The Uighur and Tibetan Empires differed primarily in their cultural and religious orientations. The Uighur Empire, which flourished in the 8th to 9th centuries, was heavily influenced by Turkic culture and adopted Manichaeism and later Buddhism. In contrast, the Tibetan Empire, reaching its height during the 7th to 9th centuries, was characterized by its strong Buddhist identity, particularly with the promotion of Vajrayana Buddhism. Additionally, while the Uighurs were more nomadic and interacted extensively with other Central Asian cultures, the Tibetans established a more centralized and theocratic governance structure centered around their religious institutions.
Empires are when one nation rules another.
The Age of Imperialism was the quest for colonial empires.
It did because they were not good empires
The "Great Three" West African empires were Ghana, Mali, and Songhai.
in africa
Civilizations often transcend Empires and are not dependent on their survival. For example, Roman civilization was both a Republic and an Empire.
In Tibetan, the word for "bored" is "འདོད་" (pronounced "dö"). Tibetan has various dialects, so the expression might differ slightly depending on the region. If you need a more specific context or phrase, please provide additional details!
You need to specify which empires you are referring to if you want to make it possible to answer you question.
Uighur
The word "Uighur" is pronounced as "WEE-gur" or "WEE-ger." The "U" is pronounced like the "we" in "well," and the "gh" is silent.
Han Chinese 91.5%, Zhuang, Manchu, Hui, Miao, Uighur, Tujia, Yi, Mongol, Tibetan, Buyi, Dong, Yao, Korean, and other nationalities 8.5% (2000 census) ~ CIA World Factbook .
Ruji Niu has written: 'Huihu fo jiao wen xian' -- subject(s): Buddhism, Buddhist literature, Uighur, History, Sources, Uighur Buddhist literature 'Weiwu'er gu wen zi yu gu wen xian dao lun' -- subject(s): History, Writing, Languages, Turkic languages, Uighur language, Old Turkic language, Uighur alphabet
Uighur jkhi8h; bhaji jg,
Tieshan Zhang has written: 'Tujue yu zu wen xian xue' -- subject(s): Turkic philology 'Huihu wen xian yu yan de jie gou yu te dian' -- subject(s): Manuscripts, Uighur, Uighur Manuscripts, Uighur language
yes, I am tibetan
The Ming and Qing dynasties practiced neo-Confucianism, while the Ottoman, Safavid, and Mughal empires practiced Islam
About 1,379,400,000 people speak Sino-Tibetan langauges--sources differ, but apparently, the Sino-Tibetan language family is second in number of native speakers only to the Indo-European language family.