia. Then the Mongols marched straight into Iran/Persia and Afghanistan/Bactria not without committing widespread genocide. When Ogedei took over as the Khan/Khagan, the Mongols conquered Korea, Russia, Hungary, the Caucasus, Romania and Poland. After Ogedei Khan's death, the Mongol Empire started splitting but the successor states such as the Ilkhanates, Golden Horde and Yuan Dynasty and Chagatai Khanate were all significantly powerful and continued to expand Genghis' legacy.
The idea of terror tactics is to scare the public into believing that a government can't protect them. Some people use these tactics in an act of desperation to get their point across.
The Mongols were feared for their brutal and efficient military tactics, their vast empire-building conquests, and their reputation for mercilessly annihilating cities and populations that resisted them. Additionally, their use of psychological warfare and ability to adapt to different environments made them a formidable force in warfare.
to increase their control over entire regions of Indian subcontinent. This strategy entailed fanning the flames of religious division between native Muslim and Hindu groups, and taking advantage of the political rivalries that existed between local native rulers.
Why do I use tactics? Well, because tactics are better than brute force.
The Mongols were a nomadic people who created a vast empire in the 13th century.
What kind of war tactics did who use?
That's the name of a theorem that helps to calculate asymptotic running time of some algorithms that use a "Divide an Conquer" Technique.
Mainly Blitzkreig tactics
the answer for conquer is face
what did the mongols use for shelter
The explorers intended to conquer the island.
tactics are a use of good skills that you use in any type of sport to be able to win something e.g. a football match people use tactics to get past there oponents
That was Japanese occupied territory, therefore they had use what all occupied countries had to use, guerrilla tactics. When you don't have an army to fight with, you use guerrilla tactics.